James Watriss
Member
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2008
- Messages
- 277
I agree with everyone else. I have a Makita 14.4, it's a workhorse.
But for day to day, I'm really falling in love with the lil Bosch 10.8/12V max impact. It's small enough to be pretty much pocket sized... so the need for a clip is lessened, though I definitely relate to the need for some other way to carry it around for ladders and the like. The new Makita and Milwaukee versions are similarly sized, and also nice to have around.
A friend has the Makita 18V drill... one thing I like, the light stays on for a while after the trigger is released. Being able to use the light without pulling the trigger the whole time is very convenient, so a continually on light isn't so far out of the realm of useful. But I do think that it really does lack the innovation that Festool is known for. On the other hand, what normally comes in the multi-piece tool kits these days? Continual-beam flashlights. I think there are pros and cons that some of s may be overlooking, just like many of us overlooked the use of having a light at all on the drills before. So... jury's still out for me.
But it is clunky. It's a drill, not a tactical weapon... come on!
I dunno, though. There's a lot of innovation revolving around the little 10.8/12V units. I've seen single speed drills, 2 speed drills, impact drivers, and a multi-master knock-off from Bosch. (Though I'm told the Multi-X, or whatever it's called, has a short battery life, and lacks the juice of the real deal.) I've also seen a very much abridged sawzall unit from Milwaukee. What's next?
But for day to day, I'm really falling in love with the lil Bosch 10.8/12V max impact. It's small enough to be pretty much pocket sized... so the need for a clip is lessened, though I definitely relate to the need for some other way to carry it around for ladders and the like. The new Makita and Milwaukee versions are similarly sized, and also nice to have around.
A friend has the Makita 18V drill... one thing I like, the light stays on for a while after the trigger is released. Being able to use the light without pulling the trigger the whole time is very convenient, so a continually on light isn't so far out of the realm of useful. But I do think that it really does lack the innovation that Festool is known for. On the other hand, what normally comes in the multi-piece tool kits these days? Continual-beam flashlights. I think there are pros and cons that some of s may be overlooking, just like many of us overlooked the use of having a light at all on the drills before. So... jury's still out for me.
But it is clunky. It's a drill, not a tactical weapon... come on!
I dunno, though. There's a lot of innovation revolving around the little 10.8/12V units. I've seen single speed drills, 2 speed drills, impact drivers, and a multi-master knock-off from Bosch. (Though I'm told the Multi-X, or whatever it's called, has a short battery life, and lacks the juice of the real deal.) I've also seen a very much abridged sawzall unit from Milwaukee. What's next?