gharel said:That vac immediately made me think of the CTs and then the folding tables... Someone's copying notes here!
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Yea half the readers have been mortar-fied and talk of rebaringCrazyraceguy said:I was expecting concrete fasteners.... [eek]
Unfortunately these are only patents ... their main purpose is not to make something but to prevent anyone else producing such ... so the more likely effect is we will not see such an arrangement for the next two decades. From anyone.squall_line said:I like that Milwaukee took it a step further and made their extractor mains-ready as well as 36v battery, although at the expense of two separate motors.
mino said:Unfortunately these are only patents ... their main purpose is not to make something but to prevent anyone else producing such ... so the more likely effect is we will not see such an arrangement for the next two decades. From anyone.squall_line said:I like that Milwaukee took it a step further and made their extractor mains-ready as well as 36v battery, although at the expense of two separate motors.
luvmytoolz said:It was a bit hard to tell but the router seems a strange and non-ergonomic design?
mino said:What, on the other hand, makes all kinds of sense is for the high-end cordless vacs to operate as "charging stations" when on mains. There is no (technical) reason why a CTC Midi class vac could not have a PlugIt port. The battery slots to be dual-use - charging when on mains and running from the batteries when cordless. There is the weight/space budget for this with today's available power electronics. The motor can be BLDC and take power from mains using a converter. Vacs do not need much peak power so it can be a pretty reasonable setup.
I could even see it as an "upgrade" model like a TS 60 is to the TS 55 these days.