I agree with you I will pay but won't be ripped off thanks for the information nice to see there still decent film out there great driver and good price
@beaverone383728 күн бұрын
Draper stormforce batteries fit parkside tools.
@wrightbytes10 күн бұрын
I'm sure I heard that but found they didn't. I might be wrong though. Unless it was the older Parkside range. I don't know
@dave3d45Ай бұрын
Would be handy to have left a link to the adapter in the description so we could have found it quicker
@richardoverthrow1358Ай бұрын
The cross-compatibility of batteries across brands and even within brands is deplorable. Anyway, I've found the best use for an impact driver is removing difficult screws. If you have a really tight-seated screw and the normal driver keeps slipping the bit and damaging the slot, the intermittent action of the impact driver seems to be more effective at turning it.
@TomWilson-ir6uqКүн бұрын
👍
@LOTPOR040222 күн бұрын
In the world of cordless tools you are better off sticking to one make , unless you can get adaptors
@wrightbytes18 күн бұрын
Yes normally I would totally agree with you 100%
@anthonygraham8838Ай бұрын
Not 100% sure but I think Erbauer batteries are compatible.
@Michael.Huxley26 күн бұрын
Ebauer batteries fit evolution tools
@petlesАй бұрын
Get to the point for good sake
@wrightbytes10 күн бұрын
I am sorry if 5 minutes is too long for you. I appreciate you watching anyway, have a fantastic day
@32_bits21 күн бұрын
Its my understanding that Parkside 20v batteries are now obsolete and they have moved to the 12v battery types.
@wrightbytes18 күн бұрын
I have not heard anything about that. As far as I know the current Range is the 20 volt xteam range. I wouldn't have thought any of the tools could run on 12V. Definitely not the power tools anyway
@bayadere830810 күн бұрын
What on Earth gave you that idea. Utter nonsense.
@wrightbytes10 күн бұрын
Most tools are normally 18 or 20 volt are they not.
@wrightbytes10 күн бұрын
@@bayadere8308Just my understanding. I'm not claiming to be an expert so the utter nonsense comment is unnecessary. I'm sure there used to be 12 and 18v tools but moved to 18 and 20. Unless I am misunderstanding how battery voltages work with power tools. Like I say I'm no expert. Feel free to educate me in a polite manner if you wish so I can learn something. I am always open to new knowledge
@bayadere830810 күн бұрын
@@wrightbytes Now you sound even more confused. However, here goes: there are many different voltages for power tools. The two most common are 12v. and 20v. Now, some manufacturers call their range 20v. which is the average maximum voltage at full charge with no load applied. But, other manufacturers call their range 18v. which is the nominal voltage. So, to all intents and ourposes, 18 and 20 are the same - it's just a marketing decision. Parkside are currently producing around four times more 20v. tools than 12v. If you think about it, why would Europe's best sellinhg DIY brand stop making batteries. In either range?