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@yaad2226 Жыл бұрын
u cant just make ome hole atleast do two hole for each drills
@Apalm12 Жыл бұрын
The makita 40v stuff smokes everything there impacts are the strongest and there drills
@yaad2226 Жыл бұрын
@@Apalm12 yo mama think so ??
@cowwhisperer8927 Жыл бұрын
Project Farm 2.0 ... Love it!
@OfficiallyOrca11 ай бұрын
Back in HS, I would help my dad out with projects, and later on in trade schools working under union guys they always used Dewalt. It's the nostalgia for me that's why I always go Dewalt.
@bobshanery51522 ай бұрын
To be honest that is the main reason people buy what they buy. Nothing is like it used to be. Everything is owned by a handful of the same companies. It's all pretty much made in the same spots or even factories with some companies in other parts of the world. Milwaukee and Ryobi are owned by the same people. You buying a brand and you buying color. You buying features. Its not so much quality anymore. Your mostly buying the batteries. Its why they practically give the tools away and sales usually have "buy this battery get a free tool" Like a bigger flashlight? Like a fast charge times? Like different bits/accessories? Like more power? Thats what you buying. Anyone talking about quality is bs themselves. Look at what you need the tool to do and then buy based off the specs. If you just need a general drill then they all fine. Save your money. If you like the grip or feel of a tool and dont care to spend a little more then go for it. I have tons of tools from all the common brands. Everything works the dam same for the most part.
@shepdogsd Жыл бұрын
DeWalt makes an Atomic compact drill....maybe it is not the most expensive (what you bought), but those short length drills are agile and would probalby rank higher in comfort. Probably the same situation with Milwalkee. People are always ranking by power, but I think a lot more goes into what makes a good drill. If you get Dewalt, Milwaukee, or Makita you'll be happy with most of them.
@magicscorner11 ай бұрын
Makita is good, but their batteries are horrible.
@Birdgangg Жыл бұрын
Used to use rigid only...switched to milwaukee about 10 years ago and never looked back. Its hard to find anything the milwaukee fuel system cannot handle. Great video!
@brandonporter7030 Жыл бұрын
Ridgid sucks. I started out with ridgid 6 years ago, half the tools I bought died. Now I have Milwaukee
@NathanEsh-w5c10 ай бұрын
Red tools and red tractors🫶
@sakibc17877 ай бұрын
They're both the same company
@Vincent-gn3xh5 ай бұрын
TTi, a Chinese company, owns both and ryobi, among others
@josuecaleb50533 ай бұрын
@@Vincent-gn3xh they own them, but that's about all it has to do with them. Milwaukee is made to different specs, in different factories, with different parts. I use almost all dewalt, but I don't know why people say "just get ryobi, same company as milwaukee". I have a couple ryobi tools as well, and while they work great, I only have them because of their price point.
@NonieTools Жыл бұрын
When I first bought a set of cordless tools several years ago, I thought Ryobi would be everything I need. The drills were fine with drywall screws and smaller fasteners. But when it was time to assemble a swingset for my daughter, it wasn't able to drive in the lag screws or 4" deck screws into old pressure treated. I bought a Milwaukee fuel set and it eats through everything I can throw at it. As a side note, Ryobi does make decent brad nailers and I still use the 36volt sliding miter saw I have. Also the 5.5" circular saw is light and powerful enough for light duty and rotten trim cutoffs. Great tools, but everything else I've used from them has failed to meet expectations. Maybe they've gotten better in recent years but the sawzall can't cut through soft pine without jamming. The multi tools (regular and HP) are both pathetic, and vibrate like crazy. I've replaced them all with Milwaukee and I am so glad I did. I only buy new tools when they are heavily discounted or on clearance, so my entire line up of new Milwaukee tools ended up costing about half as much as the same Makita tools would have been.
@NonieTools Жыл бұрын
And less than what I would have paid for brand new non discounted Ryobi which is insane. Their prices have really gone up on some power tools
@monteglover41339 ай бұрын
I’m a semi retired contractor and have injured my wrist with drills the anti kickback on the Milwaukee M18 is definitely a wrist saver. FYI I use the M12 vast majority of the time,
@truthserum9157 Жыл бұрын
I have a mix of Milwaukee for metal and automotive and DeWalt for wood working, i also like Festool for sanders and dust collection.
@treyb387 Жыл бұрын
My father in law was an electrician for 40 years and has a ton of Dewalt tools, in fact that's the only brand he uses. It's his personal preference which I think is what it comes down to.
@thelostviking225 Жыл бұрын
40 year electrician puts your father in law as the same generation of electrician my father was and back then electricians exclusively used dewalt power tools. At least that's how my father tells it.
@DookyShoes1 Жыл бұрын
That's funny, my father in law was an electrician as well and only used Dewalt power tools, Klein hand tools, and fluke meters
@Orgelfan62 Жыл бұрын
I have a Dewalt Fleet in 18 and 54 Volt and i use Fluke Meters too. All in all best Choice
@owld.b.a.pbrowlornolaowl5218 Жыл бұрын
My take away is Milwaukee is for contractors (with DeWalt a very close second), Ridgid for DIY enthusiast, and Ryobi for someone who just needs a drill to basic home drill.
@Techprep23Ай бұрын
You would be correct dewalt and Milwaukee are contractor level. rigid is contractor lite prosumer grade. Rigid can hang with Milwaukee on a job site. for half the price. But doesn't have the depth of tools in its arsenal that Milwaukee does. Ryobi and skil are your Johnny homeowner Just need basic tools for light duty projects they do it at home and the F-150 they drive the most strenuous thing it does is to and from home Depot on the weekends to get supplies that are going to be built with their Ryobi tools at home.
@SidoxenizedАй бұрын
Im a painter in construction. I dont have to use power tools often, but when i do i need them to perform and need reliability, i stick to ridgid because of the lifetime warranty and the pricepoint being much more reasonable
@owld.b.a.pbrowlornolaowl5218Ай бұрын
@Sidoxenized yeah I do handyman jobs now and than but not full time. And Ridgid is what I use for the tools that I constantly use for the same reason. But I still have Ryobi tools for the one off uses.
@SidoxenizedАй бұрын
@@owld.b.a.pbrowlornolaowl5218 yea i figure ill just stick to what i have batteries for too
@BYOTools Жыл бұрын
Amazing job on all the testing buddy. Absolutely love that my Milwaukee did a pretty good job overall. Now you and project farm are my new favorite testing tool channels :) keep up the amazing work
@markp8295 Жыл бұрын
I have a Dewalt DCD996 drill. The torque settings are based on the elctronic clutch, which measures current draw. So for lower torque, use gear 3. I think you used gear 1 in your test which is why it was higher.
@hr1meg10 ай бұрын
@markp8295 Same here, and unlike this 998 my 996 is Made in USA from Global Materials. Seems random where these drills are made.
@basilyousif3077 Жыл бұрын
I have found Rigid to be the best bang for the buck. They are very durable - Don't know how many times mine fllew out of my hads while I was on a Ladder and no damage!! The hammer drill doesn't have as much torque as I needed for countersinking into the hardibacker very well but it worked. Also the drywall countersinking adjustment isn't great but tolerable on Rigid. For drywall I would use Makita and for high torque applications I would get the Milwakee. General use definitely Rigid!!
@brandonporter7030 Жыл бұрын
I’d run from ridgid, all those tools will die. My hammer drill died and my brothers died, my reciprocating saw died and the impact wrench died last month. Not one made it past two years. Now I have Milwaukee
@kevintaylor70477 ай бұрын
@@brandonporter7030 all of my ridgid tools have held up just fine. Even if they don’t, the LSA is there. It’s the best bang for your buck easily. I’d only buy Milwaukee if I was a contractor, but for home use, ridgid all the way.
@bobshanery51522 ай бұрын
@@brandonporter7030 Yea and your Milwaukee will die too. Everything is made to fail today. If not the tool then the batteries. I have had Milwaukee batteries die under a 1 year of light usage. Spend another 200 bucks to buy more batteries at the store. Why you think they often give the tools away?
@JohnDoe-qq8et10 ай бұрын
I'm a milwaukee guy. All my tools, toolbelt, backpack, hardhat... is mikwaukee. I used my coworkers dewalt hammer drill once because I was too lazy to go to another room to grab mine. I love how much work the tool absorbs. The clutch kicks in so smooth and the hand and arm position never really move. I love my mikwaukee, but it kicks like a mf'r!!!
@bobshanery51522 ай бұрын
Right so buying features. Like buying different models of the same car. Not so much the fact one better then the other..
@jontnoneya3404 Жыл бұрын
Interesting - I would say that what matters most to the home DIYer is a few things like cost to expand tool collections where MW and others charge premiums for their other tools and the extensive tool collections like Ryobi. For many Ridgid's lifetime service agreement on tools and batteries is a HUGE bonus and may well be the overriding determining factor in their buying decisions as most home DIYers won't care if it takes less than 1 second difference to drive a screw. Sure Torque might be important but probably NOT for most home projects.
@thespencerowen Жыл бұрын
Are you reusing the lag bolts between tests? That might favor the early tests while the threads are sharp
@charleslao2937 Жыл бұрын
Think Ryobi would have it have done similar to Rigid with the max output battery if you used the HP battery on the Ryobi. Love the tests. As a Ryobi user I love their tools for heavy diy and light job site use.
@MegaDante58 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. I bet it would have made a difference
@sgt_loeram1933 Жыл бұрын
I actually have the Makita, Milwaukee and Ryobi and Love them all! The Makita is my go to though. Also, I even have the Groovelife belt, wallet AND wedding ring!! Lol
@Josh-fo5fd9 ай бұрын
Ryobi is great for me. I'm not trying to do anything crazy so the performance is great. My main thing is the compatibility Ryobi has going. I have maybe 15 Ryobi tools and they all use the same 4 batteries I own.
@john-qz3fu29 күн бұрын
Nothing wrong with Ryobi
@WillY-tu5nz Жыл бұрын
I thought HD doesn’t sell Dewalt Power Detect, only FlexVolt. Dewalt also has the compact 4amp battery. In order to maximize the power detect, you have to pair it with a 8amp battery or a flexvolt battery.
@miggythegreat Жыл бұрын
They dont. He probably got the picture online (amazon) instead of taking it front the drill he bought. HD sells the dcd999 and Lowe’s sells the dcd998
@dbf1dware10 ай бұрын
LOVE you munching on treats from your daughter (sawdust or not). That's a real dad thing to do!
@nikaa12689 ай бұрын
battery life also plays a roll, i noticed during the half inch bolt torque test the milwakuee battery was flashing due to low battery life
@stipcrane Жыл бұрын
Once you invest in a battery platform you probably need to stay with it, unless it fails you. That's why I committed to Makita many years ago. A $100 battery price is reason enough to stay put. Not every single Makita tool is the crème de la crème, but it is still excellent and will take every battery I own. Many of the tests are theoretical and don't have a huge effect on what you do in your trade.
@fluid8888 Жыл бұрын
Good points.
@attilajuhasz2526 Жыл бұрын
An outstanding comparison video, Nils. Very clinical, quite scientific. Well done. And spreadsheets! I think you would further extend your appeal if you added SI units. Greetings from Down Under!
@LRN2DIY Жыл бұрын
Noted! I'll try to include that SI in my upcoming videos and in the spreadsheets too. Thanks for the feedback, friend.
@kyle90254 ай бұрын
New to the power tool game, I purchased a DeWalt 778 drill, for £99 British pounds, came with two batteries only 2mA variant but has done all the jobs I need it to so far, mostly furniture building and wall mouthing. Very happy but I was coming from basic drills (no name brand) from amazon. I also coupled my purchase with the 100 bit drill kit for £24. More than meets my needs. Very interesting video and I feel justified in my purchase.
@MrRockstarSocial Жыл бұрын
@10:01 I think it's a bit weird for festool to be ranked that fast since many of the screws did not go all the way through/down as the others, it was fast however it lacked the torque at that gear setting to completely set the screws
@potato-dp5xb10 күн бұрын
i agree some of these tests dont seem to be well put together
@dymytryruban43247 ай бұрын
When I drive fasteners with DeWalt drill driver, I often do so on the lowest torque setting and a second gear which is about 3 times weaker.
@GamerJosh06 Жыл бұрын
With the exception of not using an HP battery with the Ryobi, nice testing! The HP tools are meant to be used with HP batteries, so leaving it out kind of defeats the point of testing it for comparison.
@albertshilton53369 ай бұрын
Great did a great job on this project. Quick question. Where did you get the racheted lifting mechanism for the dumbbells? Thanks
@donaldcurry5629 Жыл бұрын
Millwaukee has a 4ah battery, only comes with the big non fuel kits tho I don't think you can buy them individually.
@alfredosalcedo409711 ай бұрын
If one needs to buy a cordless powertool combo kit as a starting woodworker (e.g., hammer drill, driver, circular saw, etc.) what would you recommend?
@brianf9619 Жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed your little "Head to Head" Home Depot drill video and as a Huge DeWalt Fan I have to tell you that Home Depot Doesn't sell DeWalt XR Power Detect Tools , you can only buy them at Lowes , the Home Depot Does sell 20v Flexvolt Advantage and 60v Flexvolt , Regular XR and Atomic tools ......
@AuroraColoradoUSA11 ай бұрын
Is a cordless drill more powerful in forward than in reverse? Thanks.
@meyeame8956 Жыл бұрын
Great thorough work, thanks. Love seeing channels really ramping up their review quality. Competition raising the bar it's great. Thanks very much for this.
@556blackwater15 күн бұрын
I'm a contractor. My corded woodworking machines are all DeWalt, and years ago, so were all my cordless tools. Around 15 years ago Milwaukee went all in on their cordless tools, and just outstripped every other brand. I replaced all my cordless tools with Milwaukee, and never looked back. Festool is nice, but not at those prices, and I still consider to be pound for pound the best cordless tool I've ever owned.
@dalehughes54210 ай бұрын
Great comparison. I really appreciate that you do such a thoughtful review. It drives me nuts to watch a "TEST/REVIEW" and the reviewer gives an opinion based on manufacturer specs. A waste of my time. Yours are the best I've seen. Thanks
@daboys_entertainment_5234 Жыл бұрын
Does anybody else watch these videos and start cheering for their favorite brand?
@carlosf9278 Жыл бұрын
As a Dewalt and Milwaukee guy, I was not surprised that they performed well… never heard of Festool before but they seem a tad bit more expensive for about the same performance if not worse… Ryobi and Rigid, too I think, is a DIY/ home power tool brand… but it was still impressive to see them keep up with the big 3: Milwaukee, Dewalt & Makita I think what was shocking to me was Makita coming in dead last for cement drilling…. Although It might have been an off moment for the drill… I demand a redo😭😂
@fj75095 ай бұрын
I believe Festool is a European company. They’re one of the last power tool brands that manufacture everything in Germany rather than outsourcing their work to Asia. They’re known for making the domino jointer and their superb dust collection.
@ericnichols9275 Жыл бұрын
I love my MILWAUKEE M12 Fuel 3 rd GENERATION HAMMER DRILL it packs a PUNCH with the XC 5.0
@voldemortified7 ай бұрын
Solid Project Farm vibes here. No complaints!
@m4a1JAY Жыл бұрын
Worked for a large O&G company that deals with assembly of heavy offshore machinery. We only used Milwaukee M18 or Makita 18V Brushless drills and impacts. There were a few DeWalts floating around but mostly sat in tool drawers.
@alexandrealbuquerque72647 ай бұрын
🇧🇷 parabéns pelo canal, muito completo. São poucos que dedicam tanto tempo para entregar um material com tanta qualidade. Infelizmente no Brasil não temos o mesmo acesso às marcas, makita, dewalt e bosch são as principais marcas. Parabéns mais uma vez.
@warpark Жыл бұрын
Best and most complete review of this type I’ve seen. Very well done and helpful
@M..................... Жыл бұрын
Loved this video! As someone learning this for the first time, these videos are gold!!
@johnwalton5576 Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for stating where the tool is manufactured. This is a very important factor in my purchasing decision, so I appreciate it.
@rooster-zg4oo Жыл бұрын
Dewalt makes the best saws… got the drills to match and have not been disappointed
@Goalsplus Жыл бұрын
Very good. You're right people should make their own chart. Driving roofing screws all day compared to casual diy is a big difference in demand.
@jasonhoyt8232 Жыл бұрын
That's strange about the Makita. I have it, the 2804, 2904, and 998. The Makita has been the most reliable of them all.
@danabenjamin330011 ай бұрын
Indeed
@TheMormonPower Жыл бұрын
I know you cant beat the convenience of battery powered tools, and in most circumstances they are more than adequate. However, when you do realy need power, heavy duty corded tools cant be beat 😮
@christopherstein106 Жыл бұрын
What about the Bosch cordless drills??
@gk7588 Жыл бұрын
This just confirmed my latest purchases. Recently bought my 15 yr old daughter the Ryobi One+ HP drill to start with wood working. I was worried it might have too much power but glad to know it is perfect for her skill set right now.
@GamerJosh06 Жыл бұрын
If she'll be using it with an HP battery, it'll perform better than tested here, since he used a non-HP one. Though it still shouldn't be an issue to handle.
@superdog6838 Жыл бұрын
no matter which brand you have or prefer. IMO you should get an old school corded 1/2 inch drill and impact a. can get used some what cheap b. use them for that 10% of the hard or long use. this will incr. the life span of all you "smaller" tools by 3-5 times. example i have a thor 1/2 hp from like 1950. it still works 100% have done rail road tie walls, drill 3/8 by 18 inch for 150 to 300 rail road ties approx 500 18 inch holes. watched guys try and help while laughing at my 10 ib. monster drill, most fried their drill in 20 min. why corded?? because you do not do the extreme very often and a corded will last decades. older Milwaukee and porter cable corded do well, of course if you do this all day long and make big$$ just get a 40 volt kit for $700-1000 Mikita makes one. because cords do slow you down and time is $$ for a pro. rest of us can get corded backup tools for $200 and last 30 years.
@oscarjr.juelle37105 ай бұрын
What model is the milwaukee m12 “screwdriver” you used?
@ErmIDK19 Жыл бұрын
ive got a big pressure lump on base of my thumb where it joins onto my index finger from years of using a milwaukee gen 3 impact driver . it gets very painful with sustained use
@facepwnagewtf5 ай бұрын
Working construction for the last 3 years and I usually see 4 tools on sites. The odd Rigid, some Makita's, a lot of DeWalt's, and an overwhelming amount of Milwaukee, after using all of them extensively i didn't hesitate to buy my own set of Milwaukee's.
@MegaDante58 ай бұрын
I wonder if you would have used ryobi hp battery if it would have made a difference?
@person8802 ай бұрын
Like some other said, you need to use one of the "High Performance" batteries with the HP line of tools from Ryobi. The HP battery will make a difference with the HP drill.
@DarkestofTimes4 ай бұрын
I've gotten more of those Makita XPH14 hammer drills back at my store as returns than probably any other drill we sell, it was a tie between that and the Dewalt dcd777. The Dewalt was usually a chuck issue, the Makita would frequently come back because it just died or the motor literally started smoking.
@HelloKittyFanMan8 ай бұрын
Cool video! Haha, one more thing is that I just wanted to watch you put these in color order: Milwaukee, Ridgid, DeWalt, Ryobi, Festool, and Makita. Oh, and then Benchtop Pro (dark blue), Think Learn (hot pink/magenta), and Pink Power (lighter pink). Wait... purple? Who has the purple one?
@1988MaxVivasАй бұрын
“Bosch is in my heart”, my dad used to say…
@elijahknighton5315 Жыл бұрын
I love how he just bought like 5+ new drills and then is wearing that "I have enough power tools" - No One Ever shirt haha. Its a subtle but hilarious detail to me.
@jimecary7 ай бұрын
I was super fan of Makita but now I'm in love with Milwaukee
@FrugalFixing8 ай бұрын
I would really like to see this done with the Ridgid that has 1250 or 1300 inch pounds of torque. It kept up pretty well being a way lower end drill, how would the higher end one do
@ErosSatelital2 ай бұрын
Greetings, success, friend... in these drills like the one you use, you can use sds plus drill bits for concrete or those that are smaller, but they come with slots in the shank like the sds plus and the Max
@NWGR Жыл бұрын
Excellent video. I'll be looking forward to more comparisons in the future. I'd love to see 18/20v compact drills tested and 12v drills too especially. 12v drills have come a long way and some of them are probably good enough for 98% of what DIYers need out of a drill.
@monteglover4133 Жыл бұрын
I agree I have the M -18 hammer drill and impact driver, also the M-12 drill and impact driver. The M-12’s will be my primary use for building cabinetry.
@superdog6838 Жыл бұрын
12 volt are great, but mostly for interior work, cabinets, closet, tight area or elec. where up and down a ladder all day. most should still go 18-24 volt covers most of the basic chores. and too expensive to keep and use 12v and 18v systems. first time you have to do a small deck or shed or drill 30 3/4" holes with a 12v you will have issues. and just because it works today you will lose about 25% after 1-2 month. (especially if colder area) i had unheated rentals renovations and big drop. batteries are the big issue for occasional use pick a system that has what you need and use same batteries for all.
@monteglover4133 Жыл бұрын
@@superdog6838 the cheap 12v are not so good with poor performance, the high quality 12v (m12) perform surprisingly good, as well as some budget 18v. Most of the time using the 18v’s is like grabbing the big diesel truck to pickup some fence pickets all ya need is the minivan My m12’s have held a good charge after the moving process over 3 months
@VeraPoolandSpaservices4 ай бұрын
When you showed the 2 inch deck screw driving competition festool won .. but it didn't sink all the screws. it looks like it left one or 2 half way in ::>?
@FitzWell365 Жыл бұрын
When I heard you say you're going to do those other videos, I was really sad this one only came out two days ago.... lol.
@keithfailmezger1596 Жыл бұрын
it is weird , i did not see the lawn mower in the milwaukee line up .. i have it and love it
@sociopathmercenary Жыл бұрын
I never use a drill to drive long screws. That's what the impact driver is used for.
@monteglover4133 Жыл бұрын
Yep
@edwardolvera52806 ай бұрын
Yep, Guy is totally wrong
@amishdoinks51042 ай бұрын
It works but drills are torque focused while impact is power focused. For lag bolts that are long you’d want something torque focused to make it go faster- so long as it has the power behind the torque to not die off. It’s like trying to compare horse power vs torque.
@dannyrivera70177 ай бұрын
There is a considerable difference in the Dewalt when using flexvolt or powerstack batteries where it can deliver a little more performance, which is why I stick with Dewalt
@magicscorner11 ай бұрын
I used to have Makita, but after some time, I phoned my friend who also had Makita and asked: What do you do with faulty batteries? He said: "I just collect them." I decided to switch to another brand and the choice was between DeWalt and Milwaukee. I asked around for an edvice and most of professionals said: Milwaukee - the worst warranty service in the UK, after some time you need to own 2 or 3 drills, because they break a lot and it takes ages to get a replacement. I switched to DeWalt and have no problems at all. The new powerstack batteries give new life to all my tools.
@traviswood8346 Жыл бұрын
What's hilarious is that the Dewalt Drill in this video is actually over at Lowe's and the one you featured at Lowe's is actually only available at HD. LOL
@Aivensons9 ай бұрын
I want to see the drill that will work while gear switch is between 1 and 2 , you didn't break it , just had to select the gear ( makita drill ) . mr tester .
@HeebzMedia Жыл бұрын
Pairing the Dewalt with the 4ah battery hurts the tool. It's made to be paired with the 8ah battery
@enriquejobrodriguezvega96718 ай бұрын
Porque no probaste la linea de 40V Makita ???
@parched74384 ай бұрын
Milwaukee all day. From the corded hole hawg and sawzall back in the days to the their cordless tools now. Worth the money
@314Dillman3 ай бұрын
good video, and I totally agree that what you have for batteries plays a huge part in the decision of what to buy, a good battery can cost most of the bare tools alone! I stick with DeWalt, because I have 9 batteries and 4 chargers. I will say that I'm happy the DCF961 1/2" high torque impact took the throne over Milwaukee tho haha
most important is the slowest and then precision of ramping up speed, as well as length front to back, as compactness is high on my list, as is weight....And its overall top power. Besides its build quality, easy bit changing, and battery life, then noise I would guess. but the control of slow speed, to top is is key for me. Also PRice! Would have been nice to see some off top name brands.A balance of all these. And Project Farm included a $45 drill that fits the bill!
@UseWhatchaGot Жыл бұрын
One of, if not the best comparison videos I’ve seen! 👏🏼 I am a Ryobi user and I get a lot of comments that their tools arnt legit and what not, and seeing this comparison really shows how much more powerful the top tools are, but I think everyone should use the tools they prefer AND the ones the can afford 🤦🏻♂️. Also, as a DIYer, I know I won’t be drilling in 100 lag bolts a day, but my tools have never failed me yet. If I was doing that, you better believe my tools would be red or blue. My dad has always been a Dewalt guy his whole life and I have friends who use a mix of all of them.
@Achmonth Жыл бұрын
My father in law uses Festool, Hilti and Makita at work. He prefers Ryobi at home, though, because it is good enough for what he does there.
@GamerJosh06 Жыл бұрын
Keep in mind that he did not use an HP battery for testing the Ryobi, which hampered performance.
@markkociscin695 Жыл бұрын
Amazing job! Looking forward to the rest of the series!!! 😊
@scottdehaan58642 ай бұрын
Very in depth study. Thanks. Surprised by Festool.
@artbythecartons8 күн бұрын
I went with ridgid for lifetime warranty on batteries etc. and i like the color orange🤷
@LuxWad Жыл бұрын
This is a great video, it was really helpful! As some feedback, your lux test would be much more useful if you specified the exact distance from the emitter to the meter, as otherwise these numbers are only useful exclusively for the relative output in this test. Lux is a measurement of the light on an actual object, and as such is a value subjective to the distance from a light source - candela is an objective value that can be used to compare different light sources, it is measured as lux @ 1 meter. Lumens is an objective value that measures total light output - either would allow these drills to be compared to other flashlights and whatnot.
@peterscott731611 ай бұрын
Are you able to get Bosch Professional drives in the US?
@ProblemChild-xk7ix Жыл бұрын
I now know what drill to buy to lift weights, if that need ever arises.
@lordwombat8169 Жыл бұрын
I wonder how the Hilti 22v hammer drill would compare? Nice video, very informative and enjoyable 😉
@2011vortex Жыл бұрын
Love the analysis, very scientific.
@supremechief127 ай бұрын
With over $10,000 in tools, I can tell you the only tools I own are Milwaukee and dewalt. I tried Makita and there is no comparison, I would choose Milwaukee as a favourite
@dustinkirby3287 Жыл бұрын
Dewalt Power Detect isn’t sold at Home Depot. That one is sold at Lowe’s. The flex volt is sold at home depot
@gilmerchuc57005 ай бұрын
Yo tengo la Milwaukee desde un año y sigue funcionando como si nada lo detiene.. inclusoe ha tocado trabajarlo bajo la lluvia y sigue funcionando
@goblin900dunsanylord4 ай бұрын
Great work of tests! I wonder why isn't in this tests Bosh and Skil, brands too common on the market. I bought recently a combo Metabo, unfortunately the drill was damage and I have to returned. For this reason, I get disappointed of the brand. But I would like to see a taste of the Metabo in your channel. Thanks for the reading, and a big hello from Mexico🙋♂️🇲🇽
@hypermatrix89996 ай бұрын
Only thing I’d say is that with the Milwaukee, there’s a huge difference between the XC 5.0 battery, XC 6.0 High Output, and XC 6.0 Forge batteries based on comparison test videos on KZbin. To the point where the Forge can give 30-40% more power than you get from the standard XC 5.0 you’re using.
@praiadaferrugem7 ай бұрын
Muito obrigado por disponibilizar o áudio em português.
@skylacowan3126 Жыл бұрын
I’m curious to know which dewalt drill you used and why you choose not to run either the flexvolt or power stack batteries with it for this test
@Gadgets-N-Gear6 ай бұрын
I have an older 18v LXFD01 white Makita drill, with a 4ah battery. I really like that drill. The only other drills I have, is only an entry level 20v and 12v Dewalt as well as a super old Milwaukee PowerPlus hammer drill. so maybe I just have not used a premium drill yet. But I keep hearing that Makita quality just is not what it used to be. It sad your Makita only lasted 5 minutes. I'm curious to know why Makita was first to break? are they really that bad now? Love your vids!
@jimpeter34537 ай бұрын
Great stuff, thanks! Regards from Baltimore.
@citation51power7 ай бұрын
Im am very surprised by the results, i have a full set of AEG or ridgid in north America. In our market aeg was supposed to be competitive with the big 3, and rated for work use. But it turns out that its just a Ryobi in disguise, i thought TTI wanted to create a 4th big player but retain Ryobi as the handyman DIY go to brand. I am now considering the Makita 40v range.
@bruiserdickerson4039 Жыл бұрын
Just came across your videos and totally love the way you do your test on tools
@ADD_50 Жыл бұрын
I own a construction company and when a new hire comes on they get a ryobi or a rigid kit. Once they have been on a few years most choose dewalt with a few specific Milwaukee/rigid pieces. I am the only one with Makita and still have a few pieces that are about 20 years old. The only dewalt I personally run is the job site table saw and a old school 25 year old 18 v Brad nailer that works better then my new one.
@rooster-zg4oo Жыл бұрын
Dewalt makes the best saws for sure
@travistyler3369 Жыл бұрын
great video! thanks so much for this well put together video!