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My first "cordless" screwdriver was a 2.5v or whatever black and decker thing that was useless.

I then moved onto one of these
makita6891dw.jpg
which i still have to this day but it is relegated to the garage. Totally useless for drilling masonary but the best most balanced screwdriver i have ever used especially with a 2.6amp battery.

plumbers today are spoilt,and combis weigh nothing compared to neta heats and baxi wm,s nowadays he will rarely lift a boiler because his back and knees are shot and puts every thing in with a 18 v li-on aeg

He is right lol.
Hanging netaheats, space savers and WM's was easier than taking them down 30 years later. I had to take one down today. Thankfully it was only a 40.
My back is holding up but the knees give me severe gyp and i break out in a cold sweat looking at a slotted screw :sick:.
 
My first "cordless" screwdriver was a 2.5v or whatever black and decker thing that was useless.

I then moved onto one of these
View attachment 3619
which i still have to this day but it is relegated to the garage. Totally useless for drilling masonary but the best most balanced screwdriver i have ever used especially with a 2.6amp battery.



He is right lol.
Hanging netaheats, space savers and WM's was easier than taking them down 30 years later. I had to take one down today. Thankfully it was only a 40.
My back is holding up but the knees give me severe gyp and i break out in a cold sweat looking at a slotted screw :sick:.



I too still have one of these in the loft 9.6 v
anyone remember star drills ? bit like the old rawltool
worked at Lee Cooper jean place about 30 odd years ago and the sprinkler fitters were using rawltools to fit 3/8" and 1/2" rawlbolts
to hang some of the pipework off no hammer drills for them!!! not even 110v some of those companie`s so tight in those days.Regards turnpin
icon7.png
 
i have owned the milwaukee 18v impact and combi for about 2 years now and it is brilliant i bought it from my local tool shop, they recommended it over dewalt and makita ,and have never looked back, the drills are awesome loads of power and are very robust .
 
My first "cordless" screwdriver was a 2.5v or whatever black and decker thing that was useless.

I then moved onto one of these
View attachment 3619
which i still have to this day but it is relegated to the garage. Totally useless for drilling masonary but the best most balanced screwdriver i have ever used especially with a 2.6amp battery.



He is right lol.
Hanging netaheats, space savers and WM's was easier than taking them down 30 years later. I had to take one down today. Thankfully it was only a 40.
My back is holding up but the knees give me severe gyp and i break out in a cold sweat looking at a slotted screw :sick:.
this emphasizes what i was saying about the 18v being to big to use a lot of the time especially for screwing you need something light and easy. couple of chippies i know still use those tamz as you say their light and balanced the 12v makita impact is there succesor
 
I have 14.4v makita 8434 which is a cracking drill for small stuff, and a Hilti TE2A which I use for ALL masonry drilling.

I rarely use the Makita for masonry - it mainly gets used for drilling metal, timber and driving screws.
 
Will only buy Hilti myself, only problem with that is, you have to keep your eyes on it all the time.
 
The Hilti TE2A is probably the drill I use most of all.

The TE2A had a few poor reviews as the original NiCad batteries didnt last long and were expensive to replace, However it is now supplied with NiMH batteries which are much better.
 
just got a Hilti kit 14v impact and normal drill ,came with 2.6Li-on batteries ,,,much better then my old bosch 14.4v !
only reason changed is cos my nimh batteries are dead and new one is £90 for each so i thought I get new set and batteries are guaranteed for 2 years not like bosch only 1year
 

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