Deanspoors Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 1 hour ago, Ben (bunje) said: do you have alink to the one you have terry im owndeing what sort of NM power i require to take wheels off and on Volts isn't everything, This one from DeWALT will do 950Nm/700ftlbs. http://products.dewalt.co.uk/powertools/productdetails/catno/DCF899HN/ I have this one which is 200Nm/150ftlbs which removes most bolts/studs, remember to tighten wheel studs you only want to be nipping them with an impact wrench then torquing them with a torque wrench. http://products.dewalt.co.uk/powertools/productdetails/catno/DCF880N/ Quote
BenD Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 i already have an 18 volt battery dewalt drill which im sure is the same battery to the ones youve linked dean would make sense to get a matching one wouldnt it Quote
Deanspoors Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 19 minutes ago, Ben (bunje) said: i already have an 18 volt battery dewalt drill which im sure is the same battery to the ones youve linked dean would make sense to get a matching one wouldnt it Sure would, the bare units are relatively cheap too on eBay, Amazon, etc. 2 Quote
Terry Everall Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 The Sealey does it great when the battery is ok I will check torque figures Quote
Andy (Sycho) Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 6 hours ago, Ben (bunje) said: i already have an 18 volt battery dewalt drill which im sure is the same battery to the ones youve linked dean would make sense to get a matching one wouldnt it Ben from seeing your drill at the weekend you possibly would want a new battery as well, yours looked like a 1.5Ah you ideally could do with a 4Ah battery. Quote
BenD Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 Lol the drill you would have seen isn't the one I'm on about my decent stuff is all locked away. I'm sure it's a 3Ah one but I'll have to get it out of the box to find out Quote
BenD Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 But I'm not sure if I can justify 160 quid for something I can actually do by hand Quote
Kit Car Electronics Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 40 minutes ago, Ben (bunje) said: But I'm not sure if I can justify 160 quid for something I can actually do by hand Now that could be taken badly out of context 4 Quote
BenD Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 Lol your correct it doesn't sound the best does it. Quote
Kevin (Mr T) Posted June 5, 2018 Author Posted June 5, 2018 I've still got a Makita in my basket on FFX, just can't bring myself to go through the checkout Quote
Kit Car Electronics Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 If you add more bare tools, it becomes better value and more easily justified. At this time of year, the hedgetrimmer is superb https://www.ffx.co.uk/tools/product/Makita-Duh523Z-0088381673686-18V-Hedge-Trimmer-Bare-Unit Quote
Andy (Sycho) Posted June 5, 2018 Posted June 5, 2018 1 hour ago, Ben (bunje) said: But I'm not sure if I can justify 160 quid for something I can actually do by hand You can get a bare unit for less than £100 so there’s no need to do it by hand 33 minutes ago, Kevin (Mr T) - Essex AO said: I've still got a Makita in my basket on FFX, just can't bring myself to go through the checkout That does seem like a very good buy though. Quote
Arm Posted June 6, 2018 Posted June 6, 2018 Had Makita but found batteries poor and not well supported by Makita. Scrapped the lot after getting annoyed with their support and bought milwaukee. Better tool for the money and brill support. Team is now swapping to same . Thing is the Makita or Sealey are no good with duff batteries. In the long run a decent make is better value. I spent more on replacement Makita batteries than the original tools. Not anywhere near as good as they used to be. Quote
Dave Eastwood (Gadgetman) - Club Chairman Posted June 6, 2018 Posted June 6, 2018 DeWalt went through a similar phase a dozen or so years back. It seemed like every diy/makeover program on TV had yellow DeWalt tooling all over it, so they decided to capitalize, who can blame them, and launched lots of more consumer targeted models. Trouble is, all the pro stuf for the next few years seemed to suffer. They do seem to have turned things around though in recent years. Ive got some of the earlier Makita pro-sumer stuff, and it’s decent enough, but looked at more recently, and their ro stuff, and it wasn’t what it was a few years ago, from the collective experience of the guys on a couple of job sites that I asked. Milwaukee isn’t as well known a brand over here yet, but seems well respected in the US, and definitely seems to be making good inroads over here, now. Quote
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