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![]() 127 Posts Member #: 1871 Advanced Member Chesterfield, Derbyshire |
17th Apr, 2011 at 09:54:47am
Im on the look out for a new drill, I will be using it for the mini, but also general household DIY i.e drilling through walls etc.
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Site Admin 6293 Posts Member #: 1 The boring bloke who runs this place. Berkshire |
17th Apr, 2011 at 10:20:12am
I have both - the cordless is way less powerful, and is useless on metal. I use the lectric one for most things in the garage, but the cordless is fine for in-doors diy. |
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Site Admin ![]() 15300 Posts Member #: 337 Fearless Tom Fenton, Avon Park 2007 & 2008 class D winner & TM legend. |
17th Apr, 2011 at 10:37:12am
For a spend of £50 get a mains one as a cheap cordless will be crap.
On 29th Nov, 2016 madmk1 said:
On 28th Nov, 2016 Rob Gavin said:
I refuse to pay for anything else Like fuel 😂😂 |
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![]() 12307 Posts Member #: 565 Carlos Fandango Burnham-on-Crouch, Essex |
17th Apr, 2011 at 11:24:41am
I agree with Tom,
On 28th Aug, 2011 Kean said:
At the risk of being sigged... Joe, do you have a photo of your tool? http://www.turbominis.co.uk/forums/index.p...9064&lastpost=1 https://joe1977.imgbb.com/ |
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![]() 141 Posts Member #: 7891 Advanced Member Annapolis, MD USA |
17th Apr, 2011 at 12:57:09pm
Save your money and get a better unit....I just got a Makita 18v Lithium....that thing could be used as a starter motor for my car! Eric
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![]() 127 Posts Member #: 1871 Advanced Member Chesterfield, Derbyshire |
17th Apr, 2011 at 04:56:08pm
I thought you might all say that
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![]() 12307 Posts Member #: 565 Carlos Fandango Burnham-on-Crouch, Essex |
17th Apr, 2011 at 06:22:18pm
well the alternative is to get a cheap mains drill, On 28th Aug, 2011 Kean said:
At the risk of being sigged... Joe, do you have a photo of your tool? http://www.turbominis.co.uk/forums/index.p...9064&lastpost=1 https://joe1977.imgbb.com/ |
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![]() 2909 Posts Member #: 83 Post Whore Glasgow, Scotland |
17th Apr, 2011 at 09:58:44pm
i always thought cordless drils were pap too, but you defo get what you pay for, my cordless drill has tonnes of torque, use it to drill out locking wheel nuts all the time, tis a snap-on 18v thing but my boss has a makita and its what made me realise cordless drills are actually ok. if you already have other snap-on stuff like an impact gun, you can just buy the drill with no battery or charger for ~100 notes. turbo 16v k-series 11.9@118.9 :)
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![]() 6729 Posts Member #: 618 Post Whore Glasgow |
17th Apr, 2011 at 10:32:06pm
if the budget is £50 i'd go corded. If you can go a bit more, B&Q are doing 18v hitachi drill drivers for £90. I've had mine for a while now and very happy.
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969 Posts Member #: 47 Post Whore Not very sunny swanage |
18th Apr, 2011 at 10:08:11am
just echoning what everyone else has said to be honest, if youve only got £50, then grab a mains one. In fact chuck £45 back in the jar and go to a car boot sale and buy a second hand one for £5, that should last you a few years, all but 1 of my mains drills (ive got 4 think!) are older than me, and all still work perfectly. Aviod cheap cordless drills like the plaugue And on the 7th day........... God created turbochargers! |
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![]() 127 Posts Member #: 1871 Advanced Member Chesterfield, Derbyshire |
18th Apr, 2011 at 12:14:31pm
Ive been looking at this, cheaper than everywhere else, but might wait until the weekend as im hoping they have an easter sale on!
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![]() 453 Posts Member #: 6449 Senior Member Brisbane, Australia |
18th Apr, 2011 at 01:20:26pm
On 18th Apr, 2011 Mattlad said:
Ive been looking at this, cheaper than everywhere else, but might wait until the weekend as im hoping they have an easter sale on! http://www.diy.com/diy/jsp/bq/nav.jsp?acti...ELAID=468160190 Only downside to those ones is they're still a ni-cad battery. Pretty much double in price to get a lithium one though. And how much masonry drilling are you planning on drilling? If none then just get a drill driver, rather than an impact driver/hammer drill/percussion drill. In boost we trust |
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![]() 1596 Posts Member #: 8027 Post Whore Thrapston, Kettering, Northants NN14 |
18th Apr, 2011 at 05:15:12pm
only bother with makita if its the lxt series, i use other makita standard drill at work and go through battery after battery (replacing them) but at home i have an LXT one and its the dogs danglies, batterys last forever, its comphortable and its got some beans to it. you need to spend to get a good battery drill. On 17th Feb, 2011 apbellamy said:
I popped my first one out the other day... |
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Site Admin ![]() 15300 Posts Member #: 337 Fearless Tom Fenton, Avon Park 2007 & 2008 class D winner & TM legend. |
18th Apr, 2011 at 05:25:27pm
ARSE. Typed in a long reply and it crapped out and lost it.
On 29th Nov, 2016 madmk1 said:
On 28th Nov, 2016 Rob Gavin said:
I refuse to pay for anything else Like fuel 😂😂 |
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![]() 6729 Posts Member #: 618 Post Whore Glasgow |
18th Apr, 2011 at 05:38:41pm
If your are spending the money, this is the one I have
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3594 Posts Member #: 655 Post Whore Northern Ireland |
18th Apr, 2011 at 08:00:22pm
On 17th Apr, 2011 Mattlad said:
Im on the look out for a new drill, I will be using it for the mini, but also general household DIY i.e drilling through walls etc. Been looking at corded ones thinking they were more powerful but looking at cordless, some of those are just as powerful. Im looking to spend about £50ish Any advice would be great Matt Any cordless drill at £50 will be a piece of shit. TBH, even that is cheap for a corded drill. When you say drilling through walls, what do you mean ? A small hole for a screw into a wall, or a usable hole say 20mm+ through a wall ? If the latter, buy a half decent SDS drill. £100 should get you one. 9.85 @ 145mph
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![]() 2909 Posts Member #: 83 Post Whore Glasgow, Scotland |
18th Apr, 2011 at 08:20:08pm
li-ion batterys are only needed if your using the drill/tool all day as they last longer. they still throw out the same current as a nicad battery. all my stuff is still nicad, gets used daily in work, and i need to charge a battery every 3-4 days. the upgrade to li-ion batterys (for 2 and the charger) will cost more than the drill, not really worth it. be different if i were a joiner or something though. turbo 16v k-series 11.9@118.9 :)
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50 Posts Member #: 9008 Advanced Member Lancashire |
18th Apr, 2011 at 09:50:37pm
Just bought a makita 18v cordless with two batteries yesterday, on offer at B&Q £95, absolute bargain! Cheaper than eBay! |
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![]() 62 Posts Member #: 9439 Advanced Member stoke on trent |
19th Apr, 2011 at 12:51:26am
Hey first post on TM and commenting on a drill haha
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8215 Posts Member #: 90 Post Whore Somewhere around Swindon |
19th Apr, 2011 at 08:47:02am
Screwfix do there own make 18v combo drill for £50 it has good reviews
Crystal Sound Audio said:
Why wolfie...you should have your name as Fuckfaceshithead ! "A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools."-Douglas Adams |
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![]() 127 Posts Member #: 1871 Advanced Member Chesterfield, Derbyshire |
19th Apr, 2011 at 12:22:42pm
On 18th Apr, 2011 stevieturbo said:
When you say drilling through walls, what do you mean ? A small hole for a screw into a wall, or a usable hole say 20mm+ through a wall ? The first job I will be using it for is drillling a hole through both skins of masonry into the conservatory for a plug socket, but that will be it for heavy use, probably wont have to use it for that again. Will be used mainly for Mini ralated jobs, and the odd plug and screw into a wall Think ive decided on the Makita one from B&Q Edited by Mattlad on 19th Apr, 2011. |
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34 Posts Member #: 4608 "Member" |
27th Apr, 2011 at 01:32:28pm
u can get a semi decent bosch corded drill for £50,
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![]() 514 Posts Member #: 2104 Post Whore Essex - UK |
27th Apr, 2011 at 01:35:47pm
cheep drills are grate for wire brush use as they distroy any drill so why spend lots. but every day the more u spend the better "Tuning should be a compromise between what is possible and what is necessary"
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![]() 2233 Posts Member #: 9037 Post Whore Doncaster, yorkshire |
2nd Aug, 2012 at 06:45:29am
Thread resurrection, I'm on the look out for a decent powerfull drill, I'm sick of replacing cheap drills, mainly to be used on metal, holesaws, wire brushing, general drilling etc I have a budget of £100-£120, do I go corded or cordless? Audi s4 b5 - 470bhp & 486ft lbs
On 15th Mar, 2012 wil_h said:
Yes, Carl says he gets requests for rimming all the time On 30th Apr, 2012 Brett said:
yeah stick the bit in and give it a wobble |
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![]() 2057 Posts Member #: 9252 Post Whore Cleethorpes |
2nd Aug, 2012 at 06:48:00am
corded, it never runs out when you need it Done now needs redoing lol |
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