I think Jer went all in on Rigid because of the battery warranty.
I think Jer went all in on Rigid because of the battery warranty.
I went mostly Makita 35 years ago after tiring of breaking the old US made Skil and Black and Decker tools. Have never had a Makita motor fail. But as someone said, all the pro brands are very good now.
I also have a Bosch saber saw, DeWalt compound miter, Delta contractor table saw and bench grinder. Quality tools do the job better and faster and are usually good for a lifetime of use. Throwaway tools are a waste of time and money.
Can't go wrong with Makita( my work tools), Dewalt or Milwaukee. As long as HD is still around the Rigid brand is viable too.
As Tim K said, Porter Cable large routers are pretty much bullet proof and Festool will break your heart(and wallet).
I have run Makita for work for the last 15 yrs, typically lower priced than Milwaukee and lighter weight with comparable power and battery life.
Bosch corded jigsaws have ruled for 20+ years but others have started to catch up features.
Milwaukee corded sawzalls outperform all others.
Dewalt for portable table saws.
Cordless yard/lawn tools don't quite stand up to rural living. We stick to gas or PTO powered yard/lawn tools.
I had rigid and switched to Milwaukee after rigid refused to honor their warantee.
I have a Milwaukee corded 1/2" drill that I busted the chuck on. Took it into the Milwaukee shop on W 8th? and they fixed it FOR FREE.
Lots of Porter Cable, and the most I have had to do with those, is replace the pad on a couple of sanders.
Dewalt sliding miter saw has cut a LOT of wood, and has gone through quite a few blades, still runs like a champ.
Black and Decker is junk. IMO
Milwaukee all day every day.
Obi-Won-Ryobi
Honestly pick you favorite color, hopefully it's either Yellow or Blue...
Last edited by Delfuego; 04-21-2021 at 12:59.
If your post count is higher than your round count, you are a troll.
My other advice would be to spend the extra money for the brushless models of the company has both. Worth it in my opinion.
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I love Festool, but I feel like they have two clearly defined markets; mobile tradesman / on-site installer, and middle class hobbyist with income to burn. I cannot imagine them in a production shop environment. I think my Kapex is as good as it gets for trim and fine work, but I can't imagine it lasting very long in a framing or rough carpentry environment, either. So I am sad, but not entirely surprised to have your experience confirm my suspicion.
Math is tough. Let's go shopping!