esc27,

I’ve been pretty happy with the Ryobi 18 and 40 volt stuff. If I ever need anything fancier I’ll probably start investing in milwaukee. At some point I plan to invest into a tool storage system and milwaukee may win that decision…

For corded stuff, brand loyalty isn’t that useful. I have a dewalt portable/job site table saw I really like.

My jigsaw and circular saw are skil, so I could probably stand to upgrade, but they work well enough.

Just bought a kobalt powered screwdriver that uses usbc to charge and seems fine for household use (when a drill driver is not needed)

Still have an old dewalt drill on a dead battery platform that refuses to die.

SadSadSatellite,

If you’re looking for a solid storage system, check out toughbuilt or flex. As someone with the rare experience in several different mobile tool chests, flex and toughbuilt kick the hell out of the packout. I run the toughbuilt stacktech myself, and it’s got everything I could have hoped for. Tough as hell, metal corners, waterproof, no fumbling to lock or unlock pieces as they connect automatically, and they’re a good bit cheaper to boot.

sleepdrifter,

I’m scared to mention Kobalt in here

ChickenLadyLovesLife,

I dream of owning Kobalt tools one day as I use my Harbor Freight cheapies.

captain_aggravated,
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

I’ve goy thay Kobalt router table, and it’s pretty good.

Cheems,
@Cheems@lemmy.world avatar

Nearly every single kobalt tool I’ve had has broken or just stopped so quickly. They are such a small step above harbor freight that it isn’t worth my time anymore.

sleepdrifter,

The power drill my dad got me a decade ago still works, and locked me in… I have done some med-duty ranch work with it and it still drills

nobleshift, (edited )
@nobleshift@lemmy.world avatar

I’m an America who has never been to Canada, but I’ll weigh in with this:

Every single [edit - Master Craft] Canadian Tire tool I’ve ever come across or owed has a swingin’ pair. My 1000w inverter has been in a saltwater environment for 7 years and is still killing it weekly, as well as my CT cordless drill.

howrar,

Canadian here and I’ve never seen a Canadian Tire branded tool in my life. Are you maybe talking about Mastercraft?

nobleshift,
@nobleshift@lemmy.world avatar

You know what, you’re 100% correct.

Raiderkev,

I’m pretty satisfied with Hart which is a Walmart brand. Keeping my fingers crossed, but no issues so far after a couple years.

altima_neo,
@altima_neo@lemmy.zip avatar

The same company that makes Ryobi and Milwaukee tools also makes Hart.**

ChickenLadyLovesLife,

There is a canadian Youtuber that I stopped watching because he turned out to be a Canuck Trumper type, but he did a lot of videos where he broke down power tools with various price points and showed why they cost what they cost and where manufacturers do or don’t cut corners. Interesting stuff.

Cosmocrat,

WranglerStar?

altima_neo,
@altima_neo@lemmy.zip avatar

He’s in Washington near Portland.

Probably AVE

21Cabbage,

…snap-on?

SadSadSatellite,

Let’s get you back to the home

21Cabbage,

I think it might be because I fix cars more than houses, and I’m in my 20s.

chemical_cutthroat,
@chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world avatar

Project Farm on YouTube has great tests and reviews of products like this. Fully recommend his channel if you are in the market to buy tools or tool adjacent products.

TheControlled,

Fuck yeah. Project Farm rules! He’s like Bob Ross for me. I just chill and watch tool-science happen.

snowe,
@snowe@programming.dev avatar

Torque test channel is pretty much completely power tool specific and goes a lot more in depth on them. PF for breadth, TTC for depth.

AstridWipenaugh,

Ryobi is great for starting out. They’re definitely not the best tools, but they’re cheap. If you wear out something from them, you’ve earned the right to buy a good brand of that tool.

ChickenLadyLovesLife,

I’ve gone through a skoolie (school bus converted to an RV) project and now most of a house renovation with one 1/4" Ryobi drill and one 3/8" Harbor Freight drill and they’re both somehow still going strong after five years of hard usage. I had bad opinions of both manufacturers before but not any more.

limelight79,

My experience with Harbor Freight power tools is a (corded) circular saw that works extremely well. I put in a better blade, and it rocks. I’ve had it for years and it shows no signs of slowing down. I’m not a heavy user but I’ve used it for quite a few projects over the years, including an RV renovation I’m working on now.

SadSadSatellite,

Not to bash HB cuz they rule when you need a new tool quick, but how hard can it possibly be to make a thing that spins when you plug it in?

Ilovethebomb,

Ryobi is the perfect price point and level of quality for DIY stuff, but you still want a decent quality tool.

slingstone, (edited )

Is House Craftsman like the Reynes of Castemere or something?

Edit: sorry, wrong fantasy world…

SadSadSatellite,

They’re house Tyrell. They used to be great, then they fell apart, now they’re trying to come back.

supermario182,

So DeWalt is Gryffindor right?

JudahBenHur,

hufflepuff

supermario182,

I would argue Ryobi is the Hufflepuff of these four.

Cheems,
@Cheems@lemmy.world avatar

Is Milwaukee ravenclaw or Slytherin?

Ryobi is 100% Hufflepuff

supermario182,

Milwaukee as raven claw and Makita as Slytherin seems fitting

BeautifulMind,
@BeautifulMind@lemmy.world avatar

I landed in DeWalt when their cordless devices became as good as/better than corded tools; I standardized on their battery platform only for them to abandon my battery and roll out a new (incompatible) one. Shortly thereafter my batteries bricked and it seems the business model is to force consumers to buy new tools every so often

FML I hate it that they’re all proprietary and incompatible

ChickenLadyLovesLife,

I know cords are a bit of a pain, but rotating batteries and keeping them charged is also a bit of a pain, and at least the pain of cords ensures that you always have a tool to use when you need it. Also electrical outlets have been standardized for more than a century now.

Liz,

Yep. Corded tools don’t need to be charged. Love it!

NielsBohron,
@NielsBohron@lemmy.world avatar

Exactly. Cordless drills are super convenient and super cheap. For anything more heavy duty than that, I want something corded (which usually has the added advantage of being both cheaper and available in good condition second-hand).

House Skil/Craftsman-from-Goodwill for life!

root_beer,

Word. The only tools I use with batteries are my lawn mower, leaf blower, and weed whacker. Otherwise, cords are fine.

CHOPSTEEQ,

FWIW Ryobi’s battery has been the same format since the 90s which removed any doubt I had about continuing to buy the brand.

snowe,
@snowe@programming.dev avatar

You can buy adapters for literally any battery to any other battery type. They’re all over Etsy and Amazon. Torque test channel even does a test to see how much performance you lose from them, along with building a monster battery pack that uses all the brands batteries at the same time.

ChickenLadyLovesLife,

As a Harbor Freight guy, I’m offended.

BigPotato,

I mean, this doesn’t have SnapOn or Mac. Like, do they even power tools? My neighbor’s garage has a SnapOn flag and tool chest.

Corkyskog,

Isn’t that like a Maserati equivalent? Isn’t just the chest thousands in and of itself?

helpImTrappedOnline,

Yes

st3ph3n,

SnapOn tool chests: for the guy who takes on a mortgage just to flex on his coworkers at the shop.

L0rd0fD3rp,

Went looking for my Craftsman brothers, but I’m afraid I may stand alone.

thericcer,

I stand in solidarity with you brother!

captain_aggravated,
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

Most of my SB&D Craftsmam stuff is ptetty good.

Lianodel,

IIRC, that might be because their quality & reputation took a dip for a while. They were, after all, a Sears brand, and Sears got run into the ground by some blood-sucking leadership.

That said, they used to have a great reputation, and were sold to Black & Decker in 2017, who seem to be handling the line up much, much better.

SupraMario,

B&D makes tools for people who hang pictures… I’ve never seen a b&d tool on a job site or even handle the bare minimum for anything more than little house projects. DeWalt is like the lowest grade stuff that most guys use in construction, but even those are starting to have QC issues and durability drops.

atx_aquarian, (edited )
@atx_aquarian@lemmy.world avatar

Sir, this is a shitpost about dads.

marito,

And my axe!

aspectoffate,

House Ego: I don’t want the cheapest thing, but I’m only willing to go a single step up.

team_gold,

For those who hate being stuck with one brand because the batteries are so expensive you can buy adapters to convert between them. For instance I use a rigid battery with a ryobi tool etc and it works great! I’ve seen adapters for working between most of the brands since almost all the tools are 18V. I’ve seen ones that jump between lower voltages and higher ones which is a bit sketchier but are likely fine as well. www.google.com/search?q=power+tool+battery+adapte…

Ilovethebomb,

You do lose power through those, so they’re not great for high power tools. Torque Test Channel has done quite a few videos on this.

limelight79,

DeWalt for drills, etc… I used to work in a hardware store (a small town store, not a Lowes/HD big box place) and sold DeWalt, so that’s what I gravitated toward when I was buying tools for myself.

But for yard tools, 40v Ryobi.

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