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davew



Member Since: 02 Jan 2012
Location: North Yorkshire
Posts: 888

England 1990 Defender 90 V8 Petrol PU Auto Rioja Red
I bought a Bosch GSB1800 a few months ago when I found my old cordless drill was leaving me sat waiting for it to charge if I wanted to drill more than a few holes in a day.

It's a very good piece of kit, it's been a while since I bought my last cordless drill and this one is amazing by comparison. The battery lasts for ages (put up some decking over 2 days on a single battery). It drills holes in walls in hammer mode quicker and easier than my old trusty mains powered pro drill.

I can honestly say I have yet to find a single thing about it that I'm not happy with. http://www.yorkshireoffroadclub.net/
Post #579346 21st Nov 2016 12:17am
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lambert.the.farmer



Member Since: 11 Apr 2012
Location: harrogate
Posts: 2006

England 1998 Defender 90 300 Tdi PU Rutland Red
I use makita tools and have done for many years and not once had any problems with any of them. Rhubarb and custard let fly with their secret weapon.
Post #579353 21st Nov 2016 7:18am
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AJC



Member Since: 30 Nov 2015
Location: Lancashire
Posts: 1362

United Kingdom 
I have Makita at home, but for work, constant use everyday we use Milwaukee,

I actually have 24 x Cordless 1/2 inch impacts, and various cordlesses, hammer drills etc.

Milwaukee all i get now
Post #579359 21st Nov 2016 7:35am
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AMBxx



Member Since: 24 Jul 2016
Location: York
Posts: 1031

United Kingdom 2015 Defender 110 Puma 2.2 XS CSW Orkney Grey
If your previous drill was old, biggest change you're going to notice is the improvement with Lithium batteries. No more finding all the batteries are flat when you've not used for a month!

Another vote for Bosch, though I went for smaller batteries as I have problems with my hands so wanted something a little lighter. Screwfix have constant special offers, so sign up for their newsletter and wait until something suitable comes along.

I still find it amazing to be able to drill into brick with a battery drill. My 'big' drill stays in its box most of the time. My builder says you can even get SDS drills with batteries these days, but ££££.

Just remember - whichever you buy, you'll wish you'd gone for one model better in 12 months!
Post #579365 21st Nov 2016 8:43am
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Cupboard



Member Since: 21 Mar 2014
Location: Suffolk
Posts: 2971

United Kingdom 2011 Defender 110 Puma 2.4 HT Corris Grey
I've got on well with Bosch. At work the spend on cordless drills and batteries has dropped massively since I persuaded them that it would be better buying Bosch Blue than Ryobis every year.

The caveat is that Makita (which I'd also happily own) seem to have cheaper things like angle grinders if you're ever likely to want to have a cordless not-drill.
Post #579475 21st Nov 2016 4:56pm
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Happyoldgit



Member Since: 14 Sep 2007
Location: Norfolk
Posts: 3471

United Kingdom 2015 Defender 110 Puma 2.2 USW Corris Grey
Missus Ecstatic bought me a new cordless Makita a year or two back and I can find little to complain about it, it has survived a couple of drops onto hard surfaces from a fair height and battery life is better than the wampant wabbit I bought her around the same time Wink

....why my coat, too kind. Steve.
Owned numerous Land Rover vehicles of all shapes and sizes over the decades.
Current Defender: A non tarts hand-bagged Puma 110 XS USW.

[Insert something impressive here such as extensive list of previous Land Rovers or examples of your prestigeous and expensive items, trinkets, houses, bikes, vehicles etc]

http://forums.lr4x4.com

I used to be Miserable ...but now I'm ecstatic.
Post #579481 21st Nov 2016 5:35pm
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jrule



Member Since: 10 Aug 2015
Location: Hertfordshire
Posts: 302

United Kingdom 2000 Defender 90 Td5 CSW Oslo Blue
I have a Hitachi combi drill which has 5ah ion batteries. It has a huge amount of torque and very powerful. I had a dewalt before but the Hitachi has been brilliant and will buy another in the future. Have a look on FFX or Tool Britannia as I've found them to be the cheapest and delivered quickly.
Post #579483 21st Nov 2016 5:44pm
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Romadog



Member Since: 07 Jul 2011
Location: Powys
Posts: 1749

Makita Thumbs Up
Post #579489 21st Nov 2016 5:59pm
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JAY BOY



Member Since: 04 May 2010
Location: Not here
Posts: 1706

Wales 
You won't go wrong with any of the suggestions TBH if its for DIY use.
We use Dewalt and use them to destruction as they are on sites constantly, we have tried them all over the years and find the batteries are better with Dewalt than any of the others.
Post #579509 21st Nov 2016 7:52pm
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Rashers



Member Since: 21 Jun 2015
Location: Norfolk
Posts: 3498

United Kingdom 2014 Defender 110 Puma 2.2 USW Corris Grey
That is a good point Jay Boy. Battery life is almost everything. A decent drill and a flat battery or dead battery will only ever be good as a make shift hammer or door stop.

Now, I like Makita, but I acquired a small drill / driver combo (which wasn't cheap) with three other Guys at work. Both batteries failed after about 16 months which I was bitterly disappointed about (it was a really good combo set), but three years latter, the other three sets were still going strong. No battery failures. These were Li-Ion as well. I suppose sometimes you get lucky and then other times.... I was desperate for a replacement and couldn't get another from work so I went to Screwfix and got a £100 Ebauer. Half the price and not quite as refined as the Makita, but surprisingly good.

Saying this, I still rate Makita power tools.
Post #579534 21st Nov 2016 8:32pm
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Mountain_man



Member Since: 09 Dec 2011
Location: Right side of Offas Dyke
Posts: 756

Wales 
Used Makita for years without any real problems other than the batteries seem to deteriorate relatively quickly (plus my first grinder didn't last that long either). Fancied a change so have now switched to Metabo (drill, impact driver and grinder so far). There is a noticeable difference in the "quality" feel between them. Time will tell if the Metabo also lasts longer too.
Post #579558 21st Nov 2016 9:40pm
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Cupboard



Member Since: 21 Mar 2014
Location: Suffolk
Posts: 2971

United Kingdom 2011 Defender 110 Puma 2.4 HT Corris Grey
On batteries, please bear in mind that none of the tool manufacturers actually make the cells that store the pixies. They all buy in from the cell manufacturers, Sanyo et al.

They're not consistent with where they buy their cells from either, so take any marketing with a pinch of salt. AvE on YouTube has a lot of teardowns of tools and batteries.
Post #579570 21st Nov 2016 10:15pm
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mick



Member Since: 08 Feb 2010
Location: Yorkshire
Posts: 2109

England 2010 Defender 130 Puma 2.4 HCPU Rimini Red
blackwolf wrote:
Milwaukee M18 Fuel brushless.

Same here nice bit of kit and enough torque to run a tap through as well
Post #579582 21st Nov 2016 10:48pm
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blackwolf



Member Since: 03 Nov 2009
Location: South West England
Posts: 17378

United Kingdom 2007 Defender 110 Puma 2.4 DCPU Stornoway Grey
^^ The 1/2" drive cordless impact wrench from Milwaukee in the M18 FUEL reange is awesome.
Post #579639 22nd Nov 2016 10:22am
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Muddybigdog



Member Since: 11 Apr 2014
Location: Suffolk
Posts: 1017

United Kingdom 2007 Defender 90 Puma 2.4 XS CSW Zambezi Silver
Piling onto this thread - can anyone recommend good quality drill bits (metal, wood or masonry) as well, being a subtle as a Silverback Gorilla, I am constantly breaking drill bits, granted these normally are purchase from DIY stores. Jumped ship to reliability - Mitsubishi L200
Puma 90 XS - Sold
D3 - 2.7 S x2 (both Sold)
Freelander 2 HSE - Sold
Freelander 1 - Sold
Disco 2 - Sold
Post #579648 22nd Nov 2016 11:18am
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