• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    3
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    After moving into a house, I decided to buy a small collection of power tools for household work. Batteries were a major consideration. I previously had a 12v DeWalt drill that served me well (still works too), and leaning on that, picked up a kit with a skilsaw, hammer drill, drill/driver, work light, oscillating tool, and a sawsall… all from the 20v line from DeWalt. Since then we added a hedge trimmer, string trimmer and electric mower, all using the same 20v system. We have a small fleet of batteries, which work with all of our tools.

    The risk is if DeWalt decides that they’re just going to abruptly stop selling the batteries between now and when we need replacements. If so, I’m sure we’ll have several expensive options to pick from in order to continue to have tools. I don’t think that will happen anytime soon, since all of the batteries we have are compatible with their flex volt thing, which they seem to be happily supporting across their entire ecosystem.

    The next tool I’m looking at buying is an impact wrench for some light automotive work; the only power tool type thing I wish that they had, which they currently do not, is a snow blower. If they ever release one that takes the flex volt or 20v “Max” batteries, I’m going to jump at that.

    Shoveling snow sucks.

    • @BilboBargains
      link
      21 year ago

      Feels like a snowblower would need a pretty meaty power source, 20V might struggle to cut the mustard. I ended up going with a corded one because I couldn’t face another noisy 2 stroke engine.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        11 year ago

        I’d be okay with them putting out a wired one, they’re not foreign to making wired appliances. We have a wired shopvac type thing from DeWalt. It works great.