chrisb691
4th May 2011, 03:07 PM
I have owned various (cheap) battery drills over the years, and most of them have been utter crap. About 3 years ago, I bought a Triton plungedrill, and was very happy with it in respect to it's ability for perpendicular drilling. Apart from it's weight. it's major drawback for me was my usage pattern. I only use the things periodically, and everytime I picked it up it was flat. Last year one battery died, and the other now takes 7 hrs to change.
Just before Christmas, I was lucky enough to win $200 of Bunnings cards from a forum draw (thanks again ubeaut and donors), and in december bought a Ryobi 14.4vt lithium drill. I got around to looking at it in January, and was surprised to find that both batteries already had a usable charge in them. But I fully charged both batteries, and put the drill away.
Since then I have used the drill periodically, and, up to today, have not changed the battery. Today the battery finally went flat during a job, so I slipped the other one in and kept going, having put the first battery on charge. 3/4 of an hr later I had finished, and the first battery was ready to use again.
I do not know what sort of lifetime I will get from the batteries, and only time will tell. However, I am extremely happy with the drill's performance, and particularly how it is handling my type of irregular intermittent use. It is quite small, very light, and has more than enough grunt for what I use it for, which is generally odd jobs.
For others with the same usage patterns, I am quite happy to commend these drills to you.
Just before Christmas, I was lucky enough to win $200 of Bunnings cards from a forum draw (thanks again ubeaut and donors), and in december bought a Ryobi 14.4vt lithium drill. I got around to looking at it in January, and was surprised to find that both batteries already had a usable charge in them. But I fully charged both batteries, and put the drill away.
Since then I have used the drill periodically, and, up to today, have not changed the battery. Today the battery finally went flat during a job, so I slipped the other one in and kept going, having put the first battery on charge. 3/4 of an hr later I had finished, and the first battery was ready to use again.
I do not know what sort of lifetime I will get from the batteries, and only time will tell. However, I am extremely happy with the drill's performance, and particularly how it is handling my type of irregular intermittent use. It is quite small, very light, and has more than enough grunt for what I use it for, which is generally odd jobs.
For others with the same usage patterns, I am quite happy to commend these drills to you.