Rain City
Crew Member
That's what I learned on! My dad's old hand lopper.Makita was always my top pick for a plug in saw. Or the good old black and decker 8-1/4" sawcat.
That's what I learned on! My dad's old hand lopper.Makita was always my top pick for a plug in saw. Or the good old black and decker 8-1/4" sawcat.
Would be great for repetitive work like removing and torquing lug nuts at say a tire shop. Use the app to set torque to 100 ft lb, leave the lug nut impact socket on it and just rattle away.Anyone try the dewalt Precision Wrench Bluetooth settings? Just a gimmick?
I’ll see your 40v and raise you my 60v flex volt dewalt stuff. It’s unreal!Great idea! I'm slowly going 40v makita on everything. Chainsaw, blower etc.
I think I’m going to try the Hilti 1/2” next. I have been getting pretty frustrated with the battery retention on my Milwaukee m18 guns.One other impact gun story:
We were de-tensioning some shoring rods at work, and it's just brutal. The shoring rods are 1.5" in diameter and use a coarse threaded nut which gets rusted, and covered in concrete. The nuts are installed to 40kips lockoff load, and a rough calculation puts this at 1000ft/lbs (and significantly more to break it loose). My site super kept snapping 5ft breaker bars trying to get the nuts off. Its a crap job - you are stuck in a 2ft wide overdig space between the foundation and the shoring face, trying to get these nuts loose.
Anyway, a Hilti high impact 3/4 was the tool for the job. The 1" milwaukee was our backup, but was too big and wouldn't fit between the foundation and the shoring face.
![]()
SIW 10-22 ¾” high-torque cordless impact wrench - Impact drivers and wrenches - Hilti Canada
Ultimate-class, high-torque cordless impact wrench with ¾” anvil and friction ring for heavy bolting and anchoringwww.hilti.ca
Our site guys like Hilti because the rep is close and the service is great - and we are really hard on our tools. We are a forming company, so naturally we are buying a lot from Hilti anyway. For personal tools, I see a gradual transition from Makita to Milwaukee or Dewalt. Depends on the trade.I think I’m going to try the Hilti 1/2” next. I have been getting pretty frustrated with the battery retention on my Milwaukee m18 guns.
They are great tools, don’t get me wrong, but perhaps I’m too hard them lol.
I wish tire shops used something like this. I re-check the torque on my lugs after getting tires replaced (based on experience) - They are always way too tight. Aluminum wheels are typically around 85ft/lbs, and sometimes I'm practically standing on the breaker bar to get the lugs loose.Would be great for repetitive work like removing and torquing lug nuts at say a tire shop. Use the app to set torque to 100 ft lb, leave the lug nut impact socket on it and just rattle away.
For homeowner use, you want versatile not repetitive. Wouldn't see much point in it then.
My neighbour is a bus mechanic at Coast Mtn bus co, says they check lug nut torque on ALL in-service buses EVERY day (wow!). They use Milwaukee calibrated impact guns for this.I wish tire shops used something like this. I re-check the torque on my lugs after getting tires replaced (based on experience) - They are always way too tight. Aluminum wheels are typically around 85ft/lbs, and sometimes I'm practically standing on the breaker bar to get the lugs loose.
I've never seen a tire shop use a torque wrench - they just blast away.
Dewalt are made in Mexico, and yes they don’t hold up as good as MilwaukeeI started with dewalt grease gun was awesome so I bought a drill it failed bought an impact 1/2 inch it failed now I only use Milwaukee
Made in America quality and good warranty
Dewalt is made in china and elsewhere to keep cost down I find quality suffers too
The ones I own, several are all made in mexicoWhile the company is headquartered in the United States, Dewalt tools are manufactured in several countries worldwide. The company has factories in Mexico, Brazil, the United Kingdom, and China. This distributed manufacturing model allows Dewalt to keep production costs down
The m18 compressors is well worth the money, mine gets a fair amount of use.Nice. I've been thinking about the compressor for a while. Like you, I've got a portable Vac and mid-torque impact and share batteries.
I keep one of those crappy 12v plug-in tire compressors in the truck (maybe $20 from CT, and sound like a jackhammer). Not great, but they get the job done in a pinch. At home I've got a nice quiet little 2hp Makita.
Can't quite justify the M18 compressor....yet.
It's been a good switch. I would have stuck with makita but my batteries were smaller and old, and I didn't want them to hold me back after buying a $300+ tool. The mid-torque dewalt tackled the rusted trailer brakes with no problem, and I didn't have any of the 16 tires in our caravan of summer travel blowout. I decided mid-trip to buy a dewalt tire inflator to get 80lb psi in the tires for the F350, which no gas station compressors seem to be able to handle, outside of Costco in the USA, the Makita tire inflator is just as good on reviews.Just saw this thread Kaelc...I happen to have the exact Makita machine you mentioned. DTW1002 from KMS. Its a beast. Prior to that I was using impact drivers with adapters, and predictably I killed two of them expecting too much. The first did survive 10 years of abuse, so no disappointment. I stuck with Makita because I have a fleet of batteries. I do agree with the folks who said that there are levels of Makita build quality / durability ...which is tricky to figure out at first. Generally...the price tells the story.
Anyway, your idea of carrying a strong impact wrench (not impact driver) in the vehicle while trailering is really what got my attention. Seems obvious and smart, but I never thought of it!
How's the Dewalt a few months later?