Texas_Signmaker
Very Active Signmaker
Seems to be OK. I did three passes and was able to keep kind of straight.
Tex that dinky thing looks like something your wife would use to build a bird house.Seems to be OK. I did three passes and was able to keep kind of straight.
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I have that same router - but different shoes.Seems to be OK. I did three passes and was able to keep kind of straight.
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Real tools have cords. This battery crap is great for convenience on little nonsense. We re-deck a lot of semi trailers, those cordless things, even with the fat batteries, dont hold up. I have a worm gear saw, it's backwards handed and it cuts anything, we've beat the shit out of it for years, ripping thick hardwood, leave it out in the rain whatever and it's still good. I have to replace my battery crap once every other year at best. I also have a battery powered trim router, it's fine for squaring up Formica or little stuff but after a few tasks it's done. My corded router will cut my house in half and be ready to go for the next job as soon as you're ready.I'm more curious how fast it eats batteries. I have a stupid f*cking dewalt recip saw that drains the big batteries in a couple of minutes, the plug in version of this trim router will leap out of your hands if you let it when you fire it up...
Agreed, corded hand drills are not for the limp-wristed fellasYou're not ripping 40' lengths of 2" oak with a battery saw that's for sure, even my big saw doesn't like it. I have a cordless and a corded sawzall, the cordless is good for a few cuts but I tend to get the corded one so I'm not stuck in the air halfway through a cut when the battery gives out. I do like a battery powered drill for screws because it stops when you let go. Same goes for drilling in tight spots, an electric one will break your hand if it binds up in the wrong spot.
You're not ripping 40' lengths of 2" oak with a battery saw that's for sure, even my big saw doesn't like it. I have a cordless and a corded sawzall, the cordless is good for a few cuts but I tend to get the corded one so I'm not stuck in the air halfway through a cut when the battery gives out. I do like a battery powered drill for screws because it stops when you let go. Same goes for drilling in tight spots, an electric one will break your hand if it binds up in the wrong spot
Sure but I have to do it more than once. Cordless isn't getting it doneEvery major cordless tool manufacturer has a circular saw that will easily rip anything you throw at it - including oak.
For pretty much any corded tool, there's a cordless version that performs as well as, or usually better, than the corded version. Almost all tools now are brushless and produce more torque/speed/performance than brushed tools.
The little cordless router Texas_Signmaker bought is small but it's a beast. Once he was set up, he probably cut that groove in less than a minute.
Sure but I have to do it more than once. Cordless isn't getting it done
It's faster, pop a chalk line, slide it off the edge of the trailer and make the run. It's not Amish furniture.Just curious, why are you ripping multiple 40' lengths of oak with a circular saw and not a table saw?