Yander
Veteran Member
Lowes has these on sale right now $250. With 2.5ah battery it weights in at 11.8lbs. I also have the weed eater and blower by same company. Have only used the weed eater so far, it is a beast.
Yes, but it is planned feature-itis. They'll make 100V tools as soon as 80V sales peak.I'm my experience, the lower voltage saws, have progressively lower speed. Design or not, that's just a fact. 40v were slower than 60v and the 80v is by far the fastest of the electric saws I've used. The 40v saws I've used you can almost see the teeth moving![]()
I have used EGo 16" and 18" saws. The 18" is significantly more powerful than the 16".Lowes has these on sale right now $250. With 2.5ah battery it weights in at 11.8lbs. I also have the weed eater and blower by same company. Have only used the weed eater so far, it is a beast.
I had a couple batteries that I got to take a charge by plugging them in to the charger for a short time - like 5 seconds - then unplugging them, repeat about 10 times; during that initial few seconds the battery is being charged and checked, so the charger will charge a "too low" battery, but if you leave one of these goner batteries in the battery doesn't have enough charge after the initial period and the charger will say "nope". By unplugging it before then, then plug it back in, the charger resets and tries again, so you gradually get a minute or so of charge which may be enough to put you over the minimum to charge. In my case, 2 out of 3 batteries "came back to life" this way. The third? still dead.Also, have you guys tried this.... I had a contractor/farmer in his sixties tell me about this. He said he does it all the time. Uses a fully charged car battery. But take the battery out of the car. Don't do it still hooked up to the car. I haven't tried it yet but I have two Kobalt batteries that died an early death, I'm going to try it on.
Higher voltage = lower current.Yes, but it is planned feature-itis. They'll make 100V tools as soon as 80V sales peak.
Voltage is not difficult to make. I don't respect brands such as Greenworks, Worx, and others who create deliberate pricing tiers based on voltage. Heaps of respect for EGo who decided everything will be 56V and makes batteries of different capacities but compatible with every EGo tool.
DeWalt did good for a while sticking with 20V but then felt forced to create more-premium tools at 60V, and budget tools at 12V. Don't doubt there are real engineering advantages to 60V vs 20V, but have you seen the holes their premium 20V drill will make?
I had a couple batteries that I got to take a charge by plugging them in to the charger for a short time - like 5 seconds - then unplugging them, repeat about 10 times; during that initial few seconds the battery is being charged and checked, so the charger will charge a "too low" battery, but if you leave one of these goner batteries in the battery doesn't have enough charge after the initial period and the charger will say "nope". By unplugging it before then, then plug it back in, the charger resets and tries again, so you gradually get a minute or so of charge which may be enough to put you over the minimum to charge. In my case, 2 out of 3 batteries "came back to life" this way. The third? still dead.
By using another battery, you may be able to get it from lower (maybe I just wasn't patient enough), but it's definitely dangerous as these batteries can catch fire if mis-charged, and a direct line from eg a car battery is definitely mischarging.
Changing the voltage on a DC motor will general change the speed of that particular motor, but that is not all there is to it. They may have geared it up or used a different winding on the motor to achieve a different speed.I'm my experience, the lower voltage saws, have progressively lower speed. Design or not, that's just a fact. 40v were slower than 60v and the 80v is by far the fastest of the electric saws I've used. The 40v saws I've used you can almost see the teeth moving![]()