EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
I find that the biggest problem with small corded drill is the in the keyless chuck system. They all seem to be junk. I have a DeWalt and a Bosch that I'm disapointed in. Neither would get really tight, and the DeWalt just froze up on me. I can't even get it to loosen up with a large pipe wrench and the vise to hold it in. The Bosch always needs retightening.
I bought a DeWalt paddle drill about ten years ago for mixing mortar and concrete in five gallon buckets for small jobs. It's wore out several mixing paddles and more buckets then I can remember. It's been a very good drill. It has a chuck, so I can get it good and tight, and it's geared for mixing.
For just about everything else, I rely on my cordless Makita 18v drill. I mix paint with it all the time and us it for almost all of my drilling except when it's really tight, then I use a spade bit in my Makita 18v impact driver. It's mostly for screws, and it isn't very smooth when drilling holes, but its so much shorter then the drill that I can get it into spaces nothing else will fit.
My next corded drill will probably be a Makita. I have a few Milwaukee products and the ones that last are super heavy, the others failed quickly. I rate Milwaukee about the same as DeWalt. OK for home handyman use, and cheapy tools for employees on a crew, but not something I want to rely to make a living.
I bought a DeWalt paddle drill about ten years ago for mixing mortar and concrete in five gallon buckets for small jobs. It's wore out several mixing paddles and more buckets then I can remember. It's been a very good drill. It has a chuck, so I can get it good and tight, and it's geared for mixing.
For just about everything else, I rely on my cordless Makita 18v drill. I mix paint with it all the time and us it for almost all of my drilling except when it's really tight, then I use a spade bit in my Makita 18v impact driver. It's mostly for screws, and it isn't very smooth when drilling holes, but its so much shorter then the drill that I can get it into spaces nothing else will fit.
My next corded drill will probably be a Makita. I have a few Milwaukee products and the ones that last are super heavy, the others failed quickly. I rate Milwaukee about the same as DeWalt. OK for home handyman use, and cheapy tools for employees on a crew, but not something I want to rely to make a living.