mayo ,
@mayo@lemmy.world avatar

Doesn’t matter too much to me. One is Dewalt and the other Ryobi. I like them both but I prefer yellow over green. The Ryobi has a large battery that lasts a very long time. The Dewalt has better ergonomics and is older, the batteries are gone (but that’s the benefit of having two drills/four batteries). I’ve dropped the Dewalt a bunch. The Ryobi is quieter and smoother torque at variable speeds.

I’ve eyed Festool for their sanders and dust collection, but soo expensive I don’t think I could buy them unless I’m getting paid for my work.

ahhhuevo ,

Milwaukee & Ryobi - start with Ryobi unless it completely sucks then upgrade down the road if I use it alot or the Ryobi eats it

themeltingclock ,

I got a “new homeowners” tool kit from Ryobi, so I have my light duty tools there (oscillating saw, drill, impact driver, sawzall.)

My heavy duty stuff is Makita - impact wrench, hammer drill, etc.

cave_sword_vendor ,

I picked up that same Ryobi starter kit when I bought my house. I know they aren’t the top of the line, but it’s served me well for light duty household projects.

JackBinimbul ,

Ryobi, cuz I’m broke.

AnAnxiousCorgi ,
@AnAnxiousCorgi@lemmy.reddeth.com avatar

Also Ryobi, when I was younger I was gifted/handed down a few tools and have just been in their battery ecosystem ever since.

I've had fairly good luck with them, don't recall any significant tool failures, but I can't say I'd especially recommend them.

JackBinimbul ,

I guess it’s an endorsement when no one really has anything bad to say about them. We all just go “meh, there are better options if you’ve got the cash”.

XbSuper ,

Recently inherited my dad’s collection. It’s a mix of ryobi, rigid, Milwaukee, and dewalt (along with a few miscellaneous brands I don’t remember). The Milwaukee tool cabinet and work bench are probably my favourite pieces (followed closely by the Ridgid radial arm saw)

sleepdrifter ,

My dad bought me a Kobalt Power drill that was on sale with a battery over a decade ago, and since I already had the battery I just kept buying Kobalt. Their power tools are solid but I’ve definitely busted a few bits

TheSacredOne ,

RYOBI: Recommend You Other Brands Instead (especially applies their gas stuff which has high failure rates, the cordless handhelds are decent for household and even light commercial use though)

Hardeehar ,

Basically whatever my dad lets me steal for a few weeks. From newer and cheaper black and decker analogs to old old DeWalt tools.

Alot of non electric tools have no names for me to appreciate anymore. Might even be pass me downs from my grandfather.

They all work perfectly well for most home DIY stuff.

cassetti ,

My father always insisted on buying me useful tools for holidays so I'd have a large tool chest as I grew up. Back as a young teen my father bought me a ryobi one+ 18v set of power tools (Power drill, flashlight, and circular saw). I've continued to add on to that set for the past 25 years, even upgrading the batteries to nicer lithium battery packs. But I still have those original ryobi tools my father bought me all those years ago.

Now I've recently started expanding my lawn care powertool collection of Ryobi 40v tools - leafblower, chainsaw, trimmer, and now lawn mower. I know Ryobi isn't exactly "pro grade" but they work well enough for my needs

DrrringBat ,

The 40v mower has been great to me so far. It’s quiet and managed to do a nice job even when my lawn was fairly wet.

cassetti ,

I bought a really nice gas mower a few years back and figured it would last me a long time. Had it professionally tuned up about a year ago. Couldn't get it started for the life of me (dirty carb as I later discovered).

So I went on the local classifieds and scooped up a used-twice (they gave up and hired a lawn company lol) 40v push mower with the 6-amp battery and charger. Mower still looked brand new. it takes up such little space when folded up - we love it. Sometimes I can't tell if it's running when wearing my ANC earbuds while mowing lol

But I'm so done with small-engine gas powered lawn care equipment. It's dirty, messy, heavy, and unreliable. My electric lawn tools have been so much more reliable and comfortable.

I_AnoN_I ,

Milwaukee but only Because I am an electrician. Their tools are a little over kill for diy stuff. At least their fuel line is anyway

Karmanj ,

Milwaukee 18Volt cordless for power tools.

MinustheMuse ,

I mostly do fix ups around the house, and I make furniture in my spare time. For Power Tools I use Metabo and have for the past 5 years including some of the old Hitachi stuff. My three of my old Hitachi batteries failed and Metabo HPT replaced them no questions asked not even a receipt.

As for woodworking equipment I stick to Delta, and Grizzly. Though I did pick up a helical head Wen planer after chasing down multiple reviews. 10/10 that thing just works.

Magister ,
@Magister@lemmy.world avatar

Milwaukee 12V is ok for me, to tinker in the house

EncryptKeeper ,

Ryobi. I have a bunch of 18v tools and a 40v lawn mower and they’ve all been great. I could afford better I suppose but so far I haven’t had any reason to switch.

Nobsi ,
@Nobsi@feddit.de avatar

Mostly festool with the occasional bosch blue in between. Was mostly bosch blue beforehand. I have no access to milwaukee and makita looks weird. Is ryobi bosch green/black and decker ish quality?

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • [email protected]
  • All magazines