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

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.

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

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.

jwmida ,

Contractor here. DeWalt 20v is my main cordless brand. I’ve beat the shit out of them for years. Never have given me problems, plus I’ve moved over my lawn care tools to the 20v offerings because I’ve got more batteries than I know what to do with . I migrated over from the 18v post battery lineup, which was disappointing that DeWalt didn’t support their 18v line anymore. DeWalt 12v line is a major letdown; no real tools outside of a couple of drill/driver atomics. I do have a couple of 60v DeWalt tools, but we’ll see if DeWalt continues to support that class.

I did buy into the Milwaukee 12v setup, because sometimes I only need a light duty drill/impact and their 12v line has a lot of nice options for lighter duty cordless tools.

Corded, I have no brand loyalty and buy the best tool for the money (no festool because I don’t have a money tree in my backyard). Bosch, Makita, DeWalt, Milwaukee, etc… I do a little bit of research and buy the best rated tool. I never buy anything that has moving parts from harbor freight. Anything I do buy there I consider a ‘disposable’ tool and can’t depend on it to do it’s job.

My tools make me money, and I try to treat them well, so when I need them I can count on them to work.

Dippy ,

+1 to dewalt. Stuff gets thrown around all the time, keeps right on going. More expensive than others but it just keeps working

MaxMouseOCX ,

I’m on the yellow ray-gun stuff too, I’ve only ever managed to burn a drill armature out (but then I was using a 20mm carbide hole saw on 10mm steel plate so it’s my own fault), found a replacement armature for £26 and it was easy to fit.

I also have the 9Ah monster dewalt battery and their usb topper, absolute life saver if you’re on a job site, or going camping.

I heard they’ve released an even bigger one which I’m yet to look at, and they have a power station thing that looks cool as hell.

Splyntre ,
@Splyntre@lemmy.world avatar

Same to almost all of this. My 20v dewalt line has heald up quite well with some pretty heavy usage.

Air tools have been Bostich or porter cable though truth be told I’ve had issue with porter cable. My new framing gun is an off brand Fram Amazon. It was on Hella sale and I needed one quick. It replaced a porter cable and has surprisingly held up really well so far.

I also have a light line but unlike yours I’m in the Makita 12v camp. Have a of their lighter smaller 12v tools and love them. Truthfully I’d be tempted to go all Makita if I wasn’t so heavily invested in dewalt but I don’t really have any dewalt complaints.

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?

Planza ,

Makita

holycrapwtfatheism ,

Power tools used to be Ryobi 18v, recently upgraded to Flex tools. They're probably overkill for most home level users but I do a lot of remodel work. Grizzly for most of my woodworking power tools. Hodgepodge for things like sockets/screwdrivers etc.

BilboBargains ,

Bosch blue. They have moved closer to the centre ground in recent years, to compete with cheap Chinese tools but still very solid and good value. I have a Bosch jigsaw from the 90s that I recently repaired with genuine OEM parts.

Smokeless7048 ,

i decided to go full prosumer, and go Dewalt.

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”.

baduntz ,

Being in Europe, Parkside from LIDL.

Their stuff is really good and the price is excellent.

They also have a performance line a bit more expensive but really good for professional usage

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