M akita or RYOBI
"Lurch" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 3 Mar 2004 14:18:31 -0000, in uk.d-i-y "IMM"
strung together this:
I've just had 2 Makita drills repaired. An ageing HR2410 which had
new
seals, chuck bearings and a general service. Total cost was £12. The
other was a 8443D, a new motor, bearings and general service was
just
short of £35.
Was that inc labour? £35?
All including labour, vat, materials. All in prices quoted.
A good decent drill/driver can be had now for
£50-60 inc 2 or 3 year guarantees.
My Makita battery drill was £235, I've seen them for £200 recently.
The £50-60 drills won't do what my Makita can.
It can! The makita will last longer with day to day pro use, that's all.
Now you're just talking ******** again.
Again? I never talk ******** at all. What can the Makita do that is so
magic?
The total cost of the two drills was about £370.
Which will be cheaper now, and the current equiv will most liklely be
a
far,
far less than £370. Battery drill prices have tumbled along with
SDS's.
Still about £250-300 though for like for like drills.
A DIYer paying over £20 for battery drill is madness. Even few pros
don't
pay that these days.
Define 'pro'.
Please.
I have a cheap battery drill, cost a tenner. I's ok for use as a
screwdriver but there is nowhere near enough power to do even a
fraction of what my Makita can.
Here they go again. They compare the cheapest and nastiest and attempt to
pass this off as the norm.
I suggest you actually post when you
have a vague understanding of what you're drivelling on about.
Another nutter who thinks price is the only criteria of quality and
performance. And certainly telling himself lies to give himself a warm
feeling to justify silly prices paid.
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