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-   -   Milwaukee sawzall "The Hatchet" (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/289323-milwaukee-sawzall-hatchet.html)

miamicuse October 13th 09 03:40 AM

Milwaukee sawzall "The Hatchet"
 
I noticed that Milwaukee makes a compacted form of their sawzall which they
call the "Hatchet", with the handle being able to rotate in different angles
and takes up much less room then their normal sawzall. Link he



cm[_2_] October 13th 09 01:34 PM

Milwaukee sawzall "The Hatchet"
 
Too bad you missed the close out sale last year at HD. I bought one for
around $40.00! While not as powerful as their larger saws it is quite
capable. We use it in our remodeling business. It is great in tight spaces.
The lower amperage had not been a problem for us. Plenty of power.

cm


"MiamiCuse" wrote in message
...
I noticed that Milwaukee makes a compacted form of their sawzall which they
call the "Hatchet", with the handle being able to rotate in different
angles and takes up much less room then their normal sawzall. Link he





RicodJour October 13th 09 01:44 PM

Milwaukee sawzall "The Hatchet"
 
On Oct 13, 8:34*am, "cm" wrote:
Too bad you missed the close out sale last year at HD. I bought one for
around $40.00! While not as powerful as their larger saws it is quite
capable. We use it in our remodeling business. It is great in tight spaces.
The lower amperage had not been a problem for us. Plenty of power.


I would think it would be a great tool (especially at that price!) to
have for many remodeling jobs. The bigger reciprocating saws are
overkill in many instances. If you're a contractor and you do a lot
of demolition, no question, get something with some oomph. But if
you're not, the smaller units would probably suffice 90% of the time.

R


Oren[_2_] October 13th 09 07:25 PM

Milwaukee sawzall "The Hatchet"
 
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 05:34:35 -0700, "cm" wrote:

Too bad you missed the close out sale last year at HD. I bought one for
around $40.00! While not as powerful as their larger saws it is quite
capable. We use it in our remodeling business. It is great in tight spaces.
The lower amperage had not been a problem for us. Plenty of power.

cm


I bought one at HD during a clearance sale. Forget the price, but it
was a reduced price. I like that the 10' cord is removable (Quik-Loc),
the 1/4 turn blade latch, and adjustable foot. (no tools needed)

The ONLY fault I've found is the handle adjustment button is so close
to the thumb during work that you can hit it and the handle will slip
up (from pistol position to horizontal).

The button should be in another location to prevent this from
happening. Oh, well.

Great tool for what I use it for around the house.


miamicuse October 14th 09 03:09 AM

Milwaukee sawzall "The Hatchet"
 
$40? Are you kidding?


"cm" wrote in message
...
Too bad you missed the close out sale last year at HD. I bought one for
around $40.00! While not as powerful as their larger saws it is quite
capable. We use it in our remodeling business. It is great in tight
spaces. The lower amperage had not been a problem for us. Plenty of power.

cm


"MiamiCuse" wrote in message
...
I noticed that Milwaukee makes a compacted form of their sawzall which
they call the "Hatchet", with the handle being able to rotate in different
angles and takes up much less room then their normal sawzall. Link he







Oren[_2_] October 14th 09 03:28 AM

Milwaukee sawzall "The Hatchet"
 
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 22:09:32 -0400, "MiamiCuse"
wrote:

$40? Are you kidding?



You might find the Hatchet on model # 6524-20 (mine)

A newer version model # 6524-21 (new) changes things. Price what you
buy, I'm saying.

The 6524-21 will cost you more, but the 6524-20 does a fine job.


DT October 14th 09 03:18 PM

Milwaukee sawzall "The Hatchet"
 
In article ,
says...

I bought one at HD during a clearance sale. Forget the price, but it
was a reduced price. I like that the 10' cord is removable (Quik-Loc),
the 1/4 turn blade latch, and adjustable foot. (no tools needed)

The ONLY fault I've found is the handle adjustment button is so close
to the thumb during work that you can hit it and the handle will slip
up (from pistol position to horizontal).

The button should be in another location to prevent this from
happening. Oh, well.


I found the same thing. The release button is right under your thumb and the
release action is so smooth it is easy to move the handle.

--
Dennis



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