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Which cordless drill/driver to get?
I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be
24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. -- Chris Melluish |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Wed, 16 Nov 2005 23:43:05 +0000 (UTC), "Chris Melluish"
wrote: I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be 24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. What do you want to do with it, Chris? Really to get a quality cordless drill, you need to be thinking of something in excess of £100. It is better to go for a lower voltage quality make rather than a higher voltage cheap one. You have just seen a case of what happens. Cheap batteries are used and they are just not up to the job. At the £50 price point, a corded drill is going to be more effective - so one strategy is to go for a corded drill for the heavier work and a smaller cordless for when you need it. -- ..andy |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Chris Melluish" wrote in message ... I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be 24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. Screwfix do a 12v Ryobi with two batteries. Only down side is 3 hours charge time. They also do a 18V for £60 if you can stretch again only 3 hr charge. Wickes are worth a look as they are having a sale. £72 gets you a pro quality 2 battery 15.5 v drill/hammer 2 hr charge. I see Wickes now sell the Kress drill (rebadged Wickes) with the angle chuck attachment for £95. Wickes also have a DIY range (in black). Some decent models amongst them. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message ... On Wed, 16 Nov 2005 23:43:05 +0000 (UTC), "Chris Melluish" wrote: I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be 24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. What do you want to do with it, Chris? Really to get a quality cordless drill, you need to be thinking of something in excess of £100. Matt, not so. It just gave the Wickes models at under £100. I suppose they don't register on your power tool radar because they rebaged tools from branded makes. Got to have the designer label man. I bet you wear a Rolex watch as well. Do you have a crocodile on your shirts as well? |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Doctor Drivel" wrote in message reenews.net... "Chris Melluish" wrote in message ... I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be 24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. Screwfix do a 12v Ryobi with two batteries. Only down side is 3 hours charge time. They also do a 18V for £60 if you can stretch again only 3 hr charge. Wickes are worth a look as they are having a sale. £72 gets you a pro quality 2 battery 15.5 v drill/hammer 2 hr charge. I see Wickes now sell the Kress drill (rebadged Wickes) with the angle chuck attachment for £95. Wickes also have a DIY range (in black). Some decent models amongst them. depends on what you are drilling as I have a cheap 18v job from B&Q and its ok for most jobs but forget concrete just to slow |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Wed, 16 Nov 2005 23:43:05 +0000 (UTC), "Chris Melluish"
wrote: I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be 24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. I got the PProo - it was crap, I took it back, 7 hour recharge, no overcharge protection, drilled about 2 holes before needing a recharge. I then went for the DeWalt 18v Hammer Drill driver, with dual barreries. I got it on import from the US, at arround 160 quid all in. I leave one battery in the charger, one on the drill. I bolted down my roof with it, which uses 170mmx10mm coach screws. I am very very pleased with it - I only wish it would brew up as well. Rick |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
In article ews.net,
Doctor Drivel wrote: Really to get a quality cordless drill, you need to be thinking of something in excess of £100. Matt, not so. It just gave the Wickes models at under £100. Can anyone translate Zog? -- *Sorry, I don't date outside my species. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:13:39 -0000, "Doctor Drivel"
wrote: "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message .. . On Wed, 16 Nov 2005 23:43:05 +0000 (UTC), "Chris Melluish" wrote: I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be 24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. What do you want to do with it, Chris? Really to get a quality cordless drill, you need to be thinking of something in excess of £100. Matt, not so. It just gave the Wickes models at under £100. You'd better discuss that with Matt. I was talking about quality..... -- ..andy |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message ... On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:13:39 -0000, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message .. . On Wed, 16 Nov 2005 23:43:05 +0000 (UTC), "Chris Melluish" wrote: I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be 24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. What do you want to do with it, Chris? Really to get a quality cordless drill, you need to be thinking of something in excess of £100. Matt, not so. I just gave the Wickes models at under £100. You'd better discuss that with Matt. I was talking about quality..... Matt you were not on about quality, you were on about brand labels. I am on about quality. Matt just look at the Kress detachable angle chuck drill in Wickes, a quality item indeed.. You can have 5 of those for a Festool. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 15:17:00 -0000, "Doctor Drivel"
wrote: "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message .. . On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:13:39 -0000, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message .. . On Wed, 16 Nov 2005 23:43:05 +0000 (UTC), "Chris Melluish" wrote: I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be 24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. What do you want to do with it, Chris? Really to get a quality cordless drill, you need to be thinking of something in excess of £100. Matt, not so. I just gave the Wickes models at under £100. You'd better discuss that with Matt. I was talking about quality..... Matt you were not on about quality, you were on about brand labels. I don't know about Matt, but if you look back at what I said, product names weren't mentioned at all until you talked about Wickes. I am on about quality. You're certainly on something. Matt just look at the Kress detachable angle chuck drill in Wickes, a quality item indeed.. You can have 5 of those for a Festool. .... and this has what relevance exactly? -- ..andy |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message ... On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 15:17:00 -0000, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message .. . On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:13:39 -0000, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message .. . On Wed, 16 Nov 2005 23:43:05 +0000 (UTC), "Chris Melluish" wrote: I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be 24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. What do you want to do with it, Chris? Really to get a quality cordless drill, you need to be thinking of something in excess of £100. Matt, not so. I just gave the Wickes models at under £100. You'd better discuss that with Matt. I was talking about quality..... Matt you were not on about quality, you were on about brand labels. I don't know about Matt, but if you look back at what I said, product names weren't mentioned at all until you talked about Wickes. The Wickes 15.6v drill is one of these one battery fits all setup. Interchangeable batteries amongst about 6 different tools. So, you can build up the set as time goes on. I am on about quality. You're certainly on something. Quality Matt, quality, that is what I am about. Matt just look at the Kress detachable angle chuck drill in Wickes, a quality item indeed.. You can have 5 of those for a Festool. ... and this has what relevance exactly? The Wickes/Kress is a "class" act. Made in Switzerland, two 2.0 Ah Japanese batteries and an angle chuck attachment which swivels and locks to any position and lift a collar and the chucks just slip off...drills, driver heads and bits can be fitted directly into the drill with no chucks fitted... for less than £100 at the mo'. Look at a DeWalt angle drill and it is £166 alone. The Kress/Wickes feels good too. This is two drills in a high quality product. No contest. About time this drill was sold here. See Matt, you should have asked me first. http://www.kress-elektrik.de/en/prod...?categorie=443 |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 17:18:09 -0000, "Doctor Drivel"
wrote: The Wickes 15.6v drill is one of these one battery fits all setup. Interchangeable batteries amongst about 6 different tools. So, you can build up the set as time goes on. Until they switch suppliers.... The Wickes/Kress is a "class" act. Made in Switzerland, made in a variety of places. I've checked. two 2.0 Ah Japanese batteries and an angle chuck attachment which swivels and locks to any position and lift a collar and the chucks just slip off...drills, driver heads and bits can be fitted directly into the drill with no chucks fitted... for less than £100 at the mo'. Look at a DeWalt angle drill and it is £166 alone. The Kress/Wickes feels good too. This is two drills in a high quality product. No contest. About time this drill was sold here. I'm sure it will be as soon as there is a taker. Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. See Matt, you should have asked me first. http://www.kress-elektrik.de/en/prod...?categorie=443 You'd better ask Matt about that. -- ..andy |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message ... On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 17:18:09 -0000, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: The Wickes 15.6v drill is one of these one battery fits all setup. Interchangeable batteries amongst about 6 different tools. So, you can build up the set as time goes on. Until they switch suppliers.... The the OP. Wickes do a DIY 15.6v drill for £40 that may fitt his bill. 2 yr guarantee. The Wickes/Kress is a "class" act. Made in Switzerland, made in a variety of places. I've checked. I have checked and this drill is made In Switzerland by Kress. two 2.0 Ah Japanese batteries and an angle chuck attachment which swivels and locks to any position and lift a collar and the chucks just slip off...drills, driver heads and bits can be fitted directly into the drill with no chucks fitted... for less than £100 at the mo'. Look at a DeWalt angle drill and it is £166 alone. The Kress/Wickes feels good too. This is two drills in a high quality product. No contest. About time this drill was sold here. Also a drill bit or driver bit can be inserted right into the angle attachment without using a lengthy chuck, with the ability to get in tighter than a DeWalt or Makita angle drill. A quality dual purpose product. Look at the Kress URL I gave and enlarge the piccs of it, the breakdown shows it all with the driver bits in. Wickes are not selling it properly that is clear, as most will just think it is a normal drill/driver and not a versatile angle drill as well. If they did this would take off, even at £130, its normal selling price. If it fails it is because the seller doesn't appreciate its qualities and doesn't sell it on them. The punter clearly has to know what it can do. I'm sure it will be as soon as there is a taker. Go to any large Wickes and they are display. Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. Wickes shift some power tools. They are a national chain, who are now owned by TP, so rebadged Kresses may be seen in their stores, probably at inflated prices Kress probably can only make so many products. Kress are a medium sized quality maker who do quite a bit of R&D. They have to, to survive in this market. They patented the quick change chuck system on this drill. This is a drill I have always admired having seen them in Germany. See Matt, you should have asked me first. http://www.kress-elektrik.de/en/prod...?categorie=443 You'd better ask Matt about that. Well Matt as I said, you should have asked me. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
Andy Hall wrote:
Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. What has this got to do with the quality of the product? They may have restricted their route to market in the UK for a number of reasons. Lack of marketing budget, Wickes being the only taker and demanding an exclusive deal, the link with TP which makes the combined Wickes/Travis Perkins potential huge, limited production capacity, whatever. You appear to judge quality only on label & price. Are the Swiss known as low quality producers like we assume the Chinese must be? Dave |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"david lang" wrote in message . uk... Andy Hall wrote: Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. What has this got to do with the quality of the product? They may have restricted their route to market in the UK for a number of reasons. Lack of marketing budget, Wickes being the only taker and demanding an exclusive deal, the link with TP which makes the combined Wickes/Travis Perkins potential huge, limited production capacity, whatever. You appear to judge quality only on label & price. Are the Swiss known as low quality producers like we assume the Chinese must be? Kress make 700,000 tools a year. Small by the millions produced by the big names, which is many millions. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 23:56:31 GMT, "david lang"
wrote: Andy Hall wrote: Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. What has this got to do with the quality of the product? I didn't say that it did have anything to do with the *quality* of the product; only that if it is so good (i.e. attractive to somebody buying) then why have they restricted themselves? They may have restricted their route to market in the UK for a number of reasons. Lack of marketing budget, Wickes being the only taker and demanding an exclusive deal, the link with TP which makes the combined Wickes/Travis Perkins potential huge, limited production capacity, whatever. There is an obvious inconsistency. In every other country, bar the UK, they are selling their products with their own label through subsidiaries and distributors. The UK isn't listed. It's very odd to do a private label deal that excludes selling one's own product under one's own label. People make strange business decisions sometimes. You appear to judge quality only on label & price. Hardly. I go to a great deal of trouble when looking at and choosing tools. See thread on visit to Axminster exhibition as one example. Some manufacturers make consistently good tools of a given type - e.g. Makita on drills, Metabo on sanders and so on. Others have one-hit wonders in a sea of mediochrity, and yet others have the occasional miss in a generally good stable of products. Are the Swiss known as low quality producers like we assume the Chinese must be? I use origin as only one factor - it's not always reliable in any direction. It's rather stupid to suggest that because something is Swiss that it's bound to be good, or Chinese and bound to be bad. What is important, is the product itself, its design and quality, accuracy, ergonomics, proper service and spares. -- ..andy |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message ... On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 23:56:31 GMT, "david lang" wrote: Andy Hall wrote: Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. What has this got to do with the quality of the product? I didn't say that it did have anything to do with the *quality* of the product; only that if it is so good (i.e. attractive to somebody buying) then why have they restricted themselves? They may have restricted their route to market in the UK for a number of reasons. Lack of marketing budget, Wickes being the only taker and demanding an exclusive deal, the link with TP which makes the combined Wickes/Travis Perkins potential huge, limited production capacity, whatever. There is an obvious inconsistency. In every other country, bar the UK, they are selling their products with their own label through subsidiaries and distributors. The UK isn't listed. Matt, it was on on their German site and the name Wickes came up I see the USA is not listed yet Kress rebadge Porter Cable tools over there. It's very odd to do a private label deal that excludes selling one's own product under one's own label. People make strange business decisions sometimes. They may be locked in to a long contract wit Wickes, and it is in their interest to keep it that way. They did sell under Kress until BMJ Power, their agent, went bust. They were in all major towns and cities. You appear to judge quality only on label & price. Hardly. Matt, you do. I go to a great deal of trouble when looking at and choosing tools. You don't you buy the most expensive with a designer label. See thread on visit to Axminster exhibition as one example. Some manufacturers make consistently good tools of a given type - e.g. Makita on drills, One poster here had to send a Makita back. Metabo on sanders and so on. Others have one-hit wonders in a sea of mediochrity, and yet others have the occasional miss in a generally good stable of products. Are the Swiss known as low quality producers like we assume the Chinese must be? I use origin as only one factor Matt, you don't. - it's not always reliable in any direction. It's rather stupid to suggest that because something is Swiss that it's bound to be good, or Chinese and bound to be bad. What is important, is the product itself, its design and quality, accuracy, ergonomics, proper service and spares. Why do you keep slagging Chinese products? |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
In message ,
[big big snip - sorry to all] In the time it takes you two boys to argue about it, most other people would have done it, wore it out, bought another, painted it, oiled it, greased it, mixed it and finished it. Meanwhile you two are still standing at the checkout arguing about whether to pay by switch or delta. Woo bloody hoo. Someone |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
Andy Hall wrote: On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 23:56:31 GMT, "david lang" wrote: Andy Hall wrote: Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. What has this got to do with the quality of the product? I didn't say that it did have anything to do with the *quality* of the product; only that if it is so good (i.e. attractive to somebody buying) then why have they restricted themselves? They may have restricted their route to market in the UK for a number of reasons. Lack of marketing budget, Wickes being the only taker and demanding an exclusive deal, the link with TP which makes the combined Wickes/Travis Perkins potential huge, limited production capacity, whatever. There is an obvious inconsistency. In every other country, bar the UK, they are selling their products with their own label through subsidiaries and distributors. The UK isn't listed. It's very odd to do a private label deal that excludes selling one's own product under one's own label. They do sell under the Kress badge as well in Wickes stores. It's too late in the day for me to write a whole essay but without denying that the DeWalts and Makitas of this world do make good products a lot of the pricing is about marketing - price discrimination and knowing your target buyers - not about the quality. That's why I don't write off Ryobi stuff because the parent company want to stick it in some marketing bracket. Many tools contain the same quality of components because it just isnt economical to create varying levels of them. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
|
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
david lang wrote:
You appear to judge quality only on label & price. Are the Swiss known as low quality producers like we assume the Chinese must be? Do we assume the Chinese produce all low quality stuff? Some of it might be very good, surely? |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
Andy Hall wrote:
It's very odd to do a private label deal that excludes selling one's own product under one's own label. I would say it was exactly the opposite IME. Anyone signing up for an own label product would want exclusivity in a given area/region/country. Dave |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
Chris Bacon wrote:
Do we assume the Chinese produce all low quality stuff? Some of it might be very good, surely? I don't assume that. A nation that invented gunpowder, the wheelbarrow, the compass, the clock, kites, iron casting, paper, the blast furnace, Spaghetti, and built the great wall obviously aren't incapable. Dave |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Doctor Drivel" wrote in message reenews.net... "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message ... On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 23:56:31 GMT, "david lang" wrote: Andy Hall wrote: Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. What has this got to do with the quality of the product? I didn't say that it did have anything to do with the *quality* of the product; only that if it is so good (i.e. attractive to somebody buying) then why have they restricted themselves? They may have restricted their route to market in the UK for a number of reasons. Lack of marketing budget, Wickes being the only taker and demanding an exclusive deal, the link with TP which makes the combined Wickes/Travis Perkins potential huge, limited production capacity, whatever. There is an obvious inconsistency. In every other country, bar the UK, they are selling their products with their own label through subsidiaries and distributors. The UK isn't listed. Matt, it was on on their German site and the name Wickes came up I see the USA is not listed yet Kress rebadge Porter Cable tools over there. It's very odd to do a private label deal that excludes selling one's own product under one's own label. People make strange business decisions sometimes. They may be locked in to a long contract wit Wickes, and it is in their interest to keep it that way. They did sell under Kress until BMJ Power, their agent, went bust. They were in all major towns and cities. You appear to judge quality only on label & price. Hardly. Matt, you do. I go to a great deal of trouble when looking at and choosing tools. You don't you buy the most expensive with a designer label. See thread on visit to Axminster exhibition as one example. Some manufacturers make consistently good tools of a given type - e.g. Makita on drills, One poster here had to send a Makita back. That was me. I sent two Makitas back. I have now got a Hitachi which I am very happy with. -- Chris Melluish |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
In article , Andy Hall
wrote: I'm sure it will be as soon as there is a taker. Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. Commercially I would have thought it a very nice arrangement: you sell whole lorry loads of tools to one customer whose PoS systems can (presumably) feed back to you exactly what is selling. You have none of the costs of marketing, support, distribution etc so presumably can agree a win/win price. The risk of course is the same as that of all supermarket suppliers and anyone else who has a dominant customer. If they choose to drop you it is bad news. -- Tony Bryer SDA UK 'Software to build on' http://www.sda.co.uk Free SEDBUK boiler database browser http://www.sda.co.uk/qsedbuk.htm [Latest version QSEDBUK 1.10 released 4 April 2005] |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
i would go with a Ridgid dude. they have lifetime warranties. that is
just unheard of in cordless powertools. but i would buy it now before they quit that deal. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Chris Melluish" wrote in message ... "Doctor Drivel" wrote in message reenews.net... "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message ... On Thu, 17 Nov 2005 23:56:31 GMT, "david lang" wrote: Andy Hall wrote: Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. What has this got to do with the quality of the product? I didn't say that it did have anything to do with the *quality* of the product; only that if it is so good (i.e. attractive to somebody buying) then why have they restricted themselves? They may have restricted their route to market in the UK for a number of reasons. Lack of marketing budget, Wickes being the only taker and demanding an exclusive deal, the link with TP which makes the combined Wickes/Travis Perkins potential huge, limited production capacity, whatever. There is an obvious inconsistency. In every other country, bar the UK, they are selling their products with their own label through subsidiaries and distributors. The UK isn't listed. Matt, it was on on their German site and the name Wickes came up I see the USA is not listed yet Kress rebadge Porter Cable tools over there. It's very odd to do a private label deal that excludes selling one's own product under one's own label. People make strange business decisions sometimes. They may be locked in to a long contract wit Wickes, and it is in their interest to keep it that way. They did sell under Kress until BMJ Power, their agent, went bust. They were in all major towns and cities. You appear to judge quality only on label & price. Hardly. Matt, you do. I go to a great deal of trouble when looking at and choosing tools. You don't you buy the most expensive with a designer label. See thread on visit to Axminster exhibition as one example. Some manufacturers make consistently good tools of a given type - e.g. Makita on drills, One poster here had to send a Makita back. That was me. I sent two Makitas back. I have now got a Hitachi which I am very happy with. Good on you. I much prefer Hitachi. Their core drills are superb. Makita is designer label garbage. Good enough in most cases but way over the top in price/performance. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message ... On Wed, 16 Nov 2005 23:43:05 +0000 (UTC), "Chris Melluish" wrote: I tried a Nupower special offer from CPC and although it is supposed to be 24V it is absolutely gutless and the battery lasts about three minutes. It was cheap, though. Is it worth getting something like the B&Q PP Pro at £30, or should I go for a quality make. I was hoping not to spend more then about £50 or so. What do you want to do with it, Chris? Really to get a quality cordless drill, you need to be thinking of something in excess of £100. ********, Matt!!!! Designer label Matt again. Go for the Kress/Wickes angle drill attachment job at £95. Two drills in one. Knocks cobs off a Makita all around, in price, quality and functionality. Matt is brainwahsed. Sad but true. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 09:56:42 GMT, "david lang"
wrote: Andy Hall wrote: It's very odd to do a private label deal that excludes selling one's own product under one's own label. I would say it was exactly the opposite IME. Anyone signing up for an own label product would want exclusivity in a given area/region/country. Dave No..... That isn't how private labelling is meant to work. The point is that the organising forming the sales channel (Wickes in this example), takes a standard product from a manufacturer typically with only cosmetic customisation such as colour, label and the instruction book. The manufacturer would expect to be able to sell the same product in its own livery in the same geographical territory, and indeed to offer it on the same cosmetic relabelling basis to other similar channels. Clearly the manufacturer is not going to expect to be able to sell a Wickes labelled product in Homebase, but they should be in a position to sell the same thing in orange and green to Homebase. If they have restricted themselves to only one private label deal and no own presence in a geographical territory, then my conclusion would be that they are not very commercially adept, and that raises other concerns. -- ..andy |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 18:53:19 GMT, Tony Bryer
wrote: In article , Andy Hall wrote: I'm sure it will be as soon as there is a taker. Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. Commercially I would have thought it a very nice arrangement: you sell whole lorry loads of tools to one customer whose PoS systems can (presumably) feed back to you exactly what is selling. You have none of the costs of marketing, support, distribution etc so presumably can agree a win/win price. It could be if that is covering the potential market - clearly it's not because Wickes does not have dominant market share in anything. The risk of course is the same as that of all supermarket suppliers and anyone else who has a dominant customer. If they choose to drop you it is bad news. This is my point. They appear to have locked themselves into some deal that restricts their route to market through one player who can only cover a small part of the market. Not good business at all ..... -- ..andy |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" wrote in message ... On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 09:56:42 GMT, "david lang" wrote: Andy Hall wrote: It's very odd to do a private label deal that excludes selling one's own product under one's own label. I would say it was exactly the opposite IME. Anyone signing up for an own label product would want exclusivity in a given area/region/country. Dave No..... That isn't how private labelling is meant to work. The point is that the organising forming the sales channel (Wickes in this example), takes a standard product from a manufacturer typically with only cosmetic customisation such as colour, label and the instruction book. The manufacturer would expect to be able to sell the same product in its own livery in the same geographical territory, and indeed to offer it on the same cosmetic relabelling basis to other similar channels. Clearly the manufacturer is not going to expect to be able to sell a Wickes labelled product in Homebase, but they should be in a position to sell the same thing in orange and green to Homebase. If they have restricted themselves to only one private label deal and no own presence in a geographical territory, then my conclusion would be that they are not very commercially adept, and that raises other concerns. Like selling 700,000 first class products a year in 60 countries. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" wrote in message ... On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 18:53:19 GMT, Tony Bryer wrote: In article , Andy Hall wrote: I'm sure it will be as soon as there is a taker. Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. Commercially I would have thought it a very nice arrangement: you sell whole lorry loads of tools to one customer whose PoS systems can (presumably) feed back to you exactly what is selling. You have none of the costs of marketing, support, distribution etc so presumably can agree a win/win price. It could be if that is covering the potential market - clearly it's not because Wickes does not have dominant market share in anything. They sell a shed load of power tools though. The groups is TP and Wickes. Which is a hell of a lot of trade outlets. The risk of course is the same as that of all supermarket suppliers and anyone else who has a dominant customer. If they choose to drop you it is bad news. This is my point. They appear to have locked themselves into some deal that restricts their route to market through one player who can only cover a small part of the market. Not good business at all ..... Wickes and TP small? The point is that top quality Kress products are available in the UK and highly competitive prices. I always look at what Wickes sells before looking at others. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 22:41:28 -0000, "Doctor Drivel"
wrote: If they have restricted themselves to only one private label deal and no own presence in a geographical territory, then my conclusion would be that they are not very commercially adept, and that raises other concerns. Like selling 700,000 first class products a year in 60 countries. Like why limit the addressable market in the UK? -- ..andy |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 22:45:55 -0000, "Doctor Drivel"
wrote: "Andy Hall" wrote in message .. . On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 18:53:19 GMT, Tony Bryer wrote: In article , Andy Hall wrote: I'm sure it will be as soon as there is a taker. Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. Commercially I would have thought it a very nice arrangement: you sell whole lorry loads of tools to one customer whose PoS systems can (presumably) feed back to you exactly what is selling. You have none of the costs of marketing, support, distribution etc so presumably can agree a win/win price. It could be if that is covering the potential market - clearly it's not because Wickes does not have dominant market share in anything. They sell a shed load of power tools though. The groups is TP and Wickes. Which is a hell of a lot of trade outlets. Undoubtedly, but that wasn't the point being made. The risk of course is the same as that of all supermarket suppliers and anyone else who has a dominant customer. If they choose to drop you it is bad news. This is my point. They appear to have locked themselves into some deal that restricts their route to market through one player who can only cover a small part of the market. Not good business at all ..... Wickes and TP small? The point is that top quality Kress products are available in the UK and highly competitive prices. I always look at what Wickes sells before looking at others. I can imagine. -- ..andy |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message ... On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 22:45:55 -0000, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message .. . On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 18:53:19 GMT, Tony Bryer wrote: In article , Andy Hall aka Matt wrote: I'm sure it will be as soon as there is a taker. Please explain though, if this is really such a good product range that they appear to have restricted their route to market in the UK to a private label deal with Wickes. It doesn't hang together unless somebody is commercially very naive. Commercially I would have thought it a very nice arrangement: you sell whole lorry loads of tools to one customer whose PoS systems can (presumably) feed back to you exactly what is selling. You have none of the costs of marketing, support, distribution etc so presumably can agree a win/win price. It could be if that is covering the potential market - clearly it's not because Wickes does not have dominant market share in anything. They sell a shed load of power tools though. The groups is TP and Wickes. Which is a hell of a lot of trade outlets. Undoubtedly, but that wasn't the point being made. The risk of course is the same as that of all supermarket suppliers and anyone else who has a dominant customer. If they choose to drop you it is bad news. This is my point. They appear to have locked themselves into some deal that restricts their route to market through one player who can only cover a small part of the market. Not good business at all ..... Wickes and TP small? The point is that top quality Kress products are available in the UK and highly competitive prices. I always look at what Wickes sells before looking at others. I can imagine. Mat, you can't as you drool over the Makita brochure. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message ... On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 22:41:28 -0000, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: If they have restricted themselves to only one private label deal and no own presence in a geographical territory, then my conclusion would be that they are not very commercially adept, and that raises other concerns. Like selling 700,000 first class products a year in 60 countries. Like why limit the addressable market in the UK? Matt, who knows. Email Kress, I'm sure they have a press officer.. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
Andy Hall wrote:
The manufacturer would expect to be able to sell the same product in its own livery in the same geographical territory, and indeed to offer it on the same cosmetic relabelling basis to other similar channels. I think not, certainly not ever in my experience. Any deal I've ever been associated with has been exclusive rights to the UK market. The last thing you want is an identical product being available, extreemly bad for business. Clearly the manufacturer is not going to expect to be able to sell a Wickes labelled product in Homebase, but they should be in a position to sell the same thing in orange and green to Homebase. Not if they ever expect to do business with Wickes again. Wickes would never negotiate a deal that allowed an identical product to be sold by a competitor - commercial suicide. The major chains always negotiate exclusive deals. With extreemly FMCG where the brand name has the channel power you might buy a BLOGGO XYZ 123 from Currys, but in Dixons it will be a different colour with a different logo and called the BLOGGO XYZ 124. Trust me, no major national is stupid enough to allow an identical product to compete with their branded version. Dave |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 23:18:21 -0000, "Doctor Drivel"
wrote: "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message .. . On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 22:41:28 -0000, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: If they have restricted themselves to only one private label deal and no own presence in a geographical territory, then my conclusion would be that they are not very commercially adept, and that raises other concerns. Like selling 700,000 first class products a year in 60 countries. Like why limit the addressable market in the UK? Email Kress, I'm sure they have a press officer.. Why would I want to waste my time doing that? I don't suppose they would tell me anyway. -- ..andy |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"Andy Hall" wrote in message ... On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 23:18:21 -0000, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "Andy Hall" aka Matt wrote in message .. . On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 22:41:28 -0000, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: If they have restricted themselves to only one private label deal and no own presence in a geographical territory, then my conclusion would be that they are not very commercially adept, and that raises other concerns. Like selling 700,000 first class products a year in 60 countries. Like why limit the addressable market in the UK? Email Kress, I'm sure they have a press officer.. Why would I want to waste my time doing that? Then you can go out and buy some quality Teutonic tools. I don't suppose they would tell me anyway. I wouldn't tell you. You never know what you would say down the pub. |
Which cordless drill/driver to get?
"david lang" wrote in message . uk... Andy Hall wrote: The manufacturer would expect to be able to sell the same product in its own livery in the same geographical territory, and indeed to offer it on the same cosmetic relabelling basis to other similar channels. I think not, certainly not ever in my experience. Any deal I've ever been associated with has been exclusive rights to the UK market. The last thing you want is an identical product being available, extreemly bad for business. Clearly the manufacturer is not going to expect to be able to sell a Wickes labelled product in Homebase, but they should be in a position to sell the same thing in orange and green to Homebase. Matt here, thinks that Kress is low level DIY, always rubbishing the brand, showing real ignorance. Yet pros always think highly of them, because they are pro tools. Most Wickes power tools are sold to the trade and the Kress models are in the Wickes grey Professional range. I doubt Kress would sell a Homebase branded drill as it wouldn't sell being too expensive, and would lower their status. Porter Cable, a quality US maker, rebadge Kress: Look at the SDS http://www.porter-cable.com/index.asp?e=547&p=2722 and the Kress SDS http://www.kress-elektrik.de/en/prod...ct.php?id=2778 Identical, the same product. Kress only sell to professional outlets. Not if they ever expect to do business with Wickes again. Wickes would never negotiate a deal that allowed an identical product to be sold by a competitor - commercial suicide. The major chains always negotiate exclusive deals. With extreemly FMCG where the brand name has the channel power you might buy a BLOGGO XYZ 123 from Currys, but in Dixons it will be a different colour with a different logo and called the BLOGGO XYZ 124. Trust me, no major national is stupid enough to allow an identical product to compete with their branded version. |
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