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Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
I have a few jobs that I think the PMF180 and its ilk might be ideal
for. The main immediate one is to allow me to lift some sections of floorboard in awkward locations and with minimal damage. In particular I am hoping that the plunge blade would allow a neat cut across the width of the floorboard as well as dealing with the tongues. I can get the Bosch relatively cheaply at the moment - about £60 with free delivery from Amazon - but I wonder how it compares to the alternatives. I'm not interested in the battery models, so the alternative ones I have come across that I would consider are the blue Bosch one, which I have seen for about £100, and the Fein obviously. Now the latter can be had for about £120 for a basic kit, and quite a bit more for variations with extra blades and attachments. Also I have seen the PMF180 with a bigger than standard attachment kit for about £120. What to do? I guess the main question to ask is how the basic tools compare - the DIY Bosch vs the blue Bosch vs the Fein. I haven't seen any reviews of the blue Bosch. Then: is is worth paying more to get extra attachments at the outset given that they seem to be quite expensive to buy later on? I've seen cheaper clone blades available on ebay - are they up to scratch? Thanks for any recommendations or experiences. |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
Bob wrote:
I have a few jobs that I think the PMF180 and its ilk might be ideal for. The main immediate one is to allow me to lift some sections of floorboard in awkward locations and with minimal damage. In particular I am hoping that the plunge blade would allow a neat cut across the width of the floorboard as well as dealing with the tongues. It does. I can't really answer the latter part of this, but it's worked well for me to do just that. It is not fast. It's moderately noisy. The blades last reasonably well. |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
Bob wrote:
I have a few jobs that I think the PMF180 and its ilk might be ideal for. The main immediate one is to allow me to lift some sections of floorboard in awkward locations and with minimal damage. In particular I am hoping that the plunge blade would allow a neat cut across the width of the floorboard as well as dealing with the tongues. I can get the Bosch relatively cheaply at the moment - about £60 with free delivery from Amazon - but I wonder how it compares to the alternatives. I'm not interested in the battery models, so the alternative ones I have come across that I would consider are the blue Bosch one, which I have seen for about £100, and the Fein obviously. Now the latter can be had for about £120 for a basic kit, and quite a bit more for variations with extra blades and attachments. Also I have seen the PMF180 with a bigger than standard attachment kit for about £120. What to do? I guess the main question to ask is how the basic tools compare - the DIY Bosch vs the blue Bosch vs the Fein. I haven't seen any reviews of the blue Bosch. Then: is is worth paying more to get extra attachments at the outset given that they seem to be quite expensive to buy later on? I've seen cheaper clone blades available on ebay - are they up to scratch? Thanks for any recommendations or experiences. They all seem to work. The Fien is apparently the dogs, but at that price it should be. The Bosch PMF 180 works very well and is more affordable for DIY use. They all IMO suffer from the blades being mega bucks & not lasting long. A very handy tool, but I only use mine (PMF) as an absolute last resort because of the blade cost. The PMF would do the job you describe very well. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
The Medway Handyman wrote:
Bob wrote: I have a few jobs that I think the PMF180 and its ilk might be ideal for. The main immediate one is to allow me to lift some sections of floorboard in awkward locations and with minimal damage. In particular I am hoping that the plunge blade would allow a neat cut across the width of the floorboard as well as dealing with the tongues. I can get the Bosch relatively cheaply at the moment - about £60 with free delivery from Amazon - but I wonder how it compares to the alternatives. I'm not interested in the battery models, so the alternative ones I have come across that I would consider are the blue Bosch one, which I have seen for about £100, and the Fein obviously. Now the latter can be had for about £120 for a basic kit, and quite a bit more for variations with extra blades and attachments. Also I have seen the PMF180 with a bigger than standard attachment kit for about £120. What to do? I guess the main question to ask is how the basic tools compare - the DIY Bosch vs the blue Bosch vs the Fein. I haven't seen any reviews of the blue Bosch. Then: is is worth paying more to get extra attachments at the outset given that they seem to be quite expensive to buy later on? I've seen cheaper clone blades available on ebay - are they up to scratch? Thanks for any recommendations or experiences. They all seem to work. The Fien is apparently the dogs, but at that price it should be. The Bosch PMF 180 works very well and is more affordable for DIY use. They all IMO suffer from the blades being mega bucks & not lasting long. You can find a Faithfull set of 9 (or is it 13) blades for around £20 which is a lot less expensive than manufacturer's ones. I have a set on order, we'll see how they last. (They fit all the tools apparently) A very handy tool, but I only use mine (PMF) as an absolute last resort because of the blade cost. The PMF would do the job you describe very well. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk -- Chris Green |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
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Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
The Medway Handyman wrote:
wrote: You can find a Faithfull set of 9 (or is it 13) blades for around £20 which is a lot less expensive than manufacturer's ones. I have a set on order, we'll see how they last. (They fit all the tools apparently) More like £30+ where I've looked - Amazon & EBAY. Apart from which I don't want a 'set'. I never use the carbide tile blades for example. £23.32 including delivery from Bexpress. I agree to some extent about sets but I'm not at all sure what I'll find useful and at that price it's a good place to start. You can buy the Faithfull blades individually for £2.50 upwards. -- Chris Green |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
wrote:
wrote: The Medway Handyman wrote: They all seem to work. The Fien is apparently the dogs, but at that price it should be. The Bosch PMF 180 works very well and is more affordable for DIY use. They all IMO suffer from the blades being mega bucks & not lasting long. You can find a Faithfull set of 9 (or is it 13) blades for around £20 which is a lot less expensive than manufacturer's ones. I have a set on order, we'll see how they last. (They fit all the tools apparently) The blades arrived today, they certainly *look* OK and come in a very neat little aluminium case. It's 9 blades for £23 including delivery. The set comprises: scraper, 4 plunge cut blades of different widths, a standard 270 degree blade, a thick blade that I don't quite know what it's for, a triangular TC grinding plate and a 270 degree TC cutter. Not heard of Bexpress, useful looking site. Can't find that set. Do you have a part number by any chance? -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
Thanks to everyone who replied.
It has convinced me to go for the basic PMF180 package as it seems to be up to the sort of job I need it for, no one has said anything about it that has put me off, and it seems is possible to get relatively inexpensive blades for it by shopping around. |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
On Dec 2, 9:45*pm, Bob wrote:
Thanks to everyone who replied. It has convinced me to go for the basic PMF180 package as it seems to be up to the sort of job I need it for, no one has said anything about it that has put me off, and it seems is possible to get relatively inexpensive blades for it by shopping around. The one thing I've found with my PMF180 is that for some reason the straight plunge blade seems impossible to secure properly and shakes loose after a little while (15 - 30 secs sustained use). Not a difficult thing to fix (tighten the screw) and perhaps it's just me/my example, as nobody else seems to have mentioned it! Of course, if anyone has a solution to that, I'd be glad to know it. Apart from that minor irritation, I wouldn't want to be without mine now: I don't use it very often but when I do, it's to solve something that I can't think of any other way to tackle. |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
The Medway Handyman wrote:
wrote: wrote: The Medway Handyman wrote: They all seem to work. The Fien is apparently the dogs, but at that price it should be. The Bosch PMF 180 works very well and is more affordable for DIY use. They all IMO suffer from the blades being mega bucks & not lasting long. You can find a Faithfull set of 9 (or is it 13) blades for around £20 which is a lot less expensive than manufacturer's ones. I have a set on order, we'll see how they last. (They fit all the tools apparently) The blades arrived today, they certainly *look* OK and come in a very neat little aluminium case. It's 9 blades for £23 including delivery. The set comprises: scraper, 4 plunge cut blades of different widths, a standard 270 degree blade, a thick blade that I don't quite know what it's for, a triangular TC grinding plate and a 270 degree TC cutter. Not heard of Bexpress, useful looking site. Can't find that set. Do you have a part number by any chance? Here's a link:- http://www.bexpress.co.uk/pageview.p...de =FAIMFTSET I found it simply by using Froogle (that's Google 'shopping') and searching for "faithfull multi function tool blade set", then sorting by price low to high. That's my standard approach for finding low prices, not always perfect but usually pretty good. -- Chris Green |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
On 3 Dec,
wrote: The Medway Handyman wrote: Not heard of Bexpress, useful looking site. Can't find that set. Do you have a part number by any chance? Here's a link:- http://www.bexpress.co.uk/pageview.p...de =FAIMFTSET I found it simply by using Froogle (that's Google 'shopping') and searching for "faithfull multi function tool blade set", then sorting by price low to high. That's my standard approach for finding low prices, not always perfect but usually pretty good. They seem to be only 4 hole fitting, unsuitable for PMF180. Other (individual) items seem multi fitting. Is that correct? -- B Thumbs Change lycos to yahoo to reply |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
wrote:
I found it simply by using Froogle (that's Google 'shopping') and searching for "faithfull multi function tool blade set", then sorting by price low to high. That's my standard approach for finding low prices, not always perfect but usually pretty good. Didn't know that existed - thanks. Very handy. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
wrote:
On 3 Dec, wrote: The Medway Handyman wrote: Not heard of Bexpress, useful looking site. Can't find that set. Do you have a part number by any chance? Here's a link:- http://www.bexpress.co.uk/pageview.p...de =FAIMFTSET I found it simply by using Froogle (that's Google 'shopping') and searching for "faithfull multi function tool blade set", then sorting by price low to high. That's my standard approach for finding low prices, not always perfect but usually pretty good. They seem to be only 4 hole fitting, unsuitable for PMF180. Other (individual) items seem multi fitting. Is that correct? No, they fit the PMF180 fine, they have four holes *and* a radial slot, so they fit Bosch, Einhell, Fein and others. -- Chris Green |
Bosch PMF180 vs alternatives
"The Medway Handyman" wrote in message ... They all seem to work. The Fien is apparently the dogs, but at that price it should be. The Bosch PMF 180 works very well and is more affordable for DIY use. They all IMO suffer from the blades being mega bucks & not lasting long. A very handy tool, but I only use mine (PMF) as an absolute last resort because of the blade cost. The PMF would do the job you describe very well. Cool. I am sending this to myself at work to check out the web. Thanks for the info . |
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