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-   -   Any thoughts on the value of this cordless jigsaw (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/639765-any-thoughts-value-cordless-jigsaw.html)

Dave Plowman (News) October 18th 19 02:51 PM

Any thoughts on the value of this cordless jigsaw
 
In article ,
John Rumm wrote:
There is a big market for "body only" tools these days, since many
people will buy into a battery platform, and then share it between all
their tools.


Until you decide to expand that collection, and discover they've upped the
voltage on the current system. ;-)

--
*If God dropped acid, would he see people?

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.

Andy Burns[_13_] October 18th 19 03:20 PM

Any thoughts on the value of this cordless jigsaw
 
Dave Plowman wrote:

John Rumm wrote:

many people will buy into a battery platform, and then share it
between all their tools.


Until you decide to expand that collection, and discover they've upped the
voltage on the current system. ;-)


I don't see that they're (Makita) going to make any 18V tools
incompatible with the current system, new 40V tools will need different
batteries, it remains to be seen whether they introduce [m]any new 2x18V
tools.


John Rumm October 19th 19 04:43 AM

Any thoughts on the value of this cordless jigsaw
 
On 18/10/2019 14:51, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article ,
John Rumm wrote:
There is a big market for "body only" tools these days, since many
people will buy into a battery platform, and then share it between all
their tools.


Until you decide to expand that collection, and discover they've upped the
voltage on the current system. ;-)


Even if they introduce a new higher voltage battery, it would not make
any sense to discontinue the current 18V range since its vast (the
largest range of 18V tools from any manufacturer). Even if they stopped
producing them, they would just open up space for a massive clone market.

Plus Makita seem to keep battery platforms for a considerable period[1].
Their first cordless tool was released in 1969, and the current
remaining range of NiCd/Nimh tools are still using the same battery
connector, and a modern charger could still charge that original battery.

[1] If you gloss over those first LiIon tools that can't use some of the
the higher capacity LCT batteries now available.



--
Cheers,

John.

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