Electrician Talk banner
1 - 20 of 76 Posts

· Registered
Joined
·
6,229 Posts
Discussion Starter · #1 ·
Hey guys, I have been doing work on cooler door lights and whatnot, and keep running into situations where I have to try and use screwdrivers at funky angles to remove/replace screws, and keep thinking that a cordless right angle drill might do the trick. Anyone use one? The one I have been looking at the most is the Milwaukee m12 version. Also, do they have enough power to run paddle bits or the like?
 

· Banned
Joined
·
7,205 Posts
The milwaukee m12 right angle drill is probably their worst tool.

it sucks balls.. I hate it.. it's SOOOO underpowered.

If they have come out with a FUEL version, then I will redact my statement, because it'll probably be good. FUEL is shít-tons of power.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
8,009 Posts
FrunkSlammer said:
The milwaukee m12 right angle drill is probably their worst tool. it sucks balls.. I hate it.. it's SOOOO underpowered. If they have come out with a FUEL version, then I will redact my statement, because it'll probably be good. FUEL is shít-tons of power.
Incorrect. The m12 line is flawless. You must be using it wrong
 

· Registered
Joined
·
6,229 Posts
Discussion Starter · #4 ·
The milwaukee m12 right angle drill is probably their worst tool.

it sucks balls.. I hate it.. it's SOOOO underpowered.

If they have come out with a FUEL version, then I will redact my statement, because it'll probably be good. FUEL is shít-tons of power.
Is it like the m12 screwdriver but with less power or what? Is the m18 significantly better? I am looking for something compact for driving/removing screws at funky angles where I don't have a lot of room.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
6,229 Posts
Discussion Starter · #8 ·
FrunkSlammer said:
I often need the right angle.. so I use the m12 right angle, and it consistently always lets me down. It can't drill through crap. Buy this instead: Might be good enough for MAINTENANCE.. not good enough for CONSTRUCTION! :whistling2:
One of my buddies got one of those. Maybe I can borrow it and try it out. You just chuck that into a regular cordless right?
 

· Banned
Joined
·
7,205 Posts
One of my buddies got one of those. Maybe I can borrow it and try it out. You just chuck that into a regular cordless right?
Yeah any corded or cordless.

Works great because you can put small driver bits in the end and keep the profile very slim to get into tight spots.

Oh I see..............................................d1ck:laughing:
lol sorry, see pic above. :laughing:
 

· Registered
Joined
·
2,559 Posts
Going_Commando said:
Hey guys, I have been doing work on cooler door lights and whatnot, and keep running into situations where I have to try and use screwdrivers at funky angles to remove/replace screws, and keep thinking that a cordless right angle drill might do the trick. Anyone use one? The one I have been looking at the most is the Milwaukee m12 version. Also, do they have enough power to run paddle bits or the like?
. I can't speak for the M12 version , but I have an 18 volt dewalt right angle drill that I abuse the hell out of , and it still works great . I can drill joists all day with that thing . As far as screws in tight quarters , I use the Milwaukee right angle driver .
 

· Ambassador of Amps
Joined
·
9,490 Posts
I love my dewalt 18v right angle drill, though they are very hard to find now for a good price. they have a 20v version now, but I dont have any 20v stuff, so when all my tools were stolen I replaced the 18v version.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
2,559 Posts
TOOL_5150 said:
I love my dewalt 18v right angle drill, though they are very hard to find now for a good price. they have a 20v version now, but I dont have any 20v stuff, so when all my tools were stolen I replaced the 18v version.
. They're hard to find because they discontinued it . You can still find them , but whoever is selling them jacked their prices way up .
 
1 - 20 of 76 Posts
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top