A 10 volt drill is a mistake IMHO, a mickey mouse toy, get a 18 volt makita and have the right kit
 
A 10 volt drill is a mistake IMHO, a mickey mouse toy, get a 18 volt makita and have the right kit
I don't agree. They have a place and as has been mentioned it will cope with everything he needs it too.
 
A 10 volt drill is a mistake IMHO, a mickey mouse toy, get a 18 volt makita and have the right kit
A decent 10.8v is a cracking bit of kit for driving screws and drilling pilot holes... If you can only have one drill though you need to have something with a hammer function as well so you have to go for a 18v Bosch / Makita or whatever.

Had an email from screwfix today with a canny deal, 18v Bosch for £99 with a 3ah battery



http://m.screwfix.com/p/bosch-gsb-1800-18v-3ah-li-ion-cordless-combi-drill/8160g?filtered=true
 
Care to expand?
The 10.8 is fine for using as a screwdriver on limited quantity work, for a real bit of kit the 18 volt Makita is much better, the 10.8 for the cost is not IMO worth the purchase price, it is more like a domestic household driver rather than a trademans kit, I have owned nearly all of them, the 10.8 a mickey mouse drill, JMO.
 
The 10.8 is fine for using as a screwdriver on limited quantity work, for a real bit of kit the 18 volt Makita is much better, the 10.8 for the cost is not IMO worth the purchase price, it is more like a domestic household driver rather than a trademans kit, I have owned nearly all of them, the 10.8 a mickey mouse drill, JMO.
Fair one, I forget that as I pretty much only do maintenance work I probably only really need a screw gun! Having owned both I do prefer the blue Bosch to the Makita for the 18v stuff buts it's all down to personal opinion
 
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what would yous recommend for a decent and more so decently priced sds? thought i would stick this here rather than start a new thread with a similar topic :)
i love my 18v makita drill but its not fun when it comes to walls, also, is a wireless sds really worth the extra spend?
 
is a wireless sds really worth the extra spend?
If you already have batteries and a charger.
They're not too expensive if you buy it bare unit.
 
If you already have batteries and a charger.
They're not too expensive if you buy it bare unit.
True, the 18v Makita SDS can be had, body only, for around £120. Depends what you'll be doing with it whether it would be suitable or not though.
 
True, the 18v Makita SDS can be had, body only, for around £120. Depends what you'll be doing with it whether it would be suitable or not though.

Good point, what type of jobs would a £120ish 18V sds not be up to ?
Could you use 100mm core bits and chase in concrete ? Would it eat the batteries too quick ?
What would you recommend. I was asking about a mates job last week, the agency said the client wanted you to have 110V or cordless.
 
The 18v is good for rawl plug holes and up to 32mm holes in breezeblocks and a bit of light chasing. It's a handy thing to have in the van but doesn't touch a corded one really.
 
If you are doing a lot of chasing mate then it would have to be a corded drill as Resu said. I've got the Bosch 36v cordless and it a cracking drill but the minute I have any heavy work to do then the Corded comes out, you will find your gear last's a lot longer that way.
 

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