And they'll looks around and wonder what those things are or what they were for... as they never had even touched a natural grown piece of wood work in their lives
Yarbo just seems so practical on this day and time. I’m sure it’s probably Hella expensive, but in 2024 people should at least have the option for something like that. Just like we have washing machines as opposed to have to wash by hand.
Seriously, this looks ridiculous. I work in an bigger construction company with 140+ people and even we would not see to afford this kind of setup.. I know, Milwaukee said that they want am cordless jobside but this? Especially the bigger M18 batterys like to break. Image you have to maintain that enormus Park of batterys..
@@Floataciousit is rather not :D we kill 4-5 batteries per day per person. If every tool must be replaced by electric one we need 250 batteries for 50-guys company. Sick!
Ill buy the Milwaukee roll on only when it can be also charged with a solar panel for remote projects. And has a 240v power output to run most well pumps during outages etc and expandable battery packout units that can be added for running a house for days. Kind of like the delta pro eco flow ultra.
Honda really dropped the ball by not announcing a full line of OPE tools to go with their new battery system. People looking to buy a battery mower can easily skip over Honda in favor of other brands with more supported tools.
Would you rather they rush out piece of junk just to have something out there to take your money? Or rather they put the r&d into it to make a quality product?
They have had years to R&D a series of yard tools. These other companies are already producing and selling products, long lasting quality products. Actually I'm surprised that Honda is even getting into the yard tool game. He said that nothing is in the works as of now, they are waiting to see if it's customers want it or not.
@@jacksmith2315Honda just plonked an electric motor on their gas mower. That's lazy. It looks horribly hastily retrofitted, compared to many of the electric mowers on the market.
@@procrastinator1842 and the batteries are HUGE, compared to a Milwaukee 12.0….plus it would be the only Honda battery I would own. I love my Honda 217 but why no lights on the front for late night/early morning mowing? Milwaukee vs Honda…let’s see a comparison ASAP!
Excellent video brother, we really appreciate all the work, time and effort y'all put in to bring us the latest and greatest tools. Toro has gotten serious with their battery powered tools. .105 line is huge for a battery powered trimmer, especially at 17 inches. I think im sold on that trimmer, that forearm pad is sweet. How well did it fit you? I spend 60 to 70 minutes weedeating, a powerful, balanced and comfortable tool sounds like a winner.
Honda needs a wider deck option. Something 25”-30” would be great. I wonder if an electric snowblower is to follow, would make sense. I wish the gas engine was around for a few more years. My Honda mower is 14 years old and is still running like a champ.
The Toro content was great, I'm just getting started with them and their 60V weed eater is killer. Really wish they'd make a pole saw longer than 8 feet though. Dewalt's is 15 feet but they've been letting me down a lot lately so they're a no-go from now on 😂
lol, Makita made an Ammo-crate systainer that charges lots of battery at the same time... Milwaukee need to get their shit together and make some more packout like that.
Caution with the big 12 & 8 amp hour Milwaukee batteries. I’ve purchased 3 different new ones and they all only charge to 3 bars instead of 4. Using different chargers to.
@@tylerkinch7968 no crap. Hand tools like we all have today to yard tools, going above n beyond all that and there will be no infrastructure and especially enough minerals to do this, let alone the real impact and materials involved just to get lithium or cobalt, you have no idea the scale and waste
That commercial 30 inch from Ego was light…. too light in my opinion. In my experience with using commercial walk behinds, the extra weight helps keep the mower planted on the ground and less likely to bounce around on rough terrain. When the mower bounces around in rough terrain, it makes getting straight stripes more challenging. Did you see that new commercial power head and the new blower at the Ego booth or will that be day 3’s video?
Here's the thing. These are not low power electronics. These are extreme battery powered tools, some of which pull enormous amounts of energy to perform at their best. If you let anyone produce batteries, then you'd have a market FLOODED with garbage batteries that are unsafe, and underperform. And when your new Milwaukee Impact underperforms, are you going to call the shitty battery company and complain, or call Milwaukee? That's why it'll never happen.
Did you happen to see any electric compact tractors at the expo? Kubota released one in Europe, John Deere has them in development, and Solectrac seems to be in trouble.
@@SmithFarmTilton The limited selection of compact electric tractors already produced are getting 2-4 hours of continuous runtime depending on usage type, which already fits a lot of residential and commercial use cases. If manufacturers step up to fast-charging (like on EVs) or implement swappable batteries like a lot of other OPE does, then even more use cases open up. The electric OPE in the expo day one and day two videos have great examples of what’s possible and practical now.
It would be nice if the tool industry would stop ripping us off on press tools. Thousands of dollars for them when compared to other completely different tools that are much more complicated and have far more materials that are only a third of the cost. The unwillingness of the industry to make an affordableautomatic press tool that a residential buyer could purchase is crimping, pun intended, the pressfit technology in general people are forced to use other methods
I love batteries - i'm actually a battery engineer in the power tool space. But the amount of money it takes to get into any of these systems is astronomical. I can't ever see it overtaking gas without the direct and overt intervention by government authorities. The free market will never make this transition on its own. If the government steps in prematurely, it will short-circuit the natural market pressures that will make battery tech even better. We should vote and hope for no government intervention in this space. We'll actually be better off in the long run.
Batteries batteries and more batteries.. they all wear out. In a production environment your lucky to get a year out of a battery. This just isn't economical yet. I own Milwaukee batteries and tools but after a point, its just ridiculous. Buy batteries to charge batteries? This cant be the future.
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Someday we'll get to tell our kids that we had gas chainsaws, mowers and weed trimmers and they will tell us we are old.......
One day soon if not already horror movies will have kids running (and tripping) from a masked guy with a 60v chainsaw.
"If we mixed our oil and gas just right, we could start our string trimmer with just one pull."
Halloween won’t have the same flare lol
we'll also tell them how cheap everything was and they'll long for the good ole days
And they'll looks around and wonder what those things are or what they were for... as they never had even touched a natural grown piece of wood work in their lives
Yarbo just seems so practical on this day and time. I’m sure it’s probably Hella expensive, but in 2024 people should at least have the option for something like that. Just like we have washing machines as opposed to have to wash by hand.
Milwaukee display is at 33:15 BTW
Seriously, this looks ridiculous. I work in an bigger construction company with 140+ people and even we would not see to afford this kind of setup..
I know, Milwaukee said that they want am cordless jobside but this?
Especially the bigger M18 batterys like to break. Image you have to maintain that enormus Park of batterys..
Charge 60 batteries at once? Who has that kind of money.
@@voidFutureVector it's for businesses that have many employees
@@Floataciousit is rather not :D we kill 4-5 batteries per day per person. If every tool must be replaced by electric one we need 250 batteries for 50-guys company. Sick!
Ill buy the Milwaukee roll on only when it can be also charged with a solar panel for remote projects. And has a 240v power output to run most well pumps during outages etc and expandable battery packout units that can be added for running a house for days. Kind of like the delta pro eco flow ultra.
Fyi, batteries in series will double voltage, batteries in parallel will double capacity (Ah).
Honda really dropped the ball by not announcing a full line of OPE tools to go with their new battery system. People looking to buy a battery mower can easily skip over Honda in favor of other brands with more supported tools.
Would you rather they rush out piece of junk just to have something out there to take your money? Or rather they put the r&d into it to make a quality product?
They have had years to R&D a series of yard tools.
These other companies are already producing and selling products, long lasting quality products.
Actually I'm surprised that Honda is even getting into the yard tool game. He said that nothing is in the works as of now, they are waiting to see if it's customers want it or not.
@@jacksmith2315Honda just plonked an electric motor on their gas mower. That's lazy. It looks horribly hastily retrofitted, compared to many of the electric mowers on the market.
@@procrastinator1842 and the batteries are HUGE, compared to a Milwaukee 12.0….plus it would be the only Honda battery I would own. I love my Honda 217 but why no lights on the front for late night/early morning mowing? Milwaukee vs Honda…let’s see a comparison ASAP!
EGO is the way to go
Good job on the video
@@nathanwhite5602 Thanks Nathan!
Excellent video brother, we really appreciate all the work, time and effort y'all put in to bring us the latest and greatest tools.
Toro has gotten serious with their battery powered tools.
.105 line is huge for a battery powered trimmer, especially at 17 inches. I think im sold on that trimmer, that forearm pad is sweet.
How well did it fit you? I spend 60 to 70 minutes weedeating, a powerful, balanced and comfortable tool sounds like a winner.
The $249 Toro seems so reasonable.
Honda needs a wider deck option. Something 25”-30” would be great. I wonder if an electric snowblower is to follow, would make sense. I wish the gas engine was around for a few more years. My Honda mower is 14 years old and is still running like a champ.
The Toro content was great, I'm just getting started with them and their 60V weed eater is killer. Really wish they'd make a pole saw longer than 8 feet though. Dewalt's is 15 feet but they've been letting me down a lot lately so they're a no-go from now on 😂
Great video!!
Would love to see an EGO mulcher
If you missed Day 1 of the Equip EXPO, it's here! ruclips.net/video/t0RNnBclPs0/видео.html&ab_channel=ToolShow
lol, Makita made an Ammo-crate systainer that charges lots of battery at the same time...
Milwaukee need to get their shit together and make some more packout like that.
When yall gonna do dewalt
Any word on the price for one of those Milwaukee battery charger? Just the charging hub itself?
Caution with the big 12 & 8 amp hour Milwaukee batteries. I’ve purchased 3 different new ones and they all only charge to 3 bars instead of 4. Using different chargers to.
What about plugging in a welder?
Ego if you see this id love to see you make a 30 inch ride on mower and a push edger
Day 2... I missed day 1!
All this battery stuff and there is not gonna be an ability to ever support this system stand alone like everyone keeps dreaming of.
What are you talking about?
Agreed, that is decades away, if it ever comes.......
These are tools, not cars... We will be fine with battery powered tools.
@@tylerkinch7968 no crap. Hand tools like we all have today to yard tools, going above n beyond all that and there will be no infrastructure and especially enough minerals to do this, let alone the real impact and materials involved just to get lithium or cobalt, you have no idea the scale and waste
That commercial 30 inch from Ego was light…. too light in my opinion. In my experience with using commercial walk behinds, the extra weight helps keep the mower planted on the ground and less likely to bounce around on rough terrain. When the mower bounces around in rough terrain, it makes getting straight stripes more challenging. Did you see that new commercial power head and the new blower at the Ego booth or will that be day 3’s video?
I'll take the less weight!
@@troyhough I can understand wanting a lighter machine but at the same time cut quality is important too. I think there is a middle ground for sure.
@@jronmanlawn ya but you can always add weight but can't ake it off. put a couple 12.0 or 15.0 in there and there's some beef!
Every company should be force to make a standard in batterys just like charging cables for gadgets
Here's the thing. These are not low power electronics. These are extreme battery powered tools, some of which pull enormous amounts of energy to perform at their best. If you let anyone produce batteries, then you'd have a market FLOODED with garbage batteries that are unsafe, and underperform. And when your new Milwaukee Impact underperforms, are you going to call the shitty battery company and complain, or call Milwaukee? That's why it'll never happen.
Did you happen to see any electric compact tractors at the expo? Kubota released one in Europe, John Deere has them in development, and Solectrac seems to be in trouble.
Who would want one? The run time would be ridiculously short for most people.
@@SmithFarmTilton The limited selection of compact electric tractors already produced are getting 2-4 hours of continuous runtime depending on usage type, which already fits a lot of residential and commercial use cases. If manufacturers step up to fast-charging (like on EVs) or implement swappable batteries like a lot of other OPE does, then even more use cases open up. The electric OPE in the expo day one and day two videos have great examples of what’s possible and practical now.
I want FPV mowing!
You mean I get to buy 60 Milwaukee batteries. How awesome is that. 60 batteries + the charger = $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
they need to end M12 chargers. nobody only has M12, right? And if you do, you could handle the dual volt charger....
It would be nice if the tool industry would stop ripping us off on press tools. Thousands of dollars for them when compared to other completely different tools that are much more complicated and have far more materials that are only a third of the cost. The unwillingness of the industry to make an affordableautomatic press tool that a residential buyer could purchase is crimping, pun intended, the pressfit technology in general people are forced to use other methods
I love batteries - i'm actually a battery engineer in the power tool space. But the amount of money it takes to get into any of these systems is astronomical. I can't ever see it overtaking gas without the direct and overt intervention by government authorities. The free market will never make this transition on its own. If the government steps in prematurely, it will short-circuit the natural market pressures that will make battery tech even better. We should vote and hope for no government intervention in this space. We'll actually be better off in the long run.
That VPN commercial…are Rob and Sarah together?? I remember Rob mentioning his divorce a few months back
Wait what?
@@jronmanlawn 15:15 if true then cheers to the happy couple.
the girl's pretty
I love that honda mower 😍
West coast 😂
Batteries batteries and more batteries.. they all wear out. In a production environment your lucky to get a year out of a battery. This just isn't economical yet. I own Milwaukee batteries and tools but after a point, its just ridiculous. Buy batteries to charge batteries? This cant be the future.
Forge your fuel yeah?