The question about more power is a common misconception that people have, and Dewalt doesn't do much to make it clear. The Flex Volt battery does Not supply more power to the tool. It only supplies 20 volts to a 20 volt tool, the same and the 20v max battery does. It just lasts longer in a 20 volt tool. The way the flex volt system is works is that the tools have different pin configurations that connect to the battery differently so as to either supply 20 or 60 volts depending on what the tool runs on. The battery basically has three 20V cell stacks in it. One pin configuration connects them in series which triples the voltage to 60 and the other connects them in parallel which, in theory, should triple the run time. Although, 50% more is not triple, but you'd have to test that. So the power and performance is no different. The flex battery just lasts longer.
That's really interesting, For sure the flexvolt battery is giving more power to the saw. The problem is the extra energy is causing more Vibration and Resonance and gives a less smooth cut. More vibration is shaking into the blade, the wood and the users hands. The solution is to have a rock steady table holding the wood solid or reduce the power a bit with a 5 amp battery. 🤣
That's because it's a more solidly built tool than the standard 20 volt saw. But it also costs about twice as much. And it's especially heavier if you use the larger flex volt battery which, by the way, doesn't give the saw more power. it's still only a 20 volt tool. The flex battery just lasts longer.
The question about more power is a common misconception that people have, and Dewalt doesn't do much to make it clear. The Flex Volt battery does Not supply more power to the tool. It only supplies 20 volts to a 20 volt tool, the same and the 20v max battery does. It just lasts longer in a 20 volt tool. The way the flex volt system is works is that the tools have different pin configurations that connect to the battery differently so as to either supply 20 or 60 volts depending on what the tool runs on. The battery basically has three 20V cell stacks in it. One pin configuration connects them in series which triples the voltage to 60 and the other connects them in parallel which, in theory, should triple the run time. Although, 50% more is not triple, but you'd have to test that. So the power and performance is no different. The flex battery just lasts longer.
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That's really interesting, For sure the flexvolt battery is giving more power to the saw. The problem is the extra energy is causing more Vibration and Resonance and gives a less smooth cut. More vibration is shaking into the blade, the wood and the users hands. The solution is to have a rock steady table holding the wood solid or reduce the power a bit with a 5 amp battery. 🤣
Thats a good theory you may be right
Milwaukee super-saw is my solution 😝 I like it better than my flex volt advantage
It's definitely a lot heavier than the standard 20v
That's because it's a more solidly built tool than the standard 20 volt saw. But it also costs about twice as much. And it's especially heavier if you use the larger flex volt battery which, by the way, doesn't give the saw more power. it's still only a 20 volt tool. The flex battery just lasts longer.