@@brandonknight7240 you must be young when I was younger impacts were not for that if you could do it with a drill just saying every one younger thanks impact drivers are the way to go a cordless or corded drill is just as important now as it was in 1996: when I started in trades does that answer your question or does Rob need answer 🤔 I mean it's your personal preference and opinion if you think that that works for you by all means I'm not knocking you
And mines the opposite answer my co workers got me started on Milwaukee now I have a bunch of battery’s for them and they ain’t cheap so mix matching brands makes no sense unless it’s not a power tool
In order to post my comment, I had to agree to hurt your feelings . So here goes ,wuss boy. . Professional's make a choice. Similarly, homeowners make a choice when it comes to their needs and budget . Professionals know when to use a drill vs. an impact . The real deal is that a professional is going to have more tools than than a drill and driver. Myself. I have some 14-20 tools (dewalt), including duplicates. I have colleagues that use Milwaukee with just as many tools. The real deal is the batteries. They are not interchangeable. So you have to commit to one brand or another. It only makes sense. When are you going to make a video comparison of chainsaws ? I don't know . But whenever you do ,I'll bet you don't do a test with a stihl chain saw using a puolan chain and bar. Compared to a Husqvarna, using a Craftsman chain and bar will you. In conclusion... in your own words. " SHUT UP " !!!
Despite a drill being the proper tool for this, it blows my mind the only way DeWalt was able to win a lag bolt test was with something double the size of what it was going against.
Milwaukee prioritizes sustained power while Dewalt prioritizes speed. You can see it play out here. Milwaukee is getting every bit of that driver while Dewalt cruises at a higher speed and lower total load.
@blamuk ma'am you're letting your arrogance expose your incompetence. I have done more than you, I know more than you, and I own a lot more than you. I've built more and done more than every member of your inbred family
@blamuk Ma'am you watch a couple of the 1500 videos I have posted, and you think you know everything. Stupid people do things just like that. Ma'am, I used to build megawatt projects for the US military, spent 30 years in the trades, owned seven different businesses, and most importantly, I'm not a b**ch; unlike you
Anything that big has to be used with an impact wrench. Unless you want a broken wrist or have to buy a new impact driver because the old one got to hot
Yeah, but when you get much bigger lag bolts, you're going to need something like that Dewalt, drills work well for most sizes but these are also both very useful tools, the Milwaukee one for like deck screws, the Dewalt for giant lag bolts/lug nuts. And the drills for drilling/some lag bolts
Hahahaha ,, this guy is toooo funny ,,, bs question in the first place if all your gonna do is shit talk people's answers ,,,,, use whatever is easier to use ,, obviously while using brains not to destroy your work and if necessary keeping with any building codes again if necessary. Personally I can't stand Milwaukee,, always had a DeWalt around and most all I've met on job sites also had DeWalt as well. I've actually done this exact same little lag bolt question this man is trying to show here and if you're going to use a regular drill I don't care who the maker is it better not be battery operated for a lag bolt with those inches I've always found it easier to use in the old days they were called hammer drills now they're called impact drill or wrench. What I really am saying here is------ Who cares just do your thing ,, if you fukk it up ,, well that's your name not mine.
My motor swapped 2nd gen Milwaukee 1/4” driver snaps adapters all day. Swapped with a motor from a 4th gen mid torque 1/2”. Kind of a Frankenstein but I love it.
I'm super grateful for your testing. I've been weiging 12v impact drivers for my interior tool tote, and now I'm looking at 12v drill drivers instead; impacts were so pervasive for so long that they became kind of a reflex, but drill drivers with 1/4" hex chucks exist now, and the direct torque they supply feels like they're punching above their weight after years of reaching for an impact driver without question.
My big dewalt sounds like a drill on small fasteners. Doesnt even impact. Little rough on the wrist though. You're the reason ive been looking for the absolutely highest torque drill. I want to speed up building large skids. I need a drill that can sink 3/8 lags quickly without stalling or burning up. Dewalt has a 60v drill but its for mixing sonit has an automatic clutch that disengages.
Great video man, if you did the drill right at the end that would of blow some minds. After 200 lags or so though, that Milwaukee will probably burn out while the wrench has years of life left. Its big as hell but with weight, comes durability.
@@ToolswithSoAlz probably not but a small thing like the Milwaukee is gonna burn out first and it clearly was slower at getting the job done. The wrench isn't working hard meanwhile the driver is working max capacity struggling. Imagine driving 500 bolts with that thing. It wouldn't last imo. Milwaukee does put out more power I agree. Not totally necessary for everyone using them though. Just my opinion though.
I'm my experience the larger impact wrench doesn't get as hot typically as its smaller brothers (drill and drivers). This is when you drive lots of lags.
When your drill has a bit in it, for drilling pilot holes, and you don't feel like switching screwing and unscrewing that chuck 500× throughout the duration of a project. My drill is for drilling holes, impact driver is for driving fasteners. Easy. It's in the name.
I built a big livestock corral with 1/2inch milwaukee impact gun driving in 3/4 diameter × 12 inch lag screw into half cut telephone poles . I had to still predrill it first before lags went in. I tried using drill to drive them in and drill got hot on me so only use it for drilling. 1/2 inch drove those lags in no problem and stayed cool. drill should work on small lags and smaller project .
"use a drill", for a lag that big? Have you ever realistically had to drive multiple like that, nah I'd probably just use a ratchet and socket set, or just use an impact and save your wrist. No one will think you're any less a man
@connorcruz6249 Well, Pickle Puffer I used to build megawatt projects for the US military and government. Whereas you're so slow you believe you would use a ratchet
I feel like using a drill for this big of a lag bolt (like 30-40 of them ) would make the drill start to overheat whereas a half inch impact won’t care at all idk just a thought
So, you believe the slower tool, that has metal hitting on metal thousands of times a minute, building heat, transferring that heat through the fastener and the motor of the tool, would last longer? I don't have the time or Crayons needed to get this down to a level you'll be able to understand how wrong you are.
@@ToolswithSoAlz honestly it would be interesting to see how a good powerful drill holds up heat wise vs a regular Milwaukee or dewalt 1/2inch mid tourqe driving like 30 big lag bolts
But the dewalt is a lot heavier which is like putting more weight on it since it has more weight in it. For the next comparison Milwaukee 1 inch impact wrench vs dewalt cordless ratchet.
But for the criers out there the Milwaukee impact driver dang near tided the DeWalt impact wrench at the end! Yes a drill would be the proper tool to use in this situation! Go Milwaukee!!
@@ToolswithSoAlz against the standard M18 hammer drill? (I wouldn’t be surprised if the super hog won, but a bit surprised if a normal handheld drill beat out that D handle at driving 1/2 inch lags) I’d quite like to see that short…although nobody’s gonna drop 1,000$ just for that test I think the motor and the spring in the impact hammer assembly are so big in those D-handles that the motor would just power through go driving a 1/2 inch lag without making enough force to overcome the tension on the spring and make it impact instead of freespin so it’s basically just acting like a drill.
Neither the right tool is a 7/16-inch Hex High Torque Impact Driver Higher torque than a normal Driver and on average 2x the speed of a normal impact wrench ..one handed operation and also lighter and smaller that a High torque impact wrench like that DeWalt or the M18 monsters ..I use to run a Milwaukee corded back in them days for this doing large timber installations and High rise construction .... and loved it because it was always 1 handed leaving me one hand to brace my self when the wind picked up or I had to hold the material in the other hand ..cant do that with a Drill 200-900 feet up on a tether or a gang plank ..lol
I imagine impacts are commonly used by force of habit, rather than drills. I was expecting DeWalt to win the competition, but the Milwaukee gave it a run for its money. Anyway, Milwaukee all the way.
It's just one bolt, screw a handful in a row and you'll see which one is hot as a fry pan while the other is just getting started. Just because you can doesn't mean you should
frankly if you don't use tools on a daily basis making money aka business expense / irs reimbursement go to harbor freight get the Heracles brand. batteries have 21700 cells 8ah for $99 and they usually have good deals. warrantee is super easy like walk in get replacement and gtfo its why I went with them.
Yes drill is the answer. But can we talk about the consistency from the gen 4 all the way through. That’s a well made tool. But drill is the obvious choice.
The only thing I have against a drill is that it’s bigger and harder to get into places vs a compact impact. Although if you have the room to work a drill if the right tool for the job. It all really depends on circumstances which tool you should use.
this guys is wild and hyper aggresive in these comments lol. i mean i learn a thing or to from his videos, and he seems perfectly pleasant in the videos. but then in the comments he goes after people hard and half the time doesnt even help their understanding. just calls them a girl several times, and refuses to elaborate.
@rasheedharrak-sharif2321 then don't complain. BTW, if people lack the intelligence to understand what they see and what is explained, there is no amount of explanation that will make them smarter.
This guy almost religiously exalts the superior qualities of Milwaukee, not always pretty damn close. He bashes Ryobi and the fact is they are the same. They are owned by TTI out of Hong Kong. They roll off the same lines. Milwaukee isn't American made. In fact In 2023, U.S. lawmakers at the Congressional-Executive Commission on China alleged that Milwaukee Tool may have used forced labor from Chinese prisons in its supply chain.
Milwaukee was founded in the US in 1924. Ryobi was founded in Japan in the 40s. Both were eventually bought out by the Chinese. Both companies still have e their own separate R&D teams and have separate manufacturing facilities as well as different Milwaukee president and Ryobi president. They’ve have already clarified the ethos for each company. Ryobi is for DIY homeowner stuff. Milwaukee is for professional tradesmen. Get your fucking facts right
He’s right the real winner is a drill.
That's facts now but but in older days it was pneumatic impact that did that because no drill back then had that power
Hahsha caught me off guard with the drill wats up with using a impact on those?
@@brandonknight7240 you must be young when I was younger impacts were not for that if you could do it with a drill just saying every one younger thanks impact drivers are the way to go a cordless or corded drill is just as important now as it was in 1996: when I started in trades does that answer your question or does Rob need answer 🤔 I mean it's your personal preference and opinion if you think that that works for you by all means I'm not knocking you
@@bluemantom77 ????????
Dewalt, because that is the brand I have literally 25 batteries for.
And mines the opposite answer my co workers got me started on Milwaukee now I have a bunch of battery’s for them and they ain’t cheap so mix matching brands makes no sense unless it’s not a power tool
Same.. lol
Yup! I’m a Milwaukee guy but they’re all good. Once you’ve invested in one brand, you stay in that brand.
In order to post my comment, I had to agree to hurt your feelings . So here goes ,wuss boy. . Professional's make a choice. Similarly, homeowners make a choice when it comes to their needs and budget . Professionals know when to use a drill vs. an impact . The real deal is that a professional is going to have more tools than than a drill and driver. Myself. I have some 14-20 tools (dewalt), including duplicates. I have colleagues that use Milwaukee with just as many tools. The real deal is the batteries. They are not interchangeable. So you have to commit to one brand or another.
It only makes sense.
When are you going to make a video comparison of chainsaws ? I don't know . But whenever you do ,I'll bet you don't do a test with a stihl chain saw using a puolan chain and bar.
Compared to a Husqvarna, using a Craftsman chain and bar will you.
In conclusion... in your own words.
" SHUT UP " !!!
Never in your life say Milwaukee better than dewalt if it’s your brand cool but it’s not better
Despite a drill being the proper tool for this, it blows my mind the only way DeWalt was able to win a lag bolt test was with something double the size of what it was going against.
Milwaukee prioritizes sustained power while Dewalt prioritizes speed. You can see it play out here. Milwaukee is getting every bit of that driver while Dewalt cruises at a higher speed and lower total load.
@@memphis6694 It is.
I that dewalt could drill even bigger lag bolts... not milwaukee 🤯
I hated this guy at first but he's the reason I actually bought a drill
Do a drill vs impact driver while hanging with one arm and the other driving the screw and then say which is will be more manageable => safer
Ma'am you're letting your excuses expose your incompetence
@blamuk ma'am you're letting your arrogance expose your incompetence. I have done more than you, I know more than you, and I own a lot more than you. I've built more and done more than every member of your inbred family
@blamuk Ma'am you watch a couple of the 1500 videos I have posted, and you think you know everything. Stupid people do things just like that. Ma'am, I used to build megawatt projects for the US military, spent 30 years in the trades, owned seven different businesses, and most importantly, I'm not a b**ch; unlike you
Anything that big has to be used with an impact wrench. Unless you want a broken wrist or have to buy a new impact driver because the old one got to hot
Unfortunately for you, only one of us knows how this would truly be done and why the drill is the only tool you would use
@@ToolswithSoAlz🙄🙄
Yeah, but when you get much bigger lag bolts, you're going to need something like that Dewalt, drills work well for most sizes but these are also both very useful tools, the Milwaukee one for like deck screws, the Dewalt for giant lag bolts/lug nuts. And the drills for drilling/some lag bolts
The drill is the only tool you would use for this and anything bigger
@ToolswithSoAlz there's a limit to a drills torque though
@James.0304 it's more a question as to your limits in knowing what you're doing
Hahahaha ,, this guy is toooo funny ,,, bs question in the first place if all your gonna do is shit talk people's answers ,,,,, use whatever is easier to use ,, obviously while using brains not to destroy your work and if necessary keeping with any building codes again if necessary. Personally I can't stand Milwaukee,, always had a DeWalt around and most all I've met on job sites also had DeWalt as well. I've actually done this exact same little lag bolt question this man is trying to show here and if you're going to use a regular drill I don't care who the maker is it better not be battery operated for a lag bolt with those inches I've always found it easier to use in the old days they were called hammer drills now they're called impact drill or wrench.
What I really am saying here is------
Who cares just do your thing ,, if you fukk it up ,, well that's your name not mine.
Sound like your abit emotional over a tool test to be honest @RONCO420RONCO420
Would always use an 1/2 impact wrench for lag bolts that size due them not actually having to work that hard
Use a drill
@@ToolswithSoAlz👎
Id like to see you do it with a drill one handed like that
Ma'am, we do it all the time
Everything I see you use the drill you have both hands on it.
I see that you're letting your excuses expose your incompetence
I wasn’t crying about it. I was just confused why you were using two totally different things, but then left my ass off at the end. 🤣🤣 good one man.
My motor swapped 2nd gen Milwaukee 1/4” driver snaps adapters all day. Swapped with a motor from a 4th gen mid torque 1/2”. Kind of a Frankenstein but I love it.
I'm super grateful for your testing. I've been weiging 12v impact drivers for my interior tool tote, and now I'm looking at 12v drill drivers instead; impacts were so pervasive for so long that they became kind of a reflex, but drill drivers with 1/4" hex chucks exist now, and the direct torque they supply feels like they're punching above their weight after years of reaching for an impact driver without question.
Thank you
*How it feels growing and realizing youre as strong as your dad now 😂
I was stronger than my dad at 15
The ending had me rolling 😂
Lol
I chose a socket and ratchet... back then when a corded drill or impact driver were not powerful enough to drive a ½" lag bolt 😂
My big dewalt sounds like a drill on small fasteners. Doesnt even impact. Little rough on the wrist though. You're the reason ive been looking for the absolutely highest torque drill. I want to speed up building large skids. I need a drill that can sink 3/8 lags quickly without stalling or burning up. Dewalt has a 60v drill but its for mixing sonit has an automatic clutch that disengages.
Flex
Great video man, if you did the drill right at the end that would of blow some minds. After 200 lags or so though, that Milwaukee will probably burn out while the wrench has years of life left. Its big as hell but with weight, comes durability.
I doubt either would make it
@@ToolswithSoAlz probably not but a small thing like the Milwaukee is gonna burn out first and it clearly was slower at getting the job done. The wrench isn't working hard meanwhile the driver is working max capacity struggling. Imagine driving 500 bolts with that thing. It wouldn't last imo. Milwaukee does put out more power I agree. Not totally necessary for everyone using them though. Just my opinion though.
That's why it's called an impact wrench it's meant for cars and heavy machinery to break loose bolts and not driving lags
K
I'm my experience the larger impact wrench doesn't get as hot typically as its smaller brothers (drill and drivers). This is when you drive lots of lags.
Lol! Don't let your arrogance expose your incompetence.
Why are all of your impact comparisons based on speed, rather than torque? Makes no sense
Two things need to be considered - will it drive what needs driven and will it do it faster than anything else. Your comment makes no sense.
Why do you not have the brains to understand the video? It tests a lot more than speed, Sweetheart
@@ToolswithSoAlz speed does not equal torque, much like a wrench and a driver are different tools. Don’t let ya wife fool ya, it’s not all about speed
@@NexusEradication That tool isn't yours, spit it out!
Let's see you " use a freaking drill " on that same test. A drill in each hand, it took all you had to hold two impacts.
This is an honest question. When is to use impact driver?
Impact Drivers are designed for small fasteners, where camout is a possibility, self tappers, and over tightened nuts and bolts. That's it
When your drill has a bit in it, for drilling pilot holes, and you don't feel like switching screwing and unscrewing that chuck 500× throughout the duration of a project. My drill is for drilling holes, impact driver is for driving fasteners. Easy. It's in the name.
The longevity of the tool is also another thing to consider when choosing a brand
I've been a DeWalt user for nearly 20 yrs but I can't deny Milwaukee are next level
Love the automatic head start:)
K
From my experience a Milwaukee impact can’t put a tech screw in metal as good as a Dewalt. I actually hate Milwaukee when working in sheet metal.
Love the videos, and I have the same shirt. 👕 😂
Great Shirt
Bro you are the best!! 😀😀😀
For big ass lags u want torque that impact wrench has way more torque than the driver does of course its gonna win
You're letting your excuses expose your incompetence
I built a big livestock corral with 1/2inch milwaukee impact gun driving in 3/4 diameter × 12 inch lag screw into half cut telephone poles . I had to still predrill it first before lags went in. I tried using drill to drive them in and drill got hot on me so only use it for drilling. 1/2 inch drove those lags in no problem and stayed cool. drill should work on small lags and smaller project .
You used the wrong size pilot hole
The matchup I wanna see is an m18 driver vs an m12 drill. I wanna see just how superior the drill is.
Ok
Hold 2 drills at the same time and see how it feels
Ma'am we have done it. You're letting your excuses expose your incompetence
He won't do it because there's no way it's doable all day long
Not the answer we expected, but the answer we needed lol
Exactly
"use a drill", for a lag that big? Have you ever realistically had to drive multiple like that, nah I'd probably just use a ratchet and socket set, or just use an impact and save your wrist. No one will think you're any less a man
They will if you ever try it that way. Why is it that you comment and don't know how this would be done?
@@ToolswithSoAlz There are many different ways to skin a rabbit my friend, you're the only one here suggesting there's only one.
Spoken like someone who has never seen a job site
@@ToolswithSoAlz what an original cop out, never heard that one before. What jobsite? You're piece of wood in your garage?
@connorcruz6249 Well, Pickle Puffer I used to build megawatt projects for the US military and government. Whereas you're so slow you believe you would use a ratchet
The best tool for the job os the one ya got
I would use whatever tool I got as long as it works well! 😂
another w for dewalt
Ok
It was hard to tell but was the DEWALT in speed 1 not sure
No
Impact
Pretty impressive considering the Milwaukee is half the size
The real winner is the viewer
Thanks for the information 👍
My pleasure
I feel like using a drill for this big of a lag bolt (like 30-40 of them ) would make the drill start to overheat whereas a half inch impact won’t care at all idk just a thought
So, you believe the slower tool, that has metal hitting on metal thousands of times a minute, building heat, transferring that heat through the fastener and the motor of the tool, would last longer? I don't have the time or Crayons needed to get this down to a level you'll be able to understand how wrong you are.
@@ToolswithSoAlz 😂😂 but impacts are literally designed for just this not impact drivers btw
No, they're not. You don't even know the basics
@@ToolswithSoAlz honestly it would be interesting to see how a good powerful drill holds up heat wise vs a regular Milwaukee or dewalt 1/2inch mid tourqe driving like 30 big lag bolts
@Duane2004 we've done it already
This guy just hides in his shop all day playing with thousands of dollars worth of toys. This is my dream life😂
I love your attitude to assholes in the comments "it's not fear, shut up"!!!!
Lol
I got a fever!
Yellow fever.
Tired of always telling folks the same thing. Tired of folks thinking a drill DRIVER is only meant to drill holes
I agree
lol the ending is classic
Have you ever used hilti? I'd like to see them compared to machines from dewalt, makita and milwalke
I need that shirt.
But the dewalt is a lot heavier which is like putting more weight on it since it has more weight in it. For the next comparison Milwaukee 1 inch impact wrench vs dewalt cordless ratchet.
But for the criers out there the Milwaukee impact driver dang near tided the DeWalt impact wrench at the end! Yes a drill would be the proper tool to use in this situation! Go Milwaukee!!
When do you use that impact wrench I also have the dcf900
Proving a point
Put the 1 inch d handle Milwaukee up against a drill :p
Drill wins
@@ToolswithSoAlz against the standard M18 hammer drill? (I wouldn’t be surprised if the super hog won, but a bit surprised if a normal handheld drill beat out that D handle at driving 1/2 inch lags) I’d quite like to see that short…although nobody’s gonna drop 1,000$ just for that test
I think the motor and the spring in the impact hammer assembly are so big in those D-handles that the motor would just power through go driving a 1/2 inch lag without making enough force to overcome the tension on the spring and make it impact instead of freespin so it’s basically just acting like a drill.
@cnf6045 it would. Impacts stop a drill doesn't
Neither the right tool is a 7/16-inch Hex High Torque Impact Driver Higher torque than a normal Driver and on average 2x the speed of a normal impact wrench ..one handed operation and also lighter and smaller that a High torque impact wrench like that DeWalt or the M18 monsters ..I use to run a Milwaukee corded back in them days for this doing large timber installations and High rise construction .... and loved it because it was always 1 handed leaving me one hand to brace my self when the wind picked up or I had to hold the material in the other hand ..cant do that with a Drill 200-900 feet up on a tether or a gang plank ..lol
I imagine impacts are commonly used by force of habit, rather than drills. I was expecting DeWalt to win the competition, but the Milwaukee gave it a run for its money. Anyway, Milwaukee all the way.
It's just one bolt, screw a handful in a row and you'll see which one is hot as a fry pan while the other is just getting started.
Just because you can doesn't mean you should
The drill is the only tool you would use
Neither you should be using a 7/16-inch Hex High Torque Impact Wrench (Tool Only)
frankly if you don't use tools on a daily basis making money aka business expense / irs reimbursement go to harbor freight get the Heracles brand. batteries have 21700 cells 8ah for $99 and they usually have good deals. warrantee is super easy like walk in get replacement and gtfo its why I went with them.
I would definitely buy the milwaukee, it's 1/3 the size of the Dewalt and it was only 3 seconds slower✌️
@leonrobinson8142 I was right. You are incompetent.
Thank you sir I'll be good🤣🤣🤣
Big one.
Unless you like trashing tools lol
Driver as I got one and use it all the time
This is interesting, I had different results in my video but there are several factors that could have made that the case
That second piece of 6X really slowed down the Dewalt
I would hope the dealt would have won 😅 I’d love to see the best Milwaukee 1/2 impact vs the dcf900
Did it win?
Looking ro buy a good brand drill driver kit with 2 batteries, any suggestions, please???
What do you need to use it for
@ToolswithSoAlz Mostly home use. Thinking to buy at Home Depot or Lowes!!! ???
@jaxoonh9770 Ridgid represents the best value in the tool world today. That's what I use around my house
@ToolswithSoAlz Heading to Home Depot tomorrow to check their deals for Riggid. Hope to find a good deal. Thank you sir!!!
@jaxoonh9770 I did a long-form video on the Home Depot deals and I included Ridgid
Yes drill is the answer. But can we talk about the consistency from the gen 4 all the way through. That’s a well made tool. But drill is the obvious choice.
Milwaukee is just unreal
Which ever battery was charged. They both do the job..
Metabo vs Dewalt next, I have the triple hammer
Can I use my Hypertough ratchet and socket set?
Yes
I agree with James
K
Why would you want to blow your ears out when you could just use a drill and also drive it faster
You're telling me
That is the biggest "Small fastener" I have ever seen
Lol
I say impact wrench 100%
Impact wrench vs impact driver. I mean I have a Milwaukee drill. Which I would use in this scenario. But I guess this okay.
Listening is both a skill and an activity
Exactly I wish they wouldn't make them so people would use the correct tool.
Ok not even grade comparable tools that's only the mid grade milwaukee but a good drill will out preform both
Oh brother. Where do I start with this one?
Exactly 💯
I'm not gonna lie the Milwaukee kept up with the Dewalt and that was kinda sad. The correct tool is a drill
I was surprised at the result. I would have never picked it as a virtual tie
😂😂😂 it's not fair, shut up lol
Corded Drill OP!
There both amazing
Bro that took way to long for that lmao
My answer is drill.
How many times does this have to be illustrated before people will drop the whole impact thing.
I don't know
The only thing I have against a drill is that it’s bigger and harder to get into places vs a compact impact. Although if you have the room to work a drill if the right tool for the job. It all really depends on circumstances which tool you should use.
Impact wrench
small vs big.whats if big vs big?
Idk
The DeWalt 1/2 impact wrench won but still using a drill it's faster and better
Just means his right arm is weaker. 😂
😳😳😳😳
When you going live next?
Maybe tonight but definitely on Sunday
The dewaltnis for breakaway anyone that does this is insane.
Hammer Drill
But but my small baby wrists will snap like toothpick if i use a drill
this guys is wild and hyper aggresive in these comments lol. i mean i learn a thing or to from his videos, and he seems perfectly pleasant in the videos. but then in the comments he goes after people hard and half the time doesnt even help their understanding. just calls them a girl several times, and refuses to elaborate.
Don't watch
@ToolswithSoAlz ill watch as long as it's beneficial to me.
@rasheedharrak-sharif2321 then don't complain. BTW, if people lack the intelligence to understand what they see and what is explained, there is no amount of explanation that will make them smarter.
@@ToolswithSoAlz 👍
Dewalt impact wrench sometimes breaks screws in my job 😎
I would use an adjustable wrench 🔧
Ok
I'll stick with the Makita because I dont want to start a different battery platform
Milwaukee for the win
DeWalt takes the W DCF 900💯
This guy almost religiously exalts the superior qualities of Milwaukee, not always pretty damn close. He bashes Ryobi and the fact is they are the same. They are owned by TTI out of Hong Kong. They roll off the same lines. Milwaukee isn't American made. In fact In 2023, U.S. lawmakers at the Congressional-Executive Commission on China alleged that Milwaukee Tool may have used forced labor from Chinese prisons in its supply chain.
Ma'am you're letting your arrogance expose your ignorance
Milwaukee was founded in the US in 1924. Ryobi was founded in Japan in the 40s. Both were eventually bought out by the Chinese. Both companies still have e their own separate R&D teams and have separate manufacturing facilities as well as different Milwaukee president and Ryobi president. They’ve have already clarified the ethos for each company. Ryobi is for DIY homeowner stuff. Milwaukee is for professional tradesmen. Get your fucking facts right
This guy has it out for Dewalt
Ma'am you're a weak minded fangirl who can't handle what she saw. Is your husband around? Maybe he can console you, Sweetheart
This guys gets it
Milwaukee, I have 8 batteries for them
Comedy gold