Try stripping down the 850, clean the speed switch with contact cleaner followed by compressed air. There’s a bit of grease used on assembly, add dust and grit to that, the contacts get bridged.
I've had my dcf850 a little over 2 years now, and it's been as solid as a rock, not a single issue with it and has been my no 1 impact go to since i brought it.
@aaronkowalewski659 I've been torturing my gen 4 red for 6 years. It's all busted up, but it still works. Although, from what I heard and saw the new versions are not as reliable. Might wait for another update before switching.
I converted a dcf850 to an impact wrench & it's been an awesome little work horse for me. Zero issues so far & it's seen a lot of use. I also frequently use all 3 settings with no problems.
I feel like impacts have hit a limit already a while ago, the 1/4 bits just cant handle the torque and break before the driver gets maxed out. Crazy improvement on that 860
Agreed, they need a beefier shank standard for the next generation of drivers, 8mm would make a lot more sense for impacts this powerful. Hopefully the Japanese companies drive the standard so we get stuff like double sided bits and such.
@@nominalvelocity that would make sense. I think that's why makita and hikoki don't build impact drivers that are as powerful as dewalt and milwaukee. Not really any point when the bits can't take the torque
I've never broken any of the T40 bits that come with a box of large torx screws. I've seen plenty of impact drivers that couldn't sink those screws though. The Milwaukee Gen 3/4 rarely struggled, and it's nice that Dewalt's going to finally try and leapfrog them.
I have a DCF850 and use it daily but only on speed 2 as speed 3 is too much juice. However that extra bright LED and 20min function would be awesome but I can’t justify spending $370 AUD just for a skin. Thanks for the comparison mate.
Its expensive thats for sure im still gettkng one. Ive been running the original 3 speed brushless that was the first brushless offering for about 13 years still works fine just haslost alot of its original punch 👊
Nice video, thanks. Seems unfortunate about the 850's unreliability issues youve had. It's my daily use driver and mine has had no issues, same with the 887. I have had trigger issues on the 887 and the DCD796 drill, though, constant trigger pressure, but the RPM's will vary, must be a loose connection?
Just got mine and this thing is a tank of a beast impact driver. What I like about my Dewalt is they stay relatively cool compared to Flex’s and Milwaukee’s flagships
My 850s like 2 1/2 years old and I’ve dropped it 3 stories to solid concrete and it’s totally fine. Only selects the wrong speed like 2 times a month and it’s fixed in like 2 seconds flat. I use it hard because I have a back up 887 and I’d replace it with an 860 if it broke but it runs great. Mines all custom colors and has decals like it’s my #1 most used power tool.
About Freakin Time DeWalt ... Ive been waiting a Looong time for this , when they finally updated their Impact Wrenches I didn't think we would have to wait this long for a New PowerHouse Impact Driver , still hard for me to believe...😂🤣
DeWalt tools for wood, for all else go Team Red! Not so sure that holds water these days, if it ever did. For years, nothing beat Milwaukee on drills and impacts. As a DIY, Fuel 12v would probably more than suffice for me.
A new standard on impact driver.. 2024 is on history... other times was milwaukee in 2018 smaller and stronger. I just wanna see next video dewalt vs flex or milwaukee
Agreed, my 887 was a 100% reliable beast for a bit over 5 years, and I really pushed it hard (remodel carpenter). When it died after being dropped from a 20' scaffold to concrete, I almost got emotional.
I've seen 3 people on my old crew break their gen 4 m18's after less than 18 months. One guy went through 2. My old j man has his dewalt impact from 14 years ago still. Grip started peeling off the, handle and it's missing most of the rubber bumpers but it's still tickin. Also, I find Milwaukee'a batteries tend up stick to their tools a lot when taking the battery out. I'll be actively over working my current Dewalt impact on purpose. Then I can justify buying the 860 if it gives out.
Just FFS! I have the 220nm Milwaukee. It has all the other impact drivers on site for breakfast! "Hey, I can't get the screw I just put in, in the wrong spot, out"! " Bring the Milwaukee over"! Now I have to have this!!!! F! 😂🤣😂
Even with the bug 10" timberlock screw they ALL finished within under 3 seconds of each other. So even after screwing in hundreds of these screws u might save a few minute. 🤔 Either of these tools are perfectly suitable for their intended purpose.
When you're working with a tool all day it makes a big difference. It's not just the time but the fatigue as well. Especially if you're doing them horizontal or at an angle where you can't put your weight into it. He's testing it in a very comfortable position. Try driving long bolts while on a tall ladder, laying on your side or above your head. A lot of work has to be done in awkward positions and that's where the small advantage is multiplied.
@@derrickthd Go for 850 in such a case - imho weight and access into tight space (that's what she said! (c) ) does make more sense, but not pure rage power.
@@mykolashatkovskyi576I have several 840s and I had two 850s. the 840 is my go to for almost everything. 850 is a little shorter but that only helps in very specific situations. The width of the 850 makes it harder to run screws parallel to a long flat surface which is much more common then being in a very specific sized box. The 840 is very narrow and almost as short as the 850. I think any of them would be fine for the average guy. When you drive thousands of screws on a project is when you actually experience the difference more than on paper. At that point there are so many small factors any tool might fit any individual. It's kind of like shoes.
@@gregorsamsa1364 pretty sure i seen VCG test it and gen 3 came out on top. But regardless maybe both versions can be included vs 860. I got dewalt everything but was gonna buy gen 3 after using mates one. Will most likely grab 860 at fielddays in a few weeks.
If I've got it right, powerstack is kinda light, compact and has more rechargeable cycles - which makes it longrun better choice for "daily pros". For DIY morons like myself just waste of money, imho.
My 850 also changes speed without switching modes. I use the screw mode to screw in the terminals on outlets and sometimes it’ll randomly switch to speed 3 and completely strip out the screw and sometimes the threading of the receptacle. If you bang it on the ground it switches to the mode you need… til you drop it Had it for a full year. Kinda disappointed as it’s my first impact and my journeyman’s impact is about 3 years older than mine and his works with no problem
Depends on the car, but, most likely, you have great chances to succeed if you're DIYing your car - just don't overtighten those lugnuts. On the other hand, you'll add some length with a socket adapter. So, if you might intend to use the driver on other car tasks - go for the most compact impact wrench (AEG/Ridgid/Dewalt have tiny but mighty models).
That's because you live in America and Dewalt call them 20v to make people think they are more powerful. You are another victim of this. In the rest of the world they are labeled as what they really are, 18v.
AEGs go under the Ridgid name here in the Americas. I have a tiny one from previous gen(s) and it's awesome - light, compact, powerful, and nice looking. The only thing I don't like with anything but Ryobi is the sliding battery. It's SO MUCH better to "roughly penetrate" instead of "precisely slide" it in (that's what she said (c) ). You can doit even with one hand. For years I was using only Ryobi and couldn't even imagine how annoying it is to try to catch that slide when you're in the very middle of your project and have to emergently replace battery!..
I was thinking the same thing, bought my 850 when it first came out and never had a single issue with it, and never heard of this problem till this video.
DCF 860 is hitting 180-200 foot pound real world ( spec 282 NM ) . Pretty sure all the Phillip head going to strip out . Only Torx , or Hex bolt would survive. Hex you can change car lug nut with it too .
@@kizzjd9578 There will always be time when you have to take out old construction , and there will always be OLD phillip head screw to take out. you can bet your sweet batt pack on it. heck sometime there will be slotted wood screw to take out from a very old building.
Bosch just released a new impact driver, they went from 210 Nm on the last one to 220 on the new version. They increase the power on each model by too small increments in my opinion.
I gave up on my 850 and bought an 860 - not because of the extra power, but just because of the useless mode 1 on the 850 that stops right when you want it to start impacting. Let me turn the stupid screw mode off! Thank god the 860 doesn't have it - it just gets straight to impacting.
Im still running my old 886, just had to change the hammer and chuck etc once or twice, couldnt really notice anything that made the 887 or 850 worth buying. This might've convinced me to finally upgrade😂
i was going to get this dcf860 as soon as it came out, But quickly though naaa i'l wait with dewalts reputation in tatters because of the dcf850 and all of it's problem like you showed in this video demo. to yeah shall be eagerly awaiting your showdown video.....
@mykolashatkovskyi576 Доречі 850 досить добра заміна 887. Хоча я хотів купити 845 але немає в продажу . 860 потужний,важчий. Для більшості монтажних робіт 887 хватає,але 845 і 850 просто вже новіші моделі.
@@igorgoza8582 2 роки в мене вже є маленький безщіточний Ridgid - малий, легкий, потужний та спритний - улюблений інструмент на хазяйстві. Був. Поки не подарували DeWalt 850. Наскільки ж він потужніший за Ridgid! Плюс режим шуруокрута - для "ніжної" роботи. Але. Ridgid все ж трішечки зручніший. так само з 6.5" циркулярками - Ridgid сучасніша, легша, ергономічніша, зручніша пилка.
So total tools was having a deal on Dewalt so I handed over some cash. In the kit picked up the DCF840. Ive been very impressed with it. Looking forward to what the others are like
DeWalt DCF860 VS Milwaukee Gen 4 ruclips.net/video/srEiSdJrMV4/видео.html
Try stripping down the 850, clean the speed switch with contact cleaner followed by compressed air. There’s a bit of grease used on assembly, add dust and grit to that, the contacts get bridged.
I've had my dcf850 a little over 2 years now, and it's been as solid as a rock, not a single issue with it and has been my no 1 impact go to since i brought it.
I feel the same way! I absolutely love my DCF850. I have the Milwaukee Gen 4 2953 which is an animal but the Dewalt is my go to driver
@aaronkowalewski659 I've been torturing my gen 4 red for 6 years. It's all busted up, but it still works. Although, from what I heard and saw the new versions are not as reliable. Might wait for another update before switching.
@vlad1889 the gen 4 hasn't been out 6 years! What are you on about.
The gen 4 was released in 2022, the gen 3 came out in 2016.
I converted a dcf850 to an impact wrench & it's been an awesome little work horse for me. Zero issues so far & it's seen a lot of use. I also frequently use all 3 settings with no problems.
I've had my DCF860 for two weeks and yes it's a beast. It even makes my TD001G look under powerd
I have had the TD002G for 2 years now, still runs like a champ. Love that its water resistant. Ive dropped it in buckets of water and its fine.
Where’d you get it?
@@petro5 Sydney Tools
Where did you buy it?
I feel like impacts have hit a limit already a while ago, the 1/4 bits just cant handle the torque and break before the driver gets maxed out. Crazy improvement on that 860
Agreed, they need a beefier shank standard for the next generation of drivers, 8mm would make a lot more sense for impacts this powerful. Hopefully the Japanese companies drive the standard so we get stuff like double sided bits and such.
@@nominalvelocity that would make sense. I think that's why makita and hikoki don't build impact drivers that are as powerful as dewalt and milwaukee. Not really any point when the bits can't take the torque
@@nominalvelocitydon't need any of that, it's called a 3/8 or 1/2 impact wrench, get one!
I’d really like a mid torque 7/16 hex
I've never broken any of the T40 bits that come with a box of large torx screws. I've seen plenty of impact drivers that couldn't sink those screws though. The Milwaukee Gen 3/4 rarely struggled, and it's nice that Dewalt's going to finally try and leapfrog them.
I have a DCF850 and use it daily but only on speed 2 as speed 3 is too much juice. However that extra bright LED and 20min function would be awesome but I can’t justify spending $370 AUD just for a skin. Thanks for the comparison mate.
Its expensive thats for sure im still gettkng one. Ive been running the original 3 speed brushless that was the first brushless offering for about 13 years still works fine just haslost alot of its original punch 👊
The 2 Minute Version ruclips.net/video/U_keTE_p360/видео.html
Nice video, thanks. Seems unfortunate about the 850's unreliability issues youve had. It's my daily use driver and mine has had no issues, same with the 887. I have had trigger issues on the 887 and the DCD796 drill, though, constant trigger pressure, but the RPM's will vary, must be a loose connection?
Just got mine and this thing is a tank of a beast impact driver. What I like about my Dewalt is they stay relatively cool compared to Flex’s and Milwaukee’s flagships
Got mine super hot yesterday. But it does take much longer than the gen 3 and 4 Milwaukee.
Its about tkme ive set fore to 3 of my dewalt impacts laying boards
Tried the 860 side by side with a 922 wrench the other week. Nothing in it. Beast of a tool for the size!
My 850s like 2 1/2 years old and I’ve dropped it 3 stories to solid concrete and it’s totally fine. Only selects the wrong speed like 2 times a month and it’s fixed in like 2 seconds flat. I use it hard because I have a back up 887 and I’d replace it with an 860 if it broke but it runs great. Mines all custom colors and has decals like it’s my #1 most used power tool.
Any chance to compare dcf860 and dcf870? Since 870 only have 50Nm torque.
About Freakin Time DeWalt ... Ive been waiting a Looong time for this , when they finally updated their Impact Wrenches I didn't think we would have to wait this long for a New PowerHouse Impact Driver , still hard for me to believe...😂🤣
My DCF850 has been hands down the most rrliable driver ive ever owned. So im kinda shocked to see you having issues it.
Thank for the video from ca, USA! & any advice on choosing the least problematic impact driver? I was thinking m18 gen 4 trash same with dewalt
_If you've seen my channel, you should know the answer..._
Cant wait until makita releases the TD004G. Hopefully it has the ring light and is significantly more powerful.
I want to see it vs Makita 40v and vs Milwaukee
Any idea when this will release in the U.S?
We Always seem to be LAST
@ericnichols9275 Rubbish. DeWalt and Milwaukee are usually released months before the rest of the world.
@@ToolsAndStuffOFFICIAL does not show up on any tool sites like ACME or OHIO Power tools
Yes on THIS occasion you weren't first, but as I said, usually you are.
DeWalt tools for wood, for all else go Team Red!
Not so sure that holds water these days, if it ever did.
For years, nothing beat Milwaukee on drills and impacts.
As a DIY, Fuel 12v would probably more than suffice for me.
I have literally not once had an issue with a Dewalt 3 position switch in a tool that wasn't battered to hell in a decade.
You got lucky.
@@ToolsAndStuffOFFICIAL
Neither have i and ive been running it since i started working
5+ hard years on an 887 with zero issues, and not once heard a complaint about the switch from a fellow tradesman.
For bigger screws I use the dcf922, lighter jobs the dcf887.
Where can I buy this?
A new standard on impact driver.. 2024 is on history... other times was milwaukee in 2018 smaller and stronger.
I just wanna see next video dewalt vs flex or milwaukee
Good Detail Show !!~~~
My 887 is starting to give up after over 7.5 years, never had an issue with the speeds.
Agreed, my 887 was a 100% reliable beast for a bit over 5 years, and I really pushed it hard (remodel carpenter). When it died after being dropped from a 20' scaffold to concrete, I almost got emotional.
Had my DCF850 for a year and a half and it's never had any of those issues.
I'm getting the dcf845.
I don't use DeWalt but if I was to pick one of the three the 850 is to clear winner sizes King the smaller the better
Except they are unreliable. When working properly they are a great little unit.
@ToolsAndStuffOFFICIAL your the first I've heard of having this issue mabey it's more common but I know 6 diff guys that have them and no issues
A few people in the comments have the same issues. It is very common.
@@ToolsAndStuffOFFICIALis the 850 issue fixable? Im curious if for most people its the same thing that fails.
I've seen 3 people on my old crew break their gen 4 m18's after less than 18 months. One guy went through 2. My old j man has his dewalt impact from 14 years ago still. Grip started peeling off the, handle and it's missing most of the rubber bumpers but it's still tickin. Also, I find Milwaukee'a batteries tend up stick to their tools a lot when taking the battery out.
I'll be actively over working my current Dewalt impact on purpose. Then I can justify buying the 860 if it gives out.
Does bit wobble?
Weird to see the 850 trip up like that! I've had mine for a few years and beaten the shit out of it without so much as a hiccup!
Just FFS!
I have the 220nm Milwaukee. It has all the other impact drivers on site for breakfast!
"Hey, I can't get the screw I just put in, in the wrong spot, out"! " Bring the Milwaukee over"!
Now I have to have this!!!!
F! 😂🤣😂
there is a new kid in town. 282nm Dewalt DCF860 it´s been beating the Milwaukee constantly with other youtubers.
Even with the bug 10" timberlock screw they ALL finished within under 3 seconds of each other. So even after screwing in hundreds of these screws u might save a few minute. 🤔 Either of these tools are perfectly suitable for their intended purpose.
When you're working with a tool all day it makes a big difference. It's not just the time but the fatigue as well. Especially if you're doing them horizontal or at an angle where you can't put your weight into it. He's testing it in a very comfortable position. Try driving long bolts while on a tall ladder, laying on your side or above your head. A lot of work has to be done in awkward positions and that's where the small advantage is multiplied.
@@derrickthd
Go for 850 in such a case - imho weight and access into tight space (that's what she said! (c) ) does make more sense, but not pure rage power.
@@mykolashatkovskyi576I have several 840s and I had two 850s. the 840 is my go to for almost everything. 850 is a little shorter but that only helps in very specific situations. The width of the 850 makes it harder to run screws parallel to a long flat surface which is much more common then being in a very specific sized box. The 840 is very narrow and almost as short as the 850.
I think any of them would be fine for the average guy. When you drive thousands of screws on a project is when you actually experience the difference more than on paper. At that point there are so many small factors any tool might fit any individual. It's kind of like shoes.
860 vs gen3 Milwaukee is a must at some point.
And surely gen 4
@@ToolsAndStuffOFFICIAL isn’t gen 3 more powerful than 4 for some odd reason?
@@Sgten01nope
@@gregorsamsa1364 pretty sure i seen VCG test it and gen 3 came out on top. But regardless maybe both versions can be included vs 860. I got dewalt everything but was gonna buy gen 3 after using mates one. Will most likely grab 860 at fielddays in a few weeks.
@Sgten01 gen 4 came out on top in their performance tests. But not by much, if I remember correctly
So the 6 amp battery is better than the power stack?
If I've got it right, powerstack is kinda light, compact and has more rechargeable cycles - which makes it longrun better choice for "daily pros". For DIY morons like myself just waste of money, imho.
My 850 also changes speed without switching modes. I use the screw mode to screw in the terminals on outlets and sometimes it’ll randomly switch to speed 3 and completely strip out the screw and sometimes the threading of the receptacle.
If you bang it on the ground it switches to the mode you need… til you drop it
Had it for a full year. Kinda disappointed as it’s my first impact and my journeyman’s impact is about 3 years older than mine and his works with no problem
13:50 I have a feeling this will smoke the competition.
Do those have enough torque to do wheelbults on a car?
Depends on the car, but, most likely, you have great chances to succeed if you're DIYing your car - just don't overtighten those lugnuts. On the other hand, you'll add some length with a socket adapter. So, if you might intend to use the driver on other car tasks - go for the most compact impact wrench (AEG/Ridgid/Dewalt have tiny but mighty models).
Still don't understand why they released the 840 and 845 if after less than a year they release the 860.
Been 2 years for 840 and 1 year for 845 now. They have been releasing a new one every year last few years
Video is only 6 months old, but all 3 drivers say 18V on them. All I find is 20V now on those models
That's because you live in America and Dewalt call them 20v to make people think they are more powerful. You are another victim of this. In the rest of the world they are labeled as what they really are, 18v.
It may be the reason why 850 glitches in you - it missed "our" 2 additional volts ;-)
I have a Makita impact driver which pales in comparison torque-wise
Good test
I've seen videos of the new AEG and that's a beast! Curious to see how they compare.
AEGs go under the Ridgid name here in the Americas. I have a tiny one from previous gen(s) and it's awesome - light, compact, powerful, and nice looking. The only thing I don't like with anything but Ryobi is the sliding battery. It's SO MUCH better to "roughly penetrate" instead of "precisely slide" it in (that's what she said (c) ). You can doit even with one hand. For years I was using only Ryobi and couldn't even imagine how annoying it is to try to catch that slide when you're in the very middle of your project and have to emergently replace battery!..
There must be an issue specifically with the Australian version of the dcf850 because I've never seen that issue here in america
I was thinking the same thing, bought my 850 when it first came out and never had a single issue with it, and never heard of this problem till this video.
887>>> 59£=good deal, 860>>> 200£=no thanks.
DCF 860 is hitting 180-200 foot
pound real world ( spec 282 NM ) . Pretty sure all the Phillip head going to strip out .
Only Torx , or Hex bolt would survive.
Hex you can change car lug nut with it too .
Doubt anyone would be driving a phillips head screw in on max power though.
@@kizzjd9578 There will always be time when you have to take out old construction , and there will always be OLD phillip head screw to take out. you can bet your sweet batt pack on it.
heck sometime there will be slotted wood screw to take out from a very old building.
@@sofjanmustopoh7232 yea i come across the old flathead 10-12g screws all the time unfortunately lol.
Agreed !@@kizzjd9578
Square head #3 Carlisle screws
282? Oh boy, those poor collets 😅
Yeah 100 more than a 173
Wish I could find one of these here in the USA, I'm still using the DCF787 that came with the Dewalt kit I bought couple years ago.
The 850 is just so tiny. No need for a 12v line anymore. Put a bigger battery on when you need, put a 2ah on when you don't.
ma man!
Put it up against flex's best with their lithium pouch.
Bosch just released a new impact driver, they went from 210 Nm on the last one to 220 on the new version. They increase the power on each model by too small increments in my opinion.
I don't know why you didn't include the dcf845, it's more powerful than the dcf887 and the dcf850.
No it isn't. Not according to the people I asked whom had already tested it.
@@ToolsAndStuffOFFICIAL Most tests I've seen put the dcf845 second to the dcf860!
Go check!
I gave up on my 850 and bought an 860 - not because of the extra power, but just because of the useless mode 1 on the 850 that stops right when you want it to start impacting. Let me turn the stupid screw mode off! Thank god the 860 doesn't have it - it just gets straight to impacting.
I believe it may make some sense for cabinetry pocket hole assembly without having a gentle electric screwdriver, imho.
A real dewalt Milwaukee fight finally after fobbing us off with junk
Im still running my old 886, just had to change the hammer and chuck etc once or twice, couldnt really notice anything that made the 887 or 850 worth buying. This might've convinced me to finally upgrade😂
can 860 uses double sided bits?
it depends on where it is released. For asia, double sided bits are standard.
i was going to get this dcf860 as soon as it came out, But quickly though naaa i'l wait with dewalts reputation in tatters because of the dcf850 and all of it's problem like you showed in this video demo. to yeah shall be eagerly awaiting your showdown video.....
Hopefully it survives all the tests I have lined up for it... but I won't be surprised if it doesn't.
Makita ftw. For overall reliability, adequate speed, adequate power
922 with 1/4 head
My 850 does this same exact thing since day one.
It's just not purple--with-a-ring-light enough.
Vs Milwaukee
Milwaukee comparison
W. O. W. Z. Z. E. R. !!!
208 Ft Lbs
За ціну 860 можна купити 2 887
887 наче вже не немає в наявності
принаймні тут в Монреалі
@mykolashatkovskyi576
В Польщі є в продажі
@mykolashatkovskyi576
Доречі 850 досить добра заміна 887.
Хоча я хотів купити 845 але немає в продажу .
860 потужний,важчий.
Для більшості монтажних робіт 887 хватає,але 845 і 850 просто вже новіші моделі.
@@igorgoza8582
2 роки в мене вже є маленький безщіточний Ridgid - малий, легкий, потужний та спритний - улюблений інструмент на хазяйстві. Був. Поки не подарували DeWalt 850. Наскільки ж він потужніший за Ridgid! Плюс режим шуруокрута - для "ніжної" роботи. Але. Ridgid все ж трішечки зручніший.
так само з 6.5" циркулярками - Ridgid сучасніша, легша, ергономічніша, зручніша пилка.
So total tools was having a deal on Dewalt so I handed over some cash. In the kit picked up the DCF840. Ive been very impressed with it.
Looking forward to what the others are like
The 860 leaves the 840 for dead.
@@ToolsAndStuffOFFICIAL I also couldn’t pass up the kits as it came with a 5ah power stack.
@@ruddigger83 DeWalt sell kits at ridiculously cheap prices. Often cheaper to buy a kit than buy a stand alone battery. Their marketing is whack.
@@ToolsAndStuffOFFICIAL does the chuck still flop around like crazy with a long extension bit in it like the 887?
Damn
870은 더 나아질라나?
It won't be more powerful, just quieter.
I wouldn't trust it until you've thrashed it for a year.
I never expect a DeWalt to last a year.
@@ToolsAndStuffOFFICIAL Wow, that puts them on the never buy one list for me. Thanks for the candour.
My 850 sucks to it dose the same things it’s bullshit the should recall them
Holy shit lol
Sorry. Not into Black and Decker 😮
Too bad Dewalt, already replaced you with Milwaukee, womp womp
Try this ruclips.net/video/srEiSdJrMV4/видео.html
Only took dewalt 20 years to catch up
Need This New 860 for my RUclips channel i have 500 VIDEOS Planned
Foot pounds...
in the last 3 impact dewalt problems with electronics, half a year and in the trash
OK DEWALTS AND MILWAUKEES I'M CARELESS FOR YOUR COLORS OR PRICE$$ AND POWER 🔋 JUST LETS GET THE JOB DONE ON TIME ⏲️ 💪🏼 AND GO HOME