@Coptool Great Review! I just would like to mention one thing about the Makita. I have found the speed control very useful in starting holes to prevent wandering of the bit as well as finishing to minimize blowout.
I know it's late but you guy's stated DeWalt @9ah for it's capacity for runtime comparison, that's incorrect. It's 3ah @60 v nominal and 9ah @20v nominal on the flexvolt series
Same here when it comes to any sds drills I'm going with dewalt any day, and I'm a milwaukee fan. All milwaukee beside dewalt sds's lol I even tell the other milwaukee fan boys they're doing it wrong, don't get me wrong the milwaukee are good buy not the best and I'm only interested in buying the best if I'm spending my hard earned money
I've gone through several Milwaukee cordless SDS RHD's. NOT iimpressed at all. One failed and Milwaukee did not want to warranty it. These are not as magical as Milwaukee claims. Overheating and cutout issues. I'm not the only one.
there warranty is a scam I used my hammer drill (third one all have problems ) for 3/16 holes in marble had problems sent in under warranty but was denied due to excessive use WT FUDGE !!!!!!!!!!
You are 100% correct but since all these batteries can be used as 18V nominal / 20V Max batteries we gave the Ah rating so they could be directly compared. Technically the Flexvolt is a 54V nominal / 60V max battery at 3.0Ah, Milwaukee is a 18V nominal / 20V max battery at 9.0Ah and Makita is working in series as a 36V nominal / 40V Max power supply at 5.0Ah but not sure it makes it any easier to understand.
Would be easier, if you switched to Wh. Dewalt 162Wh Makita 180Wh Milwaukee 162Wh I think the Dewalt benefit from the different cell size. Bigger Cell = Less Resistant = Less Heat = More energy for the tool.
The idea here was to provide the same size "gas tank" on it's own (perhaps a Wh would have been a better measure as Hassla suggests). For testing we are mostly looking at how each competitor can convert the same amount of energy (or as close as we can get) to create the most functional tool. At the end of the day whether the tool uses 18V, 36V or 54V should be less important than which tool is the most powerful rotary hammer with the longest run-time. In this case the highest voltage was not the most powerful.
Understand the Li Ion technology inside them and stick with a nominal volt for all brands, no matter their hysteria and fake marketing material coming out of Dewalts marketing..
ive heard nothing but good about the milwuakee rotary hammers and theyre the only line up not doing any battery nonsense any one battery on any tool they offer and itll work, but i gotta say i wouldnt want to buy one that doesnt have the 3 modes like dewalt because i could definitely see this being used to drill some holes in steel from time to time rather then the typical hand held drills that break your wrists on every hole
I owned a 12 volt cordless milwaukee drill over 20 years ago, dropped it 35 feet onto concrete. Battery shot out the side, a small crack on the casing. They should drop all three of these drills and see witch one survives.
Ya not to sure about your reviews sometimes. That Makita is the best performing tool in the test. Put some 6.0’s in it to make it apples to apples for runtime. Makita charges both batteries in 45 min. Fastest charge time. You said hour. Don’t forget you can use the Makita batteries you already have! Same batteries. That counts for something. 10ah?? The Makita isn’t 10ah.
😂😂😂 the 12.0Amp battery is your only problem? 😂😂😂 This just happens when ignorant (or provocateurs) people try to make a presentation or comparison... 😂😂😂 first of all they named the Milwaukee model presented as "5317"... 5317, is the wired 110V model of milwaukee... What they show in video is the 2717 Milwaukee... 😂😂😂 2717 is the economical version sds-max of milwaukee... the real competitor of XRH07ZKU-MAKITA and DCH481X2-DEWALT is the 2718-MILWAUKEE... I'm tired to writing the differences between the 2718 and the cheap 2717 that these guys have chosen to present... just if you want, take a look here: ruclips.net/video/YKkChfqa8l0/видео.html
This is a fair point. Our focus on that category was runtime, and we slightly skewed the score based on efficiency. If we strictly stuck to "run time on a full battery run cycle of the included batteries", ignoring how many more watt-hours the Makita included, then we should have given it the same score. We will be sure to consider this in future scoring. Thanks for pointing it out!
when adding batteries in series, the voltages are summed, but not the amps. ...at least per Georg. the makita's 36V configuration is still only 5ah capacity, not 10. as per your simple logic of simply meriting holes drilled/amp-hour, then the makita sits in a class of itself.
I would like to see this test run again exactly the same except for this time put the 12.0 high output battery on the Milwaukee and then let's watch it clean up and send the other guys running with their tail between their. legs
If you compare Watt-Hr per hole drill for battery run time, the Milwaukee wins by far, especially if you deduct a point on the Makita vs. the Dewalt because it's 10AH vs. 9AH battery of the Dewalt.
Luc true story, here is our video of the Dewalt Flexvolt 1-7/8" from World of Concrete here ruclips.net/video/Rlm2xmMZvrg/видео.html we hope to see this later 2018 along with a few other competitors which may make this video useless by the end of the year but for at least the next 3-6 months these drills are what we got!
Run time and capacity is the most important unless they let you take multiple coffee breaks while the batteries recharge. Im not impressed no matter how many volts it has. Its just marketing hype. The other important factor is repair part availability. Ill stick to their corded model. At 3 hr recharge time, i would be finished with a corded tool.
A hammer drill does just fine! If your a contractor then get the rotary hammer drill! Which you probably ain’t I have a craftsman hammer drill and drills nice and only cost 59$ at Lowe’s ! Be smart and don’t be a consumer !
These are geared towards people who work drilling and chipping concrete professionally, not a DIY basement reno. The guy who comes to repair what you just fixed just might own one of these drills.
It is not 5A, amperage would be much higher than that. It is 5Ah (Amp Hour!) @ 36V, which is the same amount of total available energy as 10Ah @ 18V. [Dwain, oztooltalk]
@@OZToolTalk ITS A 36v Machine FULLSTOP. If I put 2 x 18v 3 amp batteries into a 36v machine what do I get? ... 36v 3amp not 18v 6 amp.. get ur shite together man.
I would recommend you guys watching this to see how Tool Buzz do the equal testing of tools... they tested not only these 3 tools but also more brands such as Hilton, ridgid, etc
These test are really cute , if u wanna know what’s really going on......talk to the guys that do this for a living. I mean the guys who drill holes in crete every damn day.
I'm sorry, but the Makita loses because it doesn't have the drill only mode. That's just a no brainer. WiFi dust extraction activation? It's called turn on the vacuum then drill. Just another electronic feature to fail and then go back to regular on switch operation.
That makita looks and perform shmick !!! But im a Milwaukee fan.....and we cant win them all.....keep saying crap about it and next year they'll come out with gen2 AWESOME REVIEW!!....very clear n simple amongst the top brands.....bosch is also well known in the world of concrete....and they'd recently upd their tool warranty to 6yrs... but they hardly come out with any new tools so are falling behind in the race
Nice review. Makita and Milwaukee have it right sticking to one battery platform, I don't want to have to carry different batteries for each of my tools.
Pro1er the dewalt flexvolt batteries all work with both 18/20 and 54/60 volt tools Between all my gear, i have 3 only 18V batteries(2&4AH) and 3 flexvolt batteries(6 and 9 AH) I can use any batteries with my 18V tools, but keep one or both 9AH batteries for my SDS
Makita it’s should be 2nd or 3rd or probably more low!! because comes with two batteries!! Make you waste more time more space and more money in that and also more electricity charging batteries.
somehow they got confused computing AH rating with series and parallel batteries...haha. it doesn't work that way no matter how you explain it. Inside the batteries itself are series and parallel batteries and somehow externally its not when you series or parallel a battery...get out of here...that total BULL.. you can't make up your own mathematical formula
Exactly. DeWalt is 3ah at 54 volts and Makita is 5ah at 36 volts. That puts Makita at 180 watt hours, DeWalt at 162 watt hours, and Milwaukee at 162 watt hours
Just so you know, I have the makita and the tag says 'made in Japan' as for the others I have no idea. But I would suspect the Milwaukee is made in china since they are owned by TTI
Stephane Moisan it is a word - EFFICIENCY, don't you know? I'll better buy 3 makitas for my crew for the price of hilti and do the job faster. And buy beer for everyone after the job for money I saved. When all makitas will outlast I'll buy another 3. Doesn't it smarter?
@@deserteagle1166 you need to get over your self and be realistic. Disassemble the tools and you would realize why Hilti is way better then the competition. Better build better quality. DeWalt makes good tools Bosh makes good tools lots of great tools out there. Take them apart and you will learn something. PS don't drink too much beer it will fog up your mind. Makita is stuck on there 18 volt platform. Way behind 😁 explore around
where is Hilti and Bosch? Hilti is always the best in driling in concrite, Dewalt is the best in saw, makita and bosch is good for meedle range, And Milwaukee.... not for drill in concret, but very universal for everithing else, as platform
Hilti and Bosch, as well as the 2718 sds-max onekey of milwaukee is where it should be... Very well hidden so that the DCH481X2 DEWALT looks the best SDS on the market... 😂😂😂😂😂 This is the purpose of this video 😂😂😂
A 1 point separation winner that costs much more...also the makita and Milwaukee had sale prices but the Dewalt was full price, it is always on sale for 100 less.and a second free battery..making it a much much better deal then the makita. ..it drilled more holes and had a better runtime. Half of your tests are subjective, which if you watch were all skewed to the makita. If you take out your bias opinion , Dewalt clearly wins. Also the 60 v batteries and platform is completely unmatched in power and performance by anyone to this point. Not even close. Further with the new sds max coming in a couple months , there is no competition at all...not true,,Hilti beats everyone in all competitions but for the price you could buy two Flexvolt kits and double the workload..
Iloveapplefritters your clearly not a professional... I build custom homes and nothing lasts like DeWalt cordless tools... especially flexvolt tools... your completely wrong... Flexvolt is the only cordless tools that perform better then corded tools...
and yet this Makita beats that Flexvolt. And the Makita did it with a smaller power envelope. (~1440W vs ~1600W max) this Makita also beats various 1-9/16" corded models. but yeah, only Dewalt can beat corded performance because you said so. Because building custom homes somehow makes you an expert on BLDC motors and battery tech. Less shilling. More self-educatin'
Here: ruclips.net/video/_A-06Fw3Olo/видео.html the same guys, explain very well how batteries work and how we can calculate their capacity in mAh... in this video, they seem to have forgotten how we calculate... 😂😂😂 we have two ways to connect batteries, in series or parallel... example, the two ways to connect two batteries 18V-5Ah are: parallel, and you have a 18V-10Ah battery or in line, and you have a 36V-5Ah... about makita (running at 36V) the batteries are connected in series and the capacity is 5Ah and not 10Ah... DeWalt battery is dual, it works at 20V or 60V, the connection is made between the cells inside the battery. there are 15 cells (18650) of 4V-3Ah each. if tool needs 20V, 5 triples connected parallel (3x3Ah=9Ah) and all 5 triples are connected in series (5x4V=20V) and so we have a 20V-9Ah battery... If tool needs 60V, all the 15 cells (4V-3Ah) connected in series (15x4V=60V) and if there is no connection parallel the capacity is exactly same of 1 cell (1x3Ah=3Ah) so, about DeWalt (running at 60V) the capacity is 3Ah and not 9Ah... simple math.... are taught to 6-year-old childrens in the first grade... I can't understand why adult peoples are still confused... as well as I can't understand why confused people insist on uploading videos... 😂😂😂😂😂
To me the Makita should finish last. The weight and price alone make it not practical. Think about the time and the hassle to charge 4 batteries. Two batteries increases the weight for the slight power improvement that saves you 3 seconds per hole and you have to lug a hunk of weight. If you are drilling 100 holes, I can see the point but in most cases you are just drilling a few holes. The Milwaukee now has a 12Ah battery which makes it more practical to use. The Dewalt should come in 1st place, Milwaukee second and Makita last. This review is totally bias. Have you ever had to monitor and charge 4 batteries? Obviously you are not an active working contractor. Don't do the review unless you actually use it every day.
Agreed but one thing no one brings up is that milwaukee uses all the same batteries for every 18 volt tool so if your battery dies you can use a 5.0 to finish or use your new 12.0. As dewalt has flex volt batteries but you can’t use a basic 20 volt so you need specific batteries for that drill
I agree. I'm a Milwaukee guy but DeWalt is the clear winner. Makita is a bunch of gimmicks that requires twice as many batteries to do the same thing. The big thing that stands out to me is that chipping mode on the DeWalt. That alone makes it the clear choice when buying
I guess you tested a wrong Milwaukee model to compare with makita and dewalt. Milwaukee has a model way powerful than being tested... rigged testing likely sponsored by makita.. cheap to advertise this way than commercials heheheh....
Man you need to get off the fanwagon. The Milwakuee can push maybe 900-950 watt out of there's m18 batteries. While Dewalt can't push up to 1600watt and Makita around 1400-1450watt that's the downside of the M18 system you can only go Soo far with a 18V 18650 cell battery. Metabo and Bosch can push uppsala too 1450watt with the new 21700 batteries.
@Coptool Great Review! I just would like to mention one thing about the Makita. I have found the speed control very useful in starting holes to prevent wandering of the bit as well as finishing to minimize blowout.
Wow what a throwback. Was looking for rotary hammers and found y’all young. Love the show and I tune every week. Thanks for this.
Did I miss the chipping test?
I know it's late but you guy's stated DeWalt @9ah for it's capacity for runtime comparison, that's incorrect. It's 3ah @60 v nominal and 9ah @20v nominal on the flexvolt series
I am on Dewalt platform, but I think Makita is the best quality in just about everything.
Hands down.
Would have loved to see the Metabo HPT (Hikoki) Multivolt SDS Max 1-9/16” up against these three.
Buying 2 makita batteries is cheaper for me than buying one 9 flex volt.
Buying 4 flexvolt 12ah for all tools 60v or 20v max then buying tools without batteries is cheapest
i was sure the dewalt was going to be number one.... i would still pick dewalt.
I think the same
Same here when it comes to any sds drills I'm going with dewalt any day, and I'm a milwaukee fan.
All milwaukee beside dewalt sds's lol I even tell the other milwaukee fan boys they're doing it wrong, don't get me wrong the milwaukee are good buy not the best and I'm only interested in buying the best if I'm spending my hard earned money
Yep the 36V SDS rotary by Metabo HPT is great and it also gets plugged in with the AC adapter which makes it my favorite and most flexibke
I've gone through several Milwaukee cordless SDS RHD's. NOT iimpressed at all. One failed and Milwaukee did not want to warranty it. These are not as magical as Milwaukee claims. Overheating and cutout issues. I'm not the only one.
there warranty is a scam I used my hammer drill (third one all have problems ) for 3/16 holes in marble had problems sent in under warranty but was denied due to excessive use WT FUDGE !!!!!!!!!!
The Makita is Only 5Ah as the batteries are in series. 2x18 v but not 2x5Ah
You are 100% correct but since all these batteries can be used as 18V nominal / 20V Max batteries we gave the Ah rating so they could be directly compared. Technically the Flexvolt is a 54V nominal / 60V max battery at 3.0Ah, Milwaukee is a 18V nominal / 20V max battery at 9.0Ah and Makita is working in series as a 36V nominal / 40V Max power supply at 5.0Ah but not sure it makes it any easier to understand.
Would be easier, if you switched to Wh.
Dewalt 162Wh
Makita 180Wh
Milwaukee 162Wh
I think the Dewalt benefit from the different cell size.
Bigger Cell = Less Resistant = Less Heat = More energy for the tool.
The Makita is 5.0 Ah, not 10Ah.
Series not parallel. You should list the ratings as tested as not to confuse or skew numbers!
The idea here was to provide the same size "gas tank" on it's own (perhaps a Wh would have been a better measure as Hassla suggests). For testing we are mostly looking at how each competitor can convert the same amount of energy (or as close as we can get) to create the most functional tool. At the end of the day whether the tool uses 18V, 36V or 54V should be less important than which tool is the most powerful rotary hammer with the longest run-time. In this case the highest voltage was not the most powerful.
Understand the Li Ion technology inside them and stick with a nominal volt for all brands, no matter their hysteria and fake marketing material coming out of Dewalts marketing..
Nowadays I am using Power rotatory hammer drill Amazing work done by my daily routine...
The Dewalt battery is 9ah at 20v and 3ah 60v and the DeWalt DCH481 is 60v
ive heard nothing but good about the milwuakee rotary hammers and theyre the only line up not doing any battery nonsense any one battery on any tool they offer and itll work, but i gotta say i wouldnt want to buy one that doesnt have the 3 modes like dewalt because i could definitely see this being used to drill some holes in steel from time to time rather then the typical hand held drills that break your wrists on every hole
3:15 no. The Dewalt is 54v *3Ah* Its only 9Ah if your using it at 18v
I owned a 12 volt cordless milwaukee drill over 20 years ago, dropped it 35 feet onto concrete. Battery shot out the side, a small crack on the casing. They should drop all three of these drills and see witch one survives.
Ya not to sure about your reviews sometimes. That Makita is the best performing tool in the test. Put some 6.0’s in it to make it apples to apples for runtime. Makita charges both batteries in 45 min. Fastest charge time. You said hour. Don’t forget you can use the Makita batteries you already have! Same batteries. That counts for something. 10ah?? The Makita isn’t 10ah.
Do this test with the 12.0 ah Milwaukee battery
😂😂😂
the 12.0Amp battery is your only problem?
😂😂😂
This just happens when ignorant (or provocateurs) people try to make a presentation or comparison...
😂😂😂
first of all they named the Milwaukee model presented as "5317"...
5317, is the wired 110V model of milwaukee...
What they show in video is the 2717 Milwaukee...
😂😂😂
2717 is the economical version sds-max of milwaukee...
the real competitor of XRH07ZKU-MAKITA and DCH481X2-DEWALT is the 2718-MILWAUKEE...
I'm tired to writing the differences between the 2718 and the cheap 2717 that these guys have chosen to present...
just if you want, take a look here:
ruclips.net/video/YKkChfqa8l0/видео.html
If that's your solution then I guess you had better up the Dewalt to the 12 as well and the Makita to a pair of 6s
yeah then it would lose due to extra 10lbs added
I don’t understand why you would give the makita less points on total holes drilled regardless of the a/h rating. Tied the dewalt but scored less.
This is a fair point. Our focus on that category was runtime, and we slightly skewed the score based on efficiency. If we strictly stuck to "run time on a full battery run cycle of the included batteries", ignoring how many more watt-hours the Makita included, then we should have given it the same score. We will be sure to consider this in future scoring. Thanks for pointing it out!
when adding batteries in series, the voltages are summed, but not the amps. ...at least per Georg. the makita's 36V configuration is still only 5ah capacity, not 10. as per your simple logic of simply meriting holes drilled/amp-hour, then the makita sits in a class of itself.
Biased that’s why. It was pretty clear.
The dewalt has 20v with 9 amp battery or if you convert to 60v then it only has 3 amp battery . Hope this help
and in the UK we pay for the same $1300+ this is nuts man
Makita all day long.
Makita running two batteries at the time is a heavy load that more load to hold on to
I would like to see this test run again exactly the same except for this time put the 12.0 high output battery on the Milwaukee and then let's watch it clean up and send the other guys running with their tail between their. legs
they have this 1 9/16 inch Milwaukee for 229 at depot , Tool only
You guys should do this again but whith saws
Doesn't matter what voltage you choose. A flat battery is a flat battery , Regardless.
try new milwaukee!!!! please!!!
If you compare Watt-Hr per hole drill for battery run time, the Milwaukee wins by far, especially if you deduct a point on the Makita vs. the Dewalt because it's 10AH vs. 9AH battery of the Dewalt.
Nice video but I like Bosch Rotary hammers, they are almost invincible.
Tools lover be like these machines always
Dewalt is comming out with a bigger boy SDS max
Luc true story, here is our video of the Dewalt Flexvolt 1-7/8" from World of Concrete here ruclips.net/video/Rlm2xmMZvrg/видео.html we hope to see this later 2018 along with a few other competitors which may make this video useless by the end of the year but for at least the next 3-6 months these drills are what we got!
Wrong..... Milwaukee is better.... why? Because that’s the one I have...lol.
Run time and capacity is the most important unless they let you take multiple coffee breaks while the batteries recharge. Im not impressed no matter how many volts it has. Its just marketing hype. The other important factor is repair part availability. Ill stick to their corded model. At 3 hr recharge time, i would be finished with a corded tool.
Great review!
Will there be a video on sds plus drills?
I bought the Milwaukee... for $288.... not a bad deal... I wasn’t even in the market,, I jus bought it because .. idk, I couldn’t help it,,
A hammer drill does just fine! If your a contractor then get the rotary hammer drill! Which you probably ain’t I have a craftsman hammer drill and drills nice and only cost 59$ at Lowe’s ! Be smart and don’t be a consumer !
These are geared towards people who work drilling and chipping concrete professionally, not a DIY basement reno. The guy who comes to repair what you just fixed just might own one of these drills.
can you do a review on dch 775?
for Dewalt you sholdve used the mighty DCH733
The DCH733 wasn't announced until 4 months after this video was published. But yeah, the 733 is a monster.
Silica dust going everywhere. Anonymous call to OSHA was made.
If the Makita is running 2 batteries in series having 36v then the and stay the same so technically it ran at 36V 5ah not 10ah?
Makita is only 5amp. Not 10amp
It is not 5A, amperage would be much higher than that. It is 5Ah (Amp Hour!) @ 36V, which is the same amount of total available energy as 10Ah @ 18V. [Dwain, oztooltalk]
@@OZToolTalk ITS A 36v Machine FULLSTOP. If I put 2 x 18v 3 amp batteries into a 36v machine what do I get? ... 36v 3amp not 18v 6 amp.. get ur shite together man.
I would recommend you guys watching this to see how Tool Buzz do the equal testing of tools... they tested not only these 3 tools but also more brands such as Hilton, ridgid, etc
more batteries =more weight /greater cost of PM ...weight and recharge time is ?
Greetings and appreciation to the Japanese honor, I am a Makita fan
These test are really cute , if u wanna know what’s really going on......talk to the guys that do this for a living. I mean the guys who drill holes in crete every damn day.
Ok Mason, give us your expertise
@@proverbs2life Just wait, his laptop ran out of battery in the project trailer because he had to charge the Black n Decker.
I'm sorry, but the Makita loses because it doesn't have the drill only mode. That's just a no brainer. WiFi dust extraction activation? It's called turn on the vacuum then drill. Just another electronic feature to fail and then go back to regular on switch operation.
Volts is not power watts is you are lying to people
This is the time to think about your grammer... i had to re-read your shit 3 times over.
Let's see how Milwaukee will drill with high output batteries!
What happened to Bosch?
Is the 11 joules correct on the makita
11.4 actually. www.makitatools.com/products/details/XRH07PTUN
Belts And Boxes I see they have it as 8.4 ft lbs I what I saw thanks
Why not use the 12ah milwaukee battery
I am Indonesian, I still choose Dewalt, because the best
What good are anti vibration shocks if they aren't in front of both handles DeWalt? Makita ftw!
Dewalts is in front of both hands.
Amazing and beautiful 😍....powerful hammer drills.....
These things are just toys for DIY guys as hilti is for men in real construction that know what they are doing.
pete a typical Hilti user. Overpays and has to justify getting ripped off every chance she gets.
That makita looks and perform shmick !!! But im a Milwaukee fan.....and we cant win them all.....keep saying crap about it and next year they'll come out with gen2
AWESOME REVIEW!!....very clear n simple amongst the top brands.....bosch is also well known in the world of concrete....and they'd recently upd their tool warranty to 6yrs... but they hardly come out with any new tools so are falling behind in the race
Nice review. Makita and Milwaukee have it right sticking to one battery platform, I don't want to have to carry different batteries for each of my tools.
Pro1er the dewalt flexvolt batteries all work with both 18/20 and 54/60 volt tools
Between all my gear, i have 3 only 18V batteries(2&4AH) and 3 flexvolt batteries(6 and 9 AH)
I can use any batteries with my 18V tools, but keep one or both 9AH batteries for my SDS
nice intro for dewalt ,
Nice video-advertising for DeWalt, from the intro to the end 😂😂😂
Makita it’s should be 2nd or 3rd or probably more low!! because comes with two batteries!! Make you waste more time more space and more money in that and also more electricity charging batteries.
What about milwaukee m28 is it not more suitable
John Dalton m28 is old and outdated. That’s a dead end line.
somehow they got confused computing AH rating with series and parallel batteries...haha. it doesn't work that way no matter how you explain it. Inside the batteries itself are series and parallel batteries and somehow externally its not when you series or parallel a battery...get out of here...that total BULL.. you can't make up your own mathematical formula
Exactly. DeWalt is 3ah at 54 volts and Makita is 5ah at 36 volts. That puts Makita at 180 watt hours, DeWalt at 162 watt hours, and Milwaukee at 162 watt hours
bullshit, de walt definitely wins as it has a non hammer action so you can use diamond core bits.
Now put these against the dewalt dch733 😂
Which one isn't Chinese made (not about the quality, but hey, gotta buy responsibly)?
Is there anything not made in China anymore?
Just so you know, I have the makita and the tag says 'made in Japan' as for the others I have no idea. But I would suspect the Milwaukee is made in china since they are owned by TTI
U can use 6 amp 9amp & a 12 amp bty on the Dewalt can't do that with the other tools Dewalt beats that
Where is the King? HILTI
they just launched te60-36v beats all of them 😂 we tried it..
Stephane Moisan king of overprice? Nothing can't beat Makita in reliability!
@@deserteagle1166 Makita makes good tools. But when it comes to concrete tools nothing beats Hilti tools. Yes they are expensive and the best warranty
Stephane Moisan it is a word - EFFICIENCY, don't you know? I'll better buy 3 makitas for my crew for the price of hilti and do the job faster. And buy beer for everyone after the job for money I saved. When all makitas will outlast I'll buy another 3. Doesn't it smarter?
@@deserteagle1166 you need to get over your self and be realistic. Disassemble the tools and you would realize why Hilti is way better then the competition. Better build better quality. DeWalt makes good tools Bosh makes good tools lots of great tools out there. Take them apart and you will learn something. PS don't drink too much beer it will fog up your mind. Makita is stuck on there 18 volt platform. Way behind 😁 explore around
What do you mean by cop tools? Like the police?
You didnt dock the makita for being 2.5 pounds heavier
Working over head and or on ladders i will take a lighter machine for all day work
where is Hilti and Bosch? Hilti is always the best in driling in concrite, Dewalt is the best in saw, makita and bosch is good for meedle range, And Milwaukee.... not for drill in concret, but very universal for everithing else, as platform
Hilti and Bosch, as well as the 2718 sds-max onekey of milwaukee is where it should be...
Very well hidden so that the DCH481X2 DEWALT looks the best SDS on the market...
😂😂😂😂😂
This is the purpose of this video 😂😂😂
Nice dewalt intro 60v is the best
Thanks, for best review scores. "Now, I know whose best power tool". And thanks for helping.
Thanks...
Bosch it’s number one ☝️
Juan Pino Hilti in number one ☝️
Came to checkout the beautiful brunette in the thumbnail, lovely girl. Good job dewalt.
I guess this review is for newbs. Can any of these core a 3” hole let alone a 6”. I’ll stick with the real red tools hilt
What about hilti
josh lambert Hilti do not have a SDS Max battery hammer on the market.
smackmymonkey uh yea the te30 is a 36v rotary hammer
The TE 30-A36 is actually a 1-1/8in rated SDS-Plus drill.
A 1 point separation winner that costs much more...also the makita and Milwaukee had sale prices but the Dewalt was full price, it is always on sale for 100 less.and a second free battery..making it a much much better deal then the makita. ..it drilled more holes and had a better runtime. Half of your tests are subjective, which if you watch were all skewed to the makita. If you take out your bias opinion , Dewalt clearly wins.
Also the 60 v batteries and platform is completely unmatched in power and performance by anyone to this point. Not even close. Further with the new sds max coming in a couple months , there is no competition at all...not true,,Hilti beats everyone in all competitions but for the price you could buy two Flexvolt kits and double the workload..
Joe Framer Old saying from Master Joda: "fanboy you are"
smackmymonkey watch...oz tools... reviews or any other video and only 1 company beats DeWalt,that's Hilti at twice the price.....
Iloveapplefritters your clearly not a professional... I build custom homes and nothing lasts like DeWalt cordless tools... especially flexvolt tools... your completely wrong... Flexvolt is the only cordless tools that perform better then corded tools...
and yet this Makita beats that Flexvolt. And the Makita did it with a smaller power envelope. (~1440W vs ~1600W max)
this Makita also beats various 1-9/16" corded models.
but yeah, only Dewalt can beat corded performance because you said so. Because building custom homes somehow makes you an expert on BLDC motors and battery tech.
Less shilling. More self-educatin'
Dewalt is the best.hate to use 2 batterry to run that
Here: ruclips.net/video/_A-06Fw3Olo/видео.html
the same guys, explain very well how batteries work and how we can calculate their capacity in mAh...
in this video, they seem to have forgotten how we calculate...
😂😂😂
we have two ways to connect batteries, in series or parallel...
example, the two ways to connect two batteries 18V-5Ah are:
parallel, and you have a 18V-10Ah battery
or in line, and you have a 36V-5Ah...
about makita (running at 36V) the batteries are connected in series and the capacity is 5Ah and not 10Ah...
DeWalt battery is dual, it works at 20V or 60V, the connection is made between the cells inside the battery.
there are 15 cells (18650) of 4V-3Ah each.
if tool needs 20V, 5 triples connected parallel (3x3Ah=9Ah) and all 5 triples are connected in series (5x4V=20V) and so we have a 20V-9Ah battery...
If tool needs 60V, all the 15 cells (4V-3Ah) connected in series (15x4V=60V) and if there is no connection parallel the capacity is exactly same of 1 cell (1x3Ah=3Ah)
so, about DeWalt (running at 60V) the capacity is 3Ah and not 9Ah...
simple math....
are taught to 6-year-old childrens in the first grade...
I can't understand why adult peoples are still confused...
as well as I can't understand why confused people insist on uploading videos...
😂😂😂😂😂
60 volts compared to 2 times 18 volts i think your been unfair on the 36
volt drill 60 volts should beet the poop out of all of them but dont
milwaukee 18 volt dewolt 60 volt makita36 volt...stupit test...
To me the Makita should finish last. The weight and price alone make it not practical. Think about the time and the hassle to charge 4 batteries. Two batteries increases the weight for the slight power improvement that saves you 3 seconds per hole and you have to lug a hunk of weight. If you are drilling 100 holes, I can see the point but in most cases you are just drilling a few holes. The Milwaukee now has a 12Ah battery which makes it more practical to use. The Dewalt should come in 1st place, Milwaukee second and Makita last. This review is totally bias. Have you ever had to monitor and charge 4 batteries? Obviously you are not an active working contractor. Don't do the review unless you actually use it every day.
Agreed but one thing no one brings up is that milwaukee uses all the same batteries for every 18 volt tool so if your battery dies you can use a 5.0 to finish or use your new 12.0. As dewalt has flex volt batteries but you can’t use a basic 20 volt so you need specific batteries for that drill
I agree. I'm a Milwaukee guy but DeWalt is the clear winner. Makita is a bunch of gimmicks that requires twice as many batteries to do the same thing. The big thing that stands out to me is that chipping mode on the DeWalt. That alone makes it the clear choice when buying
only one firm father of perforators hilti, the rest collect crumbs
DEWALT #1
I guess you tested a wrong Milwaukee model to compare with makita and dewalt. Milwaukee has a model way powerful than being tested... rigged testing likely sponsored by makita.. cheap to advertise this way than commercials heheheh....
Cordless, SDS-Max.
Man you need to get off the fanwagon. The Milwakuee can push maybe 900-950 watt out of there's m18 batteries. While Dewalt can't push up to 1600watt and Makita around 1400-1450watt that's the downside of the M18 system you can only go Soo far with a 18V 18650 cell battery. Metabo and Bosch can push uppsala too 1450watt with the new 21700 batteries.
Dumbest thing I heard, did you see them take a p off Makita for no real reason?
Tested is the biggest most powerful Milwaukee - so what are you talking about?
😂
dewalt win, yuck makita
Change the name of the channel! Not sure how some rogue gang members have anything to do with tools. Unless you’re saying cops are tools 😂