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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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I know I may have mislead some of you into reading this post...
I may have inadvertently purchased quite a lot of flat pack furniture. I do have an electric screwdriver, but I'm thinking of buying a drill. I'm sure it will be useful for lots of jobs and I have used one before so know how they all work. I want battery operated and my budget is under a £100. So dear fabbers any recommendations would be much appreciated. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Makita drills are good but outside your budget and probably overkill for a diyer , I have some Ryobi drills I use when on site perfectly good and reasonably priced and robust and nobody nicks them |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Dewalt are a cracking drill
Have a look on ebay for second hand ones in good order
Should get one for well uder your budget and use the spare cash for other bits you might need
X |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Buy a budget drill from Argos and buy the extended warranty they offer. I've done this with jigsaw in the past and so far have replaced it twice, they don't ask questions so you can get a new one to replace a three year old one! |
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Try a few in the shop to see which feels most comfortible for you...
Costing more dosnt allways mean better... You probabley won't need anything as robust as a full time trade person would need.
I've used various ones in the past and prefer my Hatachi .. It may not be "The best".. But it feels right and more natural for me to use. |
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"Buy a budget drill from Argos and buy the extended warranty they offer. I've done this with jigsaw in the past and so far have replaced it twice, they don't ask questions so you can get a new one to replace a three year old one! "
Does it need to be the same picture or can you choose a different jigsaw to do each time ?
Cal |
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"I know I may have mislead some of you into reading this post...
I may have inadvertently purchased quite a lot of flat pack furniture. I do have an electric screwdriver, but I'm thinking of buying a drill. I'm sure it will be useful for lots of jobs and I have used one before so know how they all work. I want battery operated and my budget is under a £100. So dear fabbers any recommendations would be much appreciated. "
You really shouldn't use powered tools for assembling flat-pack.
But I'll also add my vote to Makitta or Dewalt... Dewalt are better, most pro's are using them but they're more expensive.
Cal |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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Thank you everyone for your help and suggestions.
I did look in Argos and they had a 20v one with 2 battery's but it wasn't that cheap and I don't want to have to swap it if it's faulty or whatever. I'm off to look at Makitas ... |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"I know I may have mislead some of you into reading this post...
I may have inadvertently purchased quite a lot of flat pack furniture. I do have an electric screwdriver, but I'm thinking of buying a drill. I'm sure it will be useful for lots of jobs and I have used one before so know how they all work. I want battery operated and my budget is under a £100. So dear fabbers any recommendations would be much appreciated.
You really shouldn't use powered tools for assembling flat-pack.
But I'll also add my vote to Makitta or Dewalt... Dewalt are better, most pro's are using them but they're more expensive.
Cal "
I was looking at a drill that has adjustable torque so it's suitable for flatpack. What's the alternative? |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Dewalt are a cracking drill
Have a look on ebay for second hand ones in good order
Should get one for well uder your budget and use the spare cash for other bits you might need
X"
Tradesmen very rarely sell tools. If they're any good they will get used until they stop working.
I suspect there are quite a few hot tools on eBay so be careful what you buy.
Makita every time for me though. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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I also bought lots of flat pack furniture earlier this year, an electric screwdriver is definitely your friend.
I also purchased a new drill but I bought a cheap Argos corded one. XXX |
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"I know I may have mislead some of you into reading this post...
I may have inadvertently purchased quite a lot of flat pack furniture. I do have an electric screwdriver, but I'm thinking of buying a drill. I'm sure it will be useful for lots of jobs and I have used one before so know how they all work. I want battery operated and my budget is under a £100. So dear fabbers any recommendations would be much appreciated. "
For flat pack furniture be very careful of the battery screwdriver, the cupboard and chipboard screa are really made for hand tightening and if use the battery screwdriver it can break the surface out as it tightens.
If you still want some battery tools B&Q had a good deal on a l-ion combination set with a hammer/drill/screwdriver and a thing called an impact driver that is a battery screwdriver on overdrive but is great for putting screws into walls etc. I think they were coming in just over £100 but well worth the purchase and you would never need anything else. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"I know I may have mislead some of you into reading this post...
I may have inadvertently purchased quite a lot of flat pack furniture. I do have an electric screwdriver, but I'm thinking of buying a drill. I'm sure it will be useful for lots of jobs and I have used one before so know how they all work. I want battery operated and my budget is under a £100. So dear fabbers any recommendations would be much appreciated. "
if your not going to use it much why waste the money
ijust bought a perfectly good black and decker one off ebay for4 quid , a diy usage ones only 20 odd quid
b n q maybe |
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dont forget the battery's have a life span and if you are just using it for diy and not daily for work, it will be sitting on a shelf the battery for an expensive on will last the same as a cheep on so you would not get any benefit from one |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Don't bother buying a drill. Find a flat pack assembly god or goddess through Fab with all the tools to hand with a handy happy ending as recompense for hours of frustration pouring and peering at indecipherable instructions. Actually, all that's needed is a screwdriver and the hand that wields it. |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"Don't bother buying a drill. Find a flat pack assembly god or goddess through Fab with all the tools to hand with a handy happy ending as recompense for hours of frustration pouring and peering at indecipherable instructions. Actually, all that's needed is a screwdriver and the hand that wields it. "
That is also a damn fine idea... |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"I don't know loads about drills but while you're ordering one get one of those folding Allen key sets. It has saved much flat pack assembly frustration this end." |
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By *ficouldMan
over a year ago
a quandary, could you change my mind? |
Op,
Don't use the drill to do your flat pack furniture, you will end up over screwing things.
As for a drill, check the prices of the replacement batteries I've found that the cheaper makes batteries and spares are more expensive.
If you are only doing occasional work with the drill I would say go for a corded version. |
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my advice stay away from battery operated gear.
unless you have plenty of vibes to use with them.
for the use that you would put it to isnt going to be alot and hardly any usage kills batterys
trade use charges them often and are hard used compared to diy use.
you would be far better buying a plug in drill |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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You don't need a drill for flat pack and I would advise against it because the wood and screws or not very strong.
Makita is good but you won't get one for under £100.
The best place to look is screw fix so you can read the reviews before you buy.
Think about what you will use the drill for.
The last power tool I bought was the Worx axis 20-volt jig saw and reciprocating saw it's a two in one saw. |
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"
I was looking at a drill that has adjustable torque so it's suitable for flatpack. What's the alternative? "
Just a normal screwdriver. Power tools will generally just over tighten the screws and damage the chipboard. Even on reduced torque settings, I've never had great success using electrics for flat pack. A good old fashioned crew driver is best for this job.
Cal |
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