Submitted by BabaBooey17 t3_11xsn6e in DIY
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Submitted by BabaBooey17 t3_11xsn6e in DIY
[removed]
See also that the DeWalt 20v XR tools sold in North America are identical to the 18v XR tools sold in Europe.
If the voltage output is identical it should be fine, don't count on getting any warranty help tho
To add: if the voltage is lower, the tool will perform worse, and if the voltage is higher, it might work fine, might damage the tool right away, or might work fine but make the tool overheat prematurely.
Oh yeah my comment only applies if everything is identicle
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Buy combo kits that come with the battery and chargers.
I've just bought a couple of non-Milwaukee replacements for my 12v tools online. Cheaper, higher capacity, and they're working just fine so far. I can't speak for the 18v alternatives; maybe someone else has tried them.
I've had some off-brand M12 batteries stop charging after a while - they make the charger flash an error. I haven't bought any aftermarket M18s.
Duds are sold too, I'm sure. At work, we use Makitas with off-brand batteries; no problem with those.
Be aware that the battery protection circuit in the DeWalt system is in the tools, not the battery so make sure the adaptor has the protection circuit.
If voltage and type of battery cel (like lithium-ion or NiCd) it should work
Be sure you're comparing like for like. At Home Depot right now, 2 3.0ah Milwaukee M18 batteries are $179 ($149 on sale) and 2 3.0ah Dewalt 20v max are $189.
batteries should be similar prices. right now amazon has the Milwaukee 5ah for 66 and dewalt 5ah for 73.
with a bit of patience, both can be had for $50-60 (I havent seen $50 since covid/inflation, but people still say $10/ah is the target, though I think thats in the past).
anyway, point is, the cost and hassle of the adaptor would definitely keep me using milwaukee batteries if I had Milwaukee tools.
50 dollars for a small battery is insane.
Is an 18v 5ah battery small?
It’s the largest I have ever used in 6 years in a trade as a journeyman. If a 5ah can’t handle it, we use a corded tool with generator.
Inside there is less battery than most laptops.
It's a scam. Buy a generator and some corded and move on.
what do you base that on? can you list any other 5cell 5aH batteries for significantly less? I do some RC stuff, and a turnigy battery is $50 on the dot. but its got no battery gauge, not armored in a plastic case, just a xt connector.
There are knockoff batteries of course, which are half the price, but based on performance and teardowns, none are as advertised.
the 60v flex volt stuff... now THATS expensive.
You're not hearing me. Battery operated drills/tools are a scam.
oh... you must just not do much work...
battery powered power tools are a godsend for working quickly without dragging extension cords around. The $120 investment into 2 batteries is inconsequential to thousands of dollars of power tools.
I rebuild and remodel RVs on the side, build fences, work on assorted motor vehicles,bdo majority of home repair...and a number of other tool related activities.
I buy the lowest cost battery Ryobi, and a proper actual electric drill.
Because every so often a 20 dollar Ryobi is needed but it's exceedingly rare.
I too used to think cordless mad me a better carpenter too.
thinking your a carpenter and all you use is a drill...
I never said it made you better, again... betraying your experience, I said it saved time. anyone who works for profit knows time is everything.
You took one and conflated it to another. See the entire message and use some comprehension skills and you'll see why you look like a fool right now...
Or you could just… you know… buy the DeWalt tools instead…
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buildyourown t1_jd4t9hh wrote
The voltage is the same even if Milwaukee is labeled as 18v and DeWalt says 20v. Lithium batteries are all 3.6v. 3.6 x 5 =18