Ryobi or Makita
Ryobi or Makita
Hey Guys,
My wonderful missus is going to buy me a new 18v cordless hammer drill for my birthday next month. Currently have a $99 GMC shitta.
We looked around today, and it comes down to either Ryobi or Makita unit. Now I know the makita has the better 'trade' name. But keep in mind this is for around the home. And I like the price of the body only units for the rest of the Ryobi 1+ units.
Opinions?
My wonderful missus is going to buy me a new 18v cordless hammer drill for my birthday next month. Currently have a $99 GMC shitta.
We looked around today, and it comes down to either Ryobi or Makita unit. Now I know the makita has the better 'trade' name. But keep in mind this is for around the home. And I like the price of the body only units for the rest of the Ryobi 1+ units.
Opinions?
The Forum Parts Guy
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makita
As a builder of 33 years exp I can tell you from a trade point of view the makita is the better option, you can buy just the skins too for makita drills. Nothing wrong really with ryobi either, even makita is made in taiwan these days.
I bought a ryobi 4" grinder a month or so ago.............. The head on it is too big!!! The cutting disk wont fit into the space that my old (20 plus years) Makita one would!! And I only killed the Makita by stripping 2 machines back to metal! All the paint dust stuffed it :(
I know your after a drill, so not really helping but, I'll buy a Makita anything next time!
Having said that, a mate of mine has a ryobi impact drill that goes well...
Did that help
I know your after a drill, so not really helping but, I'll buy a Makita anything next time!
Having said that, a mate of mine has a ryobi impact drill that goes well...
Did that help
-
- Enthusiast
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- Location: Christchurch,New Zealand
I got a ryobi 18v impact wrench a few months back, it has completely changed my job.
There is cheap ryobi stuff and trade quailty stuff, would recomend it anyday + the batterys fit all their tools which will be handy down the track.
There is cheap ryobi stuff and trade quailty stuff, would recomend it anyday + the batterys fit all their tools which will be handy down the track.
1985 Widebody Factory Four Wheel Steering
1986 Euro Spec-ABS,LSD etc
1986 Euro Spec-ABS,LSD etc
i use 18v cordless all day every day a mix between bosch professional and makita, i have never used ryobi but i can tell you most of the tradies i know stick to makita... to through something else in the mix i hear the new panasonic drills and impacts are pretty good
moz
moz
85 JB, forged, larger valves, ported and polished microtech, sonata mpi, td06 20g, intercooler, willwood brakes, koni suspention, 3.9LSD and more shit i cant remember
82 JA, blueprint SIRUS 4g63, dumped and a cooler 17's, exhaust... DEAD :(
big moz (chopyou@hotmail.com)
82 JA, blueprint SIRUS 4g63, dumped and a cooler 17's, exhaust... DEAD :(
big moz (chopyou@hotmail.com)
Yeah i have heard Panasonic make the best cordless drills on the market.bigmoz wrote:i use 18v cordless all day every day a mix between bosch professional and makita, i have never used ryobi but i can tell you most of the tradies i know stick to makita... to through something else in the mix i hear the new panasonic drills and impacts are pretty good
moz
Sold - 1987 Mitsubishi Starion GSR V DASH
Current - 1995 Subaru Legacy TT SW
- 1983 Mitsubishi Starion
Current - 1995 Subaru Legacy TT SW
- 1983 Mitsubishi Starion
A Dewalt will never again be in my possession...
But I still have a blue Bosch 9,6V drill, going on 15 years...
Kind of hard to get new batteries... (One cell is bypassed on the first battery so not realy 9,6V anymore, but working!)
And a smaller blue Bosch Lithium at work, very handy!
The Makitas are looking good.
But I still have a blue Bosch 9,6V drill, going on 15 years...
Kind of hard to get new batteries... (One cell is bypassed on the first battery so not realy 9,6V anymore, but working!)
And a smaller blue Bosch Lithium at work, very handy!
The Makitas are looking good.
- panda
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- Joined: Fri Apr 18, 2008 2:56 pm
- Location: Mount Gambier, South Australia
I have been using Panasonic cordless hammer drills for years & still can't kill em. However, I've broken Ryobi, De Walt, Makita, & Bosch.
A lot of the tradies round here have now switched to Panasonic. Bit dearer, but worth if your using it all the time.
A lot of the tradies round here have now switched to Panasonic. Bit dearer, but worth if your using it all the time.
Dreams have no limits.
1982 JA - Ex Enthuzed
1982 JA - For Sale - pending
1983 JA - Ex Auto-cross car - being parted out
1983 JA - Being parted out
1984 JA - Rolling shell - For Sale
1985 JB - Rally car project
1985 JB - Autocross car
1985 JB - Week-end cruiser
1982 JA - Ex Enthuzed
1982 JA - For Sale - pending
1983 JA - Ex Auto-cross car - being parted out
1983 JA - Being parted out
1984 JA - Rolling shell - For Sale
1985 JB - Rally car project
1985 JB - Autocross car
1985 JB - Week-end cruiser
Thanks for the input guys.
It appears I will be going with a Makita unit for $358 at Bunnings atm. They have an offer on to get a 3rd battery by redemption atm.
I had also considered a Hitachi (as we sell them at work) even though they are a very hi end unit, they are priced accordingly and are only available through limited outlets.
Where as there is plenty of places to get Hitachi in sydney.
It appears I will be going with a Makita unit for $358 at Bunnings atm. They have an offer on to get a 3rd battery by redemption atm.
I had also considered a Hitachi (as we sell them at work) even though they are a very hi end unit, they are priced accordingly and are only available through limited outlets.
Where as there is plenty of places to get Hitachi in sydney.
The Forum Parts Guy
www.vibrantperformance.com for all your performance fabrication needs
IRS OUTLAW, 2.3L VR4 Powered X235 Drag Car
Here to run out of your life & take all your money!
www.vibrantperformance.com for all your performance fabrication needs
IRS OUTLAW, 2.3L VR4 Powered X235 Drag Car
Here to run out of your life & take all your money!
makita and ryobi are not even in the same league.
makita and hitachi round the house will do the job for years and do it easy.
makita and hitachi round the house will do the job for years and do it easy.
FS: Ford 302ci Windsor. Race prepped block, Clevite bearings, ARP fixings, Hypertectic pistons, nitrided rods, knife edged crank, Gilmer drive, chrome moly rings, Yella Terra stage 3 heads, manly valves, Comp cams 294* solid roller, YT roller rockers, Funnelweb manifold, 2 inch spacer, Proform 830cfm carb, K&N 10" stack, ICE ignition. - 0437900210
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