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It says True HVL and of course you’d use it because you don’t actually use any of these tools you talk about
Milwaukee makes a far better saw in that configuration. Because they actually make tools to be used by people who know what the hell they are doing.
Chervon, the current owner of the Skil brand, was, and may still be manufacturing tools for Bosch, including the worm drive saws that were sold under the Bosch and Skil brands before Chervon purchased the Skil brand from Bosch.
Milwaukee has manufactured worm drive saws for decades, but I don’t recall them having a major positive reputation for those worm drive saws like Skil had.
Chervon has purchased the Skil “brand” from Bosch, but I can’t tell whether that would have come with engineering knowledge on how to make durable tools for abusive use.
Chervon also owns the Flex brand, and Flex is/was a German manufacturer of industrial tools, that had very high service life specs, and Chervon likely did acquire the engineering knowledge from Flex when it bought the brand.
Whether Chervon applies this knowledge to the new tools has yet to be determined.
The ability to manufacture decent cordless tools is a separate issue, since the battery designs, and motor designs used for cordless tools still seem to be undergoing a lot of evolution.
Chervon was acyually a manufacturer of cordless tools for a number of brands, including Flex, before Chervon purchased the manufacturer, so they at least have a couple decades experience with cordless tool manufacture.
Milwaukee’s owner, TTI, supposedly kept some of the various design and engineering offices of the tool manufacturers it purchased, including AEG in Germany.
I’m not sure whether TTI kept the US design office for Milwaukee power tools.