There is a rule that says reliability decreases exponentially with the increase in the number of parts. There is not much to fail on a brush motor. There is no doubt that brushless motors are better but initial cost and possible repair cost are much higher. They are not necessarily the best choice for everyone. I like the latest toys too but I don't replace working tools just to own them. When the time to replace comes I research the market. My guess is the price of brushless will come down like any other new technology. There were some very good explanations here on brushless technology. Thank you, very informative.I'm not being sarcastic, but google will give you a clear explanation of this.
Short answer is brushless motors are a actually an ac powered motor that is digitally controled. The magnets and windings are actually reversed on the motors, eliminating the need for a physical connection using brushes. It is a big step forward in technology. It increases performance, eliminates friction, reduces heat, extendes runtimes, and increases longevity of the tool.
There is no downside to brushless, besides cost. That said, a tool being brushless does NOT automatically mean it is more powerful than a brushed tool. It simply means its using a newer technology to power said tool. Each tool will still need to be judged and researched on an individual basis for torque ratings. Many people do not realize this. My brushed Milwaukee impact driver is much stronger than my brushless dewalt impact driver. My brushless m18 fuel is stronger still.. The M18 fuel line of tools is usually some of the best performing brushless tools in terms or torque ratings and quality, which is why they have such a big following on here.
How about brands?,I know its subjective.I always used Makita and never had any real problems,but I left a commercial woodshop in 07 when technology was ni cad 14.4 volt.
Milwaukee is the big name in brushless tools right now. Dewalt had their time with their 18v stick pack line (the only big nicad line still being sold), and makita before them. Every brand puts out a competitive line now, but "today" Milwaukee is the one with the biggest following because of their performance and vast choices of tools and cordless lighting among other things.
I was in the same boat when I joined this forum. I had a few nicad dewalt tools that I was happy with, but I HATED how the batteries always self discharged, and the tools power always seemed to drop quickly - one problem being the large batteries with still small amp hour ratings. I wanted to make the jump to lithium, didn't WANT to leave dewalt, but once I started researching, watching hours of videos online, compared lineups between brands, one brand stood out to me. I made my first purchase and never looked back. I've been very happy with every purchase I've made from Milwaukee, and I own a lot of them now. Much more than I ever really needed or expected to buy. That said, they make things so much easier, that I'm willing to spend the money just to make my life easier when I do need to use them. Also, I've never seem so many promotions and free tools given away from any other brand besides Milwaukee. They were recently "giving away" their new 9.0 battery ($199 at the time) and rapid charger ($70 retail) with cordless saw promo kits. Also just bought a $200 tripod light that came with a free 5.0 battery and dual charger too. Holidays come and they are almost handing out product with their sales..
Take a visit in the Milwaukee addiction thread, and you'll see what all the hype is over.
You have to add in the tool truck factor. I am no SO authority. I don't know how much they actually make beside their high quality hand tools. They mark up the hell of stuff that is often sold for much less under other brands. There is a whole thread called tool truck equivalents. You are also paying for service support.It is in effect, an insurance policy added to the actual cost of rhe tool.Snap On still uses brushed motors in their cordless tools and are more money than Milwaukee brand new.
You have to add in the tool truck factor. I am no SO authority. I don't know how much they actually make beside their high quality hand tools. They mark up the hell of stuff that is often sold for much less under other brands. There is a whole thread called tool truck equivalents. You are also paying for service support.It is in effect, an insurance policy added to the actual cost of rhe tool.
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I did not know. Many justify the high prices by claiming product support. So then there is little justification for paying the big bucks for tools similar to non truck tools, at better prices. I would not even open the can of worms about whether their hand tools are over pricedMy Matco dealer gives nothing to a little bit for trade on them.Snap On does not give much of a warranty on them too,a year on the tool
pure baloney, where do you get this stuff?There is a rule that says reliability decreases exponentially with the increase in the number of parts. There is not much to fail on a brush motor.

By all means disagree with your usual classless personal attack. With your rude approach, I don't care what you have to say. And I am sure you have a degree in rocket sience that no layman should dare question. Even if I am 100% wrong i will listen and if convinced, revise my opinion to some one that does nor start out like you.pure baloney, where do you get this stuff?
Misconceptions that seem intuitively correct for the laymen, but it's a pure garbage statement to make. If this were true we'd never get a modern jet fighter off the ground not to mention go to the moon and back.
Wrong there all kinds of failure modes on a brushless motor most importantly there is usually no overload (current) protection and can simply be destroyed by overheating and melting parts / windings when overloaded beyond short term.
The switch has to pass the full motor current and sustain many arc overs due to sudden off /on with inductive windings.
The brushes wear.
Brushless designs address all of these shortcomings.
What exactly is the difference?
I know the brushed motors have carbon brushes.
From a guys who grabs the drill 30 times a months for home projects is it worth it to jump to brushless ?

I have the small milwaukee M12 fuel brushless and it's really strong. Quite amazing the torque it puts out.
By all means disagree with your usual classless personal attack. With your rude approach, I don't care what you have to say. And I am sure you have a degree in rocket sience that no layman should dare question. Even if I am 100% wrong i will listen and if convinced, revise my opinion to some one that does nor start out like you.
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Don't wanna stir the pot here, but I'm kinda sure there are less parts in a brushless motor.. hence it being called "brushless"
The digital controls also offers digital protection for the tools against overload and over heating. With a 5 yr warranty, and a huge number of people on this forum able to give first hand feedback, I'm pretty sure they are all ok..
simpleEven if I am 100% wrong i will listen and if convinced, revise my opinion to some one that does nor start out like you.
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By all means disagree with your usual classless personal attack. With your rude approach, I don't care what you have to say. Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showpost.php?p=6050273&postcount=13For those who do not follow this closely, Milwaukee still sells some BRUSHED tools. Only the tools that have "Fuel" on the side are bushless. They cost less and have a bit less power and probably consume batteries a bit faster.
The main reason BRUSHLESS tools have more power is that they spin faster. This means that can be gear down more producing more torque.
Don't wanna stir the pot here, but I'm kinda sure there are less parts in a brushless motor.. hence it being called "brushless"
There is a rule that says reliability decreases exponentially with the increase in the number of parts...
Could be. The brush system is nothing but a battery and a rotor through the brushes and the speed control. The brushless system has to generate 3 phase AC That takes a lot of electronics. Like inverters and any switching power supply, the output semiconductors are often the point of failure. I was not talking about the motor being protected by the circuitry but the circuitry itself as a possible weak link. Amplifiers, inverters, IGBT's power supplies, it is always the power semis that let out the magic smoke. On top of that lithium batteries have to be baby sat. The safety circuitry has to prevent over charging, over discharging and in some cases current limiting. All I said is there are a lot of places for something to go wrong. I am no statistical analyst and value your input but I get really pissed off when somebody gets personal. Every time sonebody asks a silly question or offers an opinion that is not widely agreed with I know some people will be all over them with all kinds of derrogatory remarks.This is in principal true but misapplied here.
If you have 3 parts on a system, say, that are 99% reliable and any one failure causes the system to fail, the reliability will be 0.99 x 0.99 x 0.99 = 0.99^3 = 0.97 or 97%.
If you replace those 3 parts with 5 parts of higher reliability, say 99.5%, you can get higher reliabilty with more parts (0.995^5 = 0.975 = 97.5%).
Kind of useless to generalize this rule since it always comes down to system specifics and numbers.
What are everyones thoughts on the makita 18v brushless?Home crepot has a combo for
229.00 drill and impact driver, looks like the batteries are lower amp hr.,but I'm not in the
Trades anymore.It would be for home use and repairs to my landscape equipt.I like the impact driver with a 3/8 adapter for small stuff.I looked at it today felt pretty good in my hand.