I would like to keep everything with interchangeable batteries, so that means going all Makita, or all another brand
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I’m not sure where the chuck issues are with makita. I am hard on my tools and they’ve been great. But I also do research and buy the top or upper quality line. Not the homeowner makita.
I know that Makita has black and white 18v tools. I always thought that those were the homeowner stuff while the blue was the pro grade stuff. I have the blue stuff
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What other tools if any do you want to add in. As far as quality goes it's hard to go wrong with just about any major brand
I know that Makita has black and white 18v tools. I always thought that those were the homeowner stuff while the blue was the pro grade stuff. I have the blue stuff
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I went Ryobi and have absolute no regrets. I'm a hobbiest and a DIYer, but I've never had a tool fail me. I did just recently have a NiCd battery fail, but it was the only one I had for a long time and I used and abused the heck out of it...it made it 3 yrs. And as far as a the selection of tools and jobs, you just can't beat them.
My Brother in law swears by his Ryobi stuff
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I looked at Ryobi, but the problem I had is they are certainly cheaper in-store, but when you look online there are a lot of good deals on the higher end brands. So good that you can pretty much Amazon Prime any DeWalt / Milwaukee / Makita tool to your front door for a similar price to the Ryobi in-store at HD. And once you remove the price advantage of Ryobi, it kind of lowers the appeal for me.
The 6.5" circular saw is very handy. I haven't used my Skilsaw since getting it.2. Buy a new brushless Makita kit with hammer drill, impact, circular saw, 2 batteries and charger for around $320
Take the dead battery packs to a Batteries Plus store and have them replace the individual cells with new ones.
It’s not that easy. The Makita batteries have a chip in them that interfaces with the charger. After 3 times being put in the charger and unsuccessfully charging that chip “self destructs” and that battery will never charge again. At least that’s how it was explained to me
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Take the dead battery packs to a Batteries Plus store and have them replace the individual cells with new ones.
Take the dead battery packs to a Batteries Plus store and have them replace the individual cells with new ones.
I know that Makita has black and white 18v tools. I always thought that those were the homeowner stuff while the blue was the pro grade stuff. I have the blue stuff
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This is a good point - look at the full tool lineup of Makita vs the competitors and make sure whatever system you invest in has all the tools you would want. And also the specs on the tools you want.
I looked at Ryobi, but the problem I had is they are certainly cheaper in-store, but when you look online there are a lot of good deals on the higher end brands. So good that you can pretty much Amazon Prime any DeWalt / Milwaukee / Makita tool to your front door for a similar price to the Ryobi in-store at HD. And once you remove the price advantage of Ryobi, it kind of lowers the appeal for me.

The Batteries Plus stores near me wont rebuild Lithium packs, but they still do Nicad.
True..The white and black are homeowner grade...
I am going on a little rant about cordless tools, wonderful things they are. I still have perfectly usable power tools from the late 50s and great Milwaukee stuff from the 70s and 80s. Since the advent of common cordless tools, I have had to dispose of a number of them because the technology gets better (great) and the batteries are no longer supported. Things I don’t use all the time, I buy corded quality stuff and it lasts practically forever. I’m in the boat with you with you on my Mikita cordless 18v drill, I would love another of their tools but they changed the batteries again and don’t have cross compatibility. I need to look at these as disposable consumables. That isn’t how I view tools and it irks me.
In 2003 when Home Depot came out with Ridgid power tools, I was a Makita guy and I had their 14.4V stuff. But I kept paying as much for batteries as the tools themselves cost. The Makitas were the bomb and worked Hard.
But I went ahead and bought a set of 18V Ridgid tools, all NiCad back then. Used my Makitas still and upgraded them to NiMh with a charger to match. Those new batteries lasted all of 2 years...
My Ridgid stuff was still running, then one battery died and the other was weak so I took them into Home Depot, got the run-around and ended up talking to the store manager, who handled getting the set in to the repair center and back, but they only replaced one battery, the other was still weak.
Finally, years later, both Ridgid batts failed and I packed everything up and went to Home Depot to go-to-war! Told service desk gal just to call manager; for what, she asks? My batteries are dead and I know he will get them replaced. Do you want your money back for the whole kit? No, I just want batteries... Then go to the Rental Dept.... Why I ask? She says they will check your tools out. I'm pissed because I think I'm getting the run around, but I head down there.
The (older) guy at Rental, looks at my receipt and says: you bought your set before you had to register the tools, if anyone ever questions you, tell them to look at the "Ridgid book". And then he handed me two new batteries and also registered them into the system; he said always register your new battery so it always can be replaced (they had a huge shelf system in back full of batteries). He also said: just come straight to Rental at Any Home Depot and they'll handle your battery replacement...
I told him I was interested in a compact drill and driver set, does anyone do the lifetime battery warranty? Yep, he says, Ridgid - just be sure to register them online. So I bought a set of 18V Lion Ridged units.
Weeks later I was charging one of the Lion batts and looked at the footprint on the base. Hmm, it looks like my 13 year old NiCad 18V base, and guess what? Versus just about everyone else out there that obsoletes their perfectly good tool by changing the battery, The ******* Ridgid 18V batteries work on all the Tools!! And I don't have to buy another new battery EVER!
I AM Brand Loyal now, and that Brand is Ridgid! I can't break them and I don't worry if I do. But buying batteries has cost many a friend a bundle in switching brands or constantly buying batteries, for perfectly good (otherwise) tools...
Loved my Makita stuff, but they're all dead on the shelf or gone...
Scott