Back in the day Milwaukee was what Hilti strives to be now. Rare to see a Hilti tool outside heavy industry and commercial construction.
Was not aware Home Depot was selling Hilti
You can still purchase a bunch of Hilti stuff off of Home Depot’s website.
Hilti used to have in store displays of Holti Tools and products, with a Hilti representative that was sometimes in store to advise on the tools and other Hilti products.
I think the Hilti arrangement with the in store displays started in the late 1990s, maybe 1999, and ended around 2012.
The Hilti tools at Home Depot had fixed pricing that was the same as the pricing at Hilti owned stores.
Most of the Hilti tools were significantly more expensive than the other “professional” tools Home Depot was selling, including the Milwaukee tools, back when the Milwaukee tools were mostly made in the USA or Germany, as well as the USA made Skil Saws, and the USA made Porter Cable Tools, and the German Swiss or USA made Bosch tools, etc.
The Hilti tools of the period had lots of innovative features, and decent, or seemingly decent build quality, but the price was significantly higher than the other options.
Hilti had a worm drive circular saw that was designed to run on a track like the Festool saws, and Festool and Mafell were basically the only two other manufacturers offering an actual track saw in the USA at the time. (I think the Hilti just used a Festool track)
The Hilti Jigsaws actually had a dust collection unit that attached to the jigsaw, not just a dust collection port.
There was a similar system for a bunch of rotary hammer models.
The screw gun Hilti made had a built in rafter hook, a weird deflected motor exhaust to prevent drywall dust issues, and I forget what other features.
Apparently Hilti couldn’t sell enough if the tolls for the economics to work.
Eventually Hilti started simplifying the tool design, and dropped a bunch of the innovative features, and just started selling tools that were made in China, and which didn’t look ghat different than a bunch of the other professional tools.
Some innovative features survived, and the build wuality was supposedly still good, but it was sort of like if Festool just released a regular circular saw that didn’t even run on a track, or have variable speed, etc.