#1 well you should have. The 2145 is a good gun to use in a comparison since it's their modern one.
#2 okay? I'm saying I own this equipment and purchased it myself, that it wasn't supplied to me making me bias.
#3 nothing wrong with comparing my experience with the 899 to air, I find the 899 (and its successor is looking to be the same body) much too bulky.
#4 a first hand opinion who has used (and tested) these things head to head, that's valuable.
#5 you're welcome
The 416 is still disappointing for what it is, get over it.
Okay, so many real world factors on why one might have done better than the other. A 20 year old, never maintained 261 vs a brand new 899 with 9ah battery perhaps? Yes, I'm sure you'll claim it was perfectly optimal conditions, but go prove it...next time you have a bolt that the 261 can't remove and the 899 can, take a video of it and share it with us. Using a reducing adapter on the 261 to put a 1/2" socket on it? Ya, that alone will knock out a huge chunk of power.
You don't run 170psi everywhere....even the 175psi two stage compressors won't cycle until 150psi (I own an IR 5hp 2 stage, again first hand knowledge), but thanks for coming out. Even then, 170psi at the tank is not 170psi after 100 feet of pipe and 50 feet of hose. Show me this 170psi constant on a gauge at the end of the hose while the tool is running.
That's using a 3/4" drive socket....
I don't have the time to do a video just for you so you can still say, yeah but...show me this...show me this...
Seriously....
You're full of assumptions and attitude...and opinions. You love opinions. Only your opinion though.
When an opinion differs from yours it's pretty clear you want to throw down and start getting defensive like how dare someone's opinion differ from yours. Then you quickly say it must be beat up...must be neglected...must be this or that because no way someone's experience could differ ftom yours.
I ask again.. were you trying to hijack a thread because you being all warm and fuzzy about your air tools have absolutely positively nothing to do with the OP's thread.
What I find hilarious is I point out facts to you and you ignore them and divert them to say show me this or show me that. The 261 since you loved looking at exact specs earlier is 12.4 lbs. Now I think I was very clear in that the 3/4" gun I mentioned to you was much heavier and more cumbersome than the 1/2" 899 gun.
Crickets on that though.....
Remember you're the one who just can't undrrstand why someone would rather use an electric gun over an air gun...that YOU love. Your words exactly were...
You state you "don't understand the appeal for these high-torque impacts." All in a thread mind you asking absolutely nothing about air guns....to which you want to turn this into an air vs electric debate. Again hijacking the thread?
Perhaps people don't like the air line attached to it and ******. Maybe they don't like finding the air line, removing a tool on it...hooking up their gun...and then rinse and repeat.
There could be literally countless reasons why someone would prefer electric over air and I promise you this...it's ok. It really is ok. It will be ok going forward if someone would rather use electric over air.
See I don't care if you'd rather use an air gun over electric. Good for you. I'd be willing to bet most who prefer electric over air also don't care what you prefer to run.
See how that works? Different people for many different reasons can like different things. You should be thankful of that because without it there would be only one socket, one wrench, one gun, one screwdriver, etc. And I assure you nobody is consulting you to determine the only type of tool the world can have.