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Impact preference: Pneumatic vs. Battery

sam_i02

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May 12, 2012
Messages
67
Location
Kanata, Ontario
Shopping for an impact wrench for medium-duty home-garage automotive work. The heaviest use it will see is suspension work on my vehicles.

Was originally inlined towards a pneumatic gun, but once I started comparing torques between pneumatic and 18V battery operated units, the battery option seems like better value. Not to mention being small than the pneumatic ones

It is common for battery impact guns to have torques from 1200-1600 ft-lbs, while the 1/2" pneumatic ones I have seen are at 800-1000 fl-lbs.

Which type do you prefer and why?
 
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denis4x4

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Jul 23, 2006
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508
Location
Durango CO
There's a third option; corded impact wrenches. I have a Makita and a DeWalt. The Makita is a tad lighter and easier to handle. Recently used it to rebuild the suspension on a 1946 Pontiac wagon.
 
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sam_i02

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May 12, 2012
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Kanata, Ontario
There's a third option; corded impact wrenches. I have a Makita and a DeWalt. The Makita is a tad lighter and easier to handle. Recently used it to rebuild the suspension on a 1946 Pontiac wagon.

True. lets add the third to the mix as well. Another feature is the noise levels. Air impacts are loudest too at ~110db.

Looking for preferences from experienced users, to get the best bang for my buck :)
 

Tim-Bob

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Nov 13, 2010
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72
While air impacts are loud, cordless are not a lot quieter when actually impacting.

Air impacts are generally very durable and the venerable IR231 can be had for under $200 CAD.

Also, most cordless are not as powerful as the air jobs, and if they are, they are pretty pricey.

If you have a compressor that can keep up, go with air.
 
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sam_i02

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May 12, 2012
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Kanata, Ontario
While air impacts are loud, cordless are not a lot quieter when actually impacting.

Air impacts are generally very durable and the venerable IR231 can be had for under $200 CAD.

Also, most cordless are not as powerful as the air jobs, and if they are, they are pretty pricey.

If you have a compressor that can keep up, go with air.

Yes, have a compressor that can keep up. But here is my concern. You mentioned the IR231. The specs on it 425 ft-lbs of torque.
http://www.tptoolbox.com/Ingersoll Rand IR231.htm

Here is a battery operated Makita, which I saw on sale last wk for $69 and it claims a torque of 2800
http://www.homedepot.ca/product/18v-lxt-1-4-brushless-impact-driver-tool-only/965067

I agree with the reliability factors, but am I missing something on the torque ratings? Or are the torque numbers on the battery guy exaggerated?? I would think 2000+ ft-lbs of torque would be enough to bust a human wrist up pretty good!
 

waterboy12

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Feb 12, 2012
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444
Location
Monroe, North Carolina
Are you sure that's not 2000 inlbs? 2000inlbs is basically 167ftlbs. There's in no cordless 1/2 impact that delivers 2000ftlbs. Not that I have seen anyways.
 

bts

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Aug 23, 2011
Messages
109
Location
Perth. Australia
It has to be inch -pounds.
No 1/2" impact electric or pnumatic will produce 2800 ft/lbs of torque. That 1 1/2" drive figures.
Best bang for your buck over a lenght of time is pnumatic.
 
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theoldwizard1

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Feb 22, 2011
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SE MI
1/2" drive - air or corded electric

3/8" drive - battery

Don't blow off a good 3/8" battery. It will handle most of a DIYers needs. If not you will probably need a 1/2" breaker bar and a cheater.
 
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sam_i02

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May 12, 2012
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67
Location
Kanata, Ontario
1/2" drive - air or corded electric

3/8" drive - battery

Don't blow off a good 3/8" battery. It will handle most of a DIYers needs. If not you will probably need a 1/2" breaker bar and a cheater.

LOL! yes, I have lived with a 1/2" breaker bar + cheater so far (Have rebuilt motors, replaced clutches, swapped transmissions, installed truck lifts...), but now that I finally have compressed air in the shop, looking to get one or those new fangled pneumatic air impacts ;)
 

KinzeMech

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Jul 15, 2012
Messages
1,164
The best solution is one of each.

If you have to choose which one, or which one first, getting the other later, then it breaks down like this.

Do you have air? If no, are you willing to get air? If no, go battery.

If you have air, are you satisfied being able to use the tool only where your air is at? If not, go battery

How much power do you need? If a lot, go air.

How much continuous run time? If much, go air.

If you are adding air to run a gun, air complements many other tools. Air hammers, inflators, angle and die grinders, blowguns, etc.

Battery guns can share batts with other tools. circular saws, recip. saws, drills, etc.

There's no one right answer, you have to assess your whole situation.
 

Boomer343

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Mar 19, 2012
Messages
519
If you are doing suspension work then get a strong air gun and high flow quick connectors and large diameter hose. Keep the hose short, just cranking up the air pressure only compensates so much. Always gives me a laugh when guys will spend money on one part but not the other....

I have been quite impressed with my $75 dollar 1/2'"electric impact although it is heavy and one speed only....be ready when you pull the trigger. LOL
 

megalo

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Jun 25, 2011
Messages
78
Location
St. Louis, MO
I haven't actually used my air impact for a while - it's too much of a pain to fire up the compressor and hook up the hose. I usually just grab my 1/2" drive DeWalt battery powered impact, and if it doesn't have enough power, a breaker bar to help it out. Still saves a ton of time to not have to use a wrench to get the (sometimes long) bolts out of suspension, etc.
 

sdguy55

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Jan 26, 2012
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2,424
Location
Pierre, SD
I started out using pneumatic 1/2 and 3/8 snap-on. Served me GREAT for 2 years. Hardly anything that a top of the line 1/2 impact wont remove (not saying snap-on is THE top one just merely making a blanket statement) advantages of air is that you have POWER and dont have to worry about losing power cause of a low battery charge. And you dont have to worry about switching batterys, or charging. They are generally smaller so you can get into tighter spots and on all my pneumatics i have a swivel adaptor that has come in handy more times than i care to count.

That all being said i recently pulled the trigger on the new 20v Dewalt line and got the impact driver. Not wrench, driver. And at first i was a bit skeptical about power but it does just fine the ergonomics of it are better than my snap-on 3/8 battery powered impact wrench or even any of the pneumatic ones. Its very well balanced even with the 3.0 a/h battery and i have the feeling that i could use it day in day out without alot of regret. Pro's of a battery? Mobility is the biggest one. And not having an air hose drooped over everything is nice. It and my snap-on battery impacts are not as powerful as my air ones but they will do alot without needing the power of air.
 

nehog

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Jan 2, 2010
Messages
7,935
Location
Jaffrey, NH
Makita web site said:
delivers 1,460 in.lbs. of Max Torque

Divide by 12 for ft/lb, for a final figure of 121 ft/lb. I've never seen an electric (cordless) come close to a air powered tools. I don't think even corded ones will be competitive, but I've not checked the figures on them.
 

Josh Kinzey

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Mar 29, 2007
Messages
89
Location
Raleigh, NC
I bought a Goodyear electric impact from Pepboys about 5 years ago for about $75. I don't know what the actual brand/manufacturer is, but it's been great. I take it with me to track and use it to change wheels.

I've done a couple transmissions with it and had good luck.

I also have air. Since I got the air, I only use the electric in a situation where I can't get an air hose. The track, inside the house, on the side of the road, etc... If I can use the air, I do.

Aircat is becoming a popular air tool, you might want to check them out:

http://www.aircat.com/

Also, there is a mistake in the Tool flier from CarQuest Auto Parts. They have a 4 lb. composite IR 1/2 drive for $140 or so. Pretty sure it's supposed to be $240.
 

dslabuda

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Joined
Sep 9, 2009
Messages
253
Location
NW Indiana
I bought a Goodyear electric impact from Pepboys about 5 years ago for about $75. I don't know what the actual brand/manufacturer is, but it's been great.

They're made by Allied. Bought one too when I worked there before I went to the rr. There are two versions, they changed the battery colour from blue on the later one. It had a slight increase is torque.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I727 using Tapatalk
 
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