speed bump
Well-known member
I don't own a 3/8 pneumatic gun and at work (cement plant) the only 3/8 air gun we have has been sitting in a drawer for 4 years. That might change if I was making my living as an auto mechanic though.
If you work out of a truck in the sunshine garage most of the time like I did battery tools just don’t hold up. They really don’t like rain or snow. Warranty’s won’t cover weather damage. Yet the job must still get done. Air tools don’t care if they get wet or oil soakedThe greasy and oily complaint about cordless is legit. I agree taking apart transmissions all day will destroy the rubber overmolds on cordless tools relatively quickly. For purposes like this the air impacts are clearly superior. Even Garcky's butterfly impact is a great way to go if removing 30 bolts from valve bodies all day.
Where'd you get your DCF921 for $139? Best I can find right now is HomeDepot $179 for tool, battery, charger. Most places are over $200 for the bare tool.Not sure where you shop, but you're paying too much. Interesting that you quote $450. Every store is 1/2 or less that much currently.
I bought the kit (tool, battery, charger, bag) for $139. I thought it was a bargain.
We're all free to spend our money as we wish.
Interested how much that run ya ?
Interested how much that run ya ?

Absolutely! In our shops at work the preference was very much a generational thing.Every time I read these threads the GJ crew falls into two camps. Nearly every time those users who have seen air power as connected to wrenching as electricity and drop lights and those who either didn’t come up that way, or work in shops where cordless power makes sense.
I‘ve used air from small or noisy compressors most of my life. I dream of a nice big 80 gallon compressor tucked away ready to go when I am, but my past and current living situation has limited me to 110v compressors. Cordless impact wrenches have literally changed my life, and have allowed me to do complex work without trying to overcome the limitations of smaller air compressors. Simple jobs, like checking brakes before state inspections doesn’t require much more than a jack and cordless impact to pull the tire. If I need to be portable, it goes in the toolbox and does the same thing along the trail 100 miles from home or at my buddy's garage.
Pneumatic tools will always have their place. Air is incredibly important for many jobs. We have threads here that beat that to death routinely. The wide variety of cordless impacts has changed the market dynamics, but for those that air is available it will always make sense to take advantage of it.
They certainly have their place in lower torque situations where a small gun is nice to have.I did a quick search and didn't find anything specifically addressing this, so here goes...
With the advent of compact, and what I would consider full-power, 1/2" drive pneumatic impact guns; Is there really much of a place for the 3/8" impact guns and sockets these days?
Since I picked up my Aircat 1055-TH, I almost never touch my 3/8 impact gun any more, and mostly use it out of nostalgia when I do.
What are your thoughts?
I think outside industry and specialty automotive repair places (transmission shops, tire places) air is dead.
My only use for my air compressor is running my last pneumatic framing nailer, rarely hvlp. That’s about it. The battery guns do everything air guns used to do.
They won't... batteries have gotten so much better and easily last 10-15-20 years now. Won't be long and we'll all be driving EVs and gas cars will be a thing of the past. Most of my M18 and M12 batteries are a decade old and still going strong.I feel the rush to battery tools will have a backlash at some point when people get tired of buying batteries. I still prefer air tools over battery tools. Guys look at all the money you are saving your employers on air compressors and air hoses.
I don't know how you guys do it. I've gone through 3 M18 XC5.0's (the screws just pull out and the halves separate) and 2 M12 batteries (the batts fall out of tools) in the last year alone.They won't... batteries have gotten so much better and easily last 10-15-20 years now. Won't be long and we'll all be driving EVs and gas cars will be a thing of the past. Most of my M18 and M12 batteries are a decade old and still going strong.
I use a wimpy 10 gal 120 psi compressor, and a 1/4" line. But my 1/2" Thor can tear the head off a bolt if I use it on the wrong ones. So I'm not getting how a 3/8" could be higher torque. Are there 3/8" pneumatics with huge air motors and 1/2" pneumatics with tiny air motors? I just don't have the experience to know.Given a D-I-Y proclivity for under-sized air compressors, a 3/8" pneumatic can have as much or more power than a 1/2" pneumatic impact wrench. This is not reflected in the rated power, but is a fact-of-life when the air supply is choked with tiny compressors running through too-small air hoses.
The lower air demand of the 3/8 makes lots of sense for lots of people.
If a 3/8 impact isn't getting the (automotive/light truck) lug-nuts loose with ease and lots of reserve power, there's something wrong. May not be adequate for heavier suspension work.