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New Mid-torque vs old High-torque cordless impact

General Geoff

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Joined
Jan 12, 2013
Messages
3,873
Location
Allentown, Pennsylvania
Seems technology really does progress. Got this Makita xwt17z yesterday to supplement my old Ingersoll-Rand W7150, since the big IR gun doesn't fit in a lot of places I need it to. The teal tool is nearly 3" shorter. Despite the lower overall torque rating (520 ft lbs vs 780 for the IR), I ran a little unscientific test by driving several 3/8 x 6" lag screws into a recently-felled tree stump and they both reliably snapped the screws in half at right around 15 seconds of ugga-duggas. I've heard Makita impacts in general are a bit stronger in reverse than forward so I'll bring them both to the junkyard next time I'm there and use em both on old seized-on wheel nuts and maybe axle nuts, see how they compare.

20220120040526-22fa6e9d.jpg

Kind of an apples to oranges thing I know. Just thought it was interesting to see how battery/cordless impact technology has progressed over the past decade.

I'll report back after my next junkyard trip.
 
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General Geoff

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Joined
Jan 12, 2013
Messages
3,873
Location
Allentown, Pennsylvania
I did watch some of their youtube tests before deciding on the xwt17z, actually. Dewalt and Milwaukee make good stuff but I didn't want to delve into yet another battery and charger ecosystem. I may still get an IR W7152 in the future to fully replace the old W7150, if I continue to encounter bolts that won't budge with either of my existing guns.

The new teal tool was more a tight-clearance solver than an insufficient power resolver. If it ends up being roughly equal to the old IR's rust busting power, that's just a bonus :cool:
 
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engineer2

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Dec 13, 2009
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11,798
Location
Chicago burbs
Makita doesn't have a big following here.
Maktia's 3 biggest markets (in order) are Europe, Japan and USA.
Not a lot of posts on the Makita addiction thread because of that and also because their tools simply get the job done without much trouble.
But Still:
Company sales 2019-ish, Major cordless brands in boldHand/Power ToolsGlobal Market Share
Stanley Black & Decker Inc. (SBD, DeWalt, Craftsman brand, Mac, Porter-Cable, Bostitch)$7.14 Billion14.0%
Robert Bosch$6.2 Billion12.2%
Fortive Corp. (Fluke, Danaher, several industrial companies)$6.0 Billion11.8%
Techtronic Industries Company Limited (TTi) Milwaukee, AEG, Ryobi, Homelite$5.04 Billion9.88%
Hilti Corp.$4.3 Billion8.43%
Illinois Tool Works Inc. (Hobart, Miller Electric, Paslode)$3.6 Billion7.06%
Makita Corp.$3.5 Billion6.86%
Snap-on Inc.$3.4 Billion6.67%
Emerson Electric Co. (Greenlee, Textron, Ridgid partners with TTi)$1.9 Billion3.73%
Apex Tool Group, LLC. ( Gearwrench, Crescent)$1.5 Billion2.94%
Hitachi Koki Co., Ltd.$1.2 Billion2.35%
Chervon Holdings Ltd. tool Co. in China (Ego, Flex, Skil, Kobalt)$630 Million1.24%
Textron Inc. >> (sold to Emerson in 2018)$600 Million1.18%
TTS Tooltechnic Systems (Festool)$400 Million0.78%
Ideal Industries, Inc.$360 Million0.71%
Positec Tool Corp. (Rockwell, Worx)$300 Million0.59%
JPW Industries, Inc. (Jet, Wilton, Powermatic, Baileigh)$150 Million0.29%
Ingersoll Rand Inc.$112 Million0.22%
Others: Home Depot Husky made by several above), Lowe's, Harbor Freight, and sub $100 million sales)$4.67 Billion9.2%
TOTAL$51 Billion100%
 
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