Short story. Read the first sentence below. And I'll add that it was fantastic for that job and a few others since. The Makita is fantastic. Smooth, very quiet, and has almost no vibration.
I picked up the new Makita XMT04ZB a few months back for some plumbing work. Our builder installed round toilets (suitable for only children) in 3 out of our 4 bathrooms, so I decided to replace them, only to find his sub did a ****** job (pun intended) of installing our toilet flanges. All ended up being too high due to the pipe in the foundation being 1/8-1/4" too tall and not allowing the flange to sit flush on the floor. This caused at least one toilet to leak and be a bit wobbly. I ended up cutting out the flanges, trimming all the pipes a bit with the Makita, and installing new/better flanges and actually anchoring them properly w/ concrete screws. In went 3 Kohler skirted toilets with nice Fluid Master closet bolts. Solid...
Side note, during the replacement I took a closer look at our supply stop valves. Garbage plastic pull stop type that could likely be pulled right off the copper pipe if you pulled hard enough. I ordered over 20 Dahl 1/4 turn angle valves and spent a few days replacing all the supply stops and supply lines in the house. The Makita did a nice job of making a few small shallow cuts to the valves so I could get a flat head in and twist and break the valve off the pipe. If you live in a two story house, that's cheap insurance. Damn valves were a disaster waiting to happen.
It's amazing the shortcuts subs take when they don't give a fook, get jobs based on quoting low prices, just want to go home ASAP, etc..
This is when the GC has f----d up to let that slop get through. Zero fooks given. I guess they have so many customers who aren't knowledgeable about quality building practices that it doesn't matter to them. Zero morals/ethics.
Larry Haun -- a quality home builder
Back on topic, a multi-tool is great to have in your arsenal. Even if you don't want a fancy one in the brand your cordless tools are in, I'd at least pick up something like a corded Ryobi, Porter-Cable, etc. one for about $40. Cordless Ryobi one is about $50 I think. I have a corded Ryobi that I've used 20-25 times over the last 5 years. It's sped up a lot of projects/repairs and paid for itself 25 times over.
If you're doing your own projects, you're saving tons of money -- kinda makes the cost for a multi-tool seem like a pittance. I use it for things like shed overhauls for myself and others, gate repairs, flooring, etc.. Makes precise cuts, also use it for light sanding over small areas.