javyLSU
Well-known member
It’s amazing how many people that don’t own that Milwaukee top off hate it. [emoji38]
Well, I will never get another precision from work... cost lucked out demo pricing, got 32gig of ram 4 gig Nvidia card and 512 class 50 m2 nvme... not going to happen again. 4k touch screen... not ever again....I am a pee on.... I have thunderbolt but not sure that would charge it needed 130 watts and my dock has a 240 watt power supply... hell my old precision rack mount at home has dual 1k power suppliesNot sure if you need a discrete video card but if not, get yourself a Lenovo T590. Charges via USB-C so it is DC to DC for charging off those batteries. The power source has a USB-C connector if I remember correctly. Also you can use your laptop power brick to charge android phones at an alarmingly fast rate. I always had Dell laptops and I hated the last few gens of Lenovo but the current T590 is the best laptop I've ever used for my day to day stuff.
Well, I will never get another precision from work... cost lucked out demo pricing, got 32gig of ram 4 gig Nvidia card and 512 class 50 m2 nvme... not going to happen again. 4k touch screen... not ever again....I am a pee on.... I have thunderbolt but not sure that would charge it needed 130 watts and my dock has a 240 watt power supply... hell my old precision rack mount at home has dual 1k power supplies
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This thing is awesome! Used one of our manually operated staple guns at work. Came home and tinkered in the garage with this. Never going back to manual again!
I've read that people have warranty problems when buying Milwaukee from from non-authorized dealers through Amazon.
It’s amazing how many people that don’t own that Milwaukee top off hate it. [emoji38]
I've read that people have warranty problems when buying Milwaukee from from non-authorized dealers through Amazon.
You must have data not available to the rest of us because no one here has said they even dislike it, let alone hate it. Can you quote your source?
You misunderstand. I’ve been looking forward to this product for quite some time, but every time it gets brought it up the critics come out of the woodwork to poo-poo it, as you’ve seen over the last page or so of posts. Same thing happened when I brought it up a few months ago:
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?p=8692635#post8692635
Usually its 5 years from purchase date or 5 years from manufacturer date. If its not from a retailer then perhaps it goes by the manufacture date rule. You could find a working tool on the side of the road and if it broke you could get it warrantied under the manufacture date timeframe.
You misunderstand. I’ve been looking forward to this product for quite some time, but every time it gets brought it up the critics come out of the woodwork to poo-poo it, as you’ve seen over the last page or so of posts. Same thing happened when I brought it up a few months ago:
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?p=8692635#post8692635
I once had extremely strong hands. Currently (56) yrs old, pain in my hands is just shy of unbearable. I was using the manual stapler yesterday with a much younger coworker. He had a good laugh at my expense. Getting old *****! This 12V is a game changer for those of us with very painful arthritis.Manual staple-guns hurt, and for my wife who has arthritis, they aren't usable.
I didn't see anyone poo-poo it. I saw a good discussion about the value of it.
This thing is awesome! Used one of our manually operated staple guns at work. Came home and tinkered in the garage with this. Never going back to manual again!
I was just looking at one of those the other day. I will be installing a bunch of vapor barrier sheeting soon and that would make it nice but long term, I don't know that I would get enough use out of this to justify the cost?
I was just looking at one of those the other day. I will be installing a bunch of vapor barrier sheeting soon and that would make it nice but long term, I don't know that I would get enough use out of this to justify the cost?
My wife would argue that I already have plenty of other tools that serve those purposes! lolDon't forget to include in your calculations the value of just knowing you have it, looking at it, talking about it, etc. - all those extra things that come with tool ownership.![]()
On second thought, what the hell. Amazon has the bare tool for $82 but they are out of stock until the end of the month. HD has it in stock with a 2.0 battery for $99 and I'll have it Saturday so one more tool that I don't really need but will be nice to haveMy wife would argue that I already have plenty of other tools that serve those purposes! lol

On second thought, what the hell. Amazon has the bare tool for $82 but they are out of stock until the end of the month. HD has it in stock with a 2.0 battery for $99 and I'll have it Saturday so one more tool that I don't really need but will be nice to have![]()



I am sure your charger would great on my 130watt laptop. Mainly for USB cell charges and times when I need to charge me laptop. I am looking at the 12 volt milwaukee charger for the m18 batteries as well....
In the world of on the road, where I normally would use a cig charger to keep a -power bank charge-, and then for my laptop, connect my powerbank-USB C to keep the laptop charged....
The last pic. That's the only thing I see myself -potentially- using the top off.
What other applications do you see yourself using for that
Now that my plumbing project is 3/4 done (doh!), what is everyone's thought on the 2470 plastic pipe shear?
https://www.milwaukeetool.com/Produ...g-Installation/Copper-and-PVC-Cutters/2470-20
The main thing I'm concerned with is it fitting between floor joists to cut a 1.5" or 2" PVC Drain Pipe square. The length dimension is 14-3/8 which is awfully cozy in a typical 14-1/2" joist cavity.
I think about 8 hours on the battery... just my experience... on a dell precision 5520 with a charged battery and a 130 watt power supply. 12.0 milwaukee
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I like mine.
Why would you hold the tool horizontally between the floor joists and not vertically?
I have a 2" ratcheting cutter and the business end of the Milwaukee isn't much bigger.
I have only found a few potential issues.
If there isn't any give in the pipe run being cut, that can be an issue if the shear blade thickness can cause a bind.
Cutting off a "little bit more" is difficult/impossible. The offcut/waste on 2" PVC really needs to be 2 inches or so.
The PVC can shatter instead of cut below 40 degrees, especially if a cut is attempted near an end of the pipe.
I use mine on a regular basis and it's one of my favorite tools. As has been mentioned, the pipe can shatter if it's too cold. I've also had issues with cutting old pvc. Sometimes it shatters, sometimes the cut is a little jagged and sometimes it works perfectly. My suggestion is to make a test cut farther back if you're planning on cutting near a spot that would be difficult to repair.Thanks for the feedback - greatly appreciated. I wouldn't have thought that you need a 1:1 diameter to cutoff length.
Below picture is why I'm concerned about using this in a standard truss cavity...
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