whateg01
Well-known member
Oh good! We need another metabo hpt thread!
I used the made in Taiwan narrow crown staplers from Hitachi for stapling underlay . they were great guns . The brad nailers were also good, tho I didn't care for the locking tab on the nail carriage .I lost interest in Hitachi when the high quality Japanese tools were replaced with, what appeared to me, to be very generic “Made in China” tools.
Interesting to hear. I have no experience of those, and don’t even think I ever saw them.I used the made in Taiwan narrow crown staplers from Hitachi for stapling underlay . they were great guns . The brad nailers were also good, tho I didn't care for the locking tab on the nail carriage .
When they went to the much cheaper made in China line that cost more , they were garbage in my eyes.
There was a time when the old style guns in decent were selling for more on ebay than the new style were .
I was at a trade show & chatted with the sales guys at the Hitachi booth about it. They said, "We know the new stuff is junk, we keep telling them but no one listens to us"

I have to say I am not surprised.^^^ if you like the new pneumatic guns, you'd probably love the older guns !![]()
I didn’t know that, and I can’t really follow the rationale there.
I know that the former Hitachi Power Tools, and Metabo, are now under the same ownership, but they are very different.
I lost interest in Hitachi when the high quality Japanese tools were replaced with, what appeared to me, to be very generic “Made in China” tools. When those tools subsequently became branded “Hikoki” in most of the world, and “Metabo HPT” in the U.S. that still wasn’t really of interest.
Metabo have always had a mixed line. Some of their tools, in fact most of their German made tools, have always been first class. But for the last few years a buyer has had to exercise caution, as some lower quality tools have turned up under the Metabo name.
I can’t imagine what’s happening now? I can see why you might as well merge the lower quality Metabo line with the former Hitachi line, as they are comparable tools.
But what about the German made Metabo? How will customers know what’s worth spending the money on? Or will the German tools be dropped in the U.S. market? I know that European tools end up quite expensive in the U.S. by the time they have had an oceanic passage.

What amp were the corded grinders did you smoke?
Really haven't seen much mention of safety yet, but it's worth paying a little more attention to.
I haven’t used my 7” grinder in years. It scares me, and a 4 1/2 inch grinder does everything I need.
I don’t really like angle grinders, but I use them more than I’d wish, so I’ll share a few thoughts!
Buying several cheap ones instead of one good one? Personally, I wouldn’t. There’s far more to a quality grinder than tool life. I’ve owned one cheap grinder, and it was honestly the nastiest thing I have ever used. It was far more noisy than the better grinders, had far more vibration, and the switch was positively dangerous! There’s a ”base level“ of quality that I wouldn’t go below.
I have several, all corded, and lighter is better.
I imagine that heavy duty work requires a beast, but that can cause fatigue pretty fast.
With me more power is always a good thing but with angle grinders I find vibration to be the better compromise. Grinders are cheap. Carpal Tunnel is not.
Have a look at corded Metabo angle grinders.
One instance does not a trend make...I thought "we" determined that sliding switches are bad because the grinder will get loose and tear a giant hole in your leg before you can shut it off or unplug it
For extended use, one of the greatest of all time metalworking grinders in my opinion.The Makita 9005B grinder is a little bigger and only 10 amps but it is also an industry standard around here.
You slide the switch forward and it locks on. You slide the switch back and a spring will assist in sliding the switch back real fast.I thought "we" determined that sliding switches are bad because the grinder will get loose and tear a giant hole in your leg before you can shut it off or unplug it
He's referring to a closed thread where an individual tore up his jogging pants.You slide the switch forward and it locks on. You slide the switch back and a spring will assist in sliding the switch back real fast.
Can the grinder inadvertently turn itself on? I don't see how. It's never happened to me and I have countless hours on them.