roofdweller49
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2023
- Messages
- 186
Ryobi makes so many little odd ball tools. Which ones are actually worthwhile? Anyone actually regularly use the cordless soldering iron or glue gun?
No experience with ryobi but I use my milwaukee soldering iron all the time. A cordless glue gun would be handy if it works.Ryobi makes so many little odd ball tools. Which ones are actually worthwhile? Anyone actually regularly use the cordless soldering iron or glue gun?
Thats another one I like using. The hedge trimmer. Easy to use, trims everything with a single battery and nice that the handle has a couple of positions. Much easier than pulling around the extension cord.The only two Ryobi tools I have are the glue gun and their hedge trimmer. I love the glue gun, use that more than I thought I would both in the house and garage. I still have an old corded glue gun somewhere, but I always hesitated to use it because I had to plug it in somewhere.
The Ryobi soldering iron looks cool, but I've never used one myself. I used to do a lot more soldering when I tinkered with guitars, but now I do very little soldering unless I'm fixing a circuit board on something at work. And that's always with a butane soldering iron.
I have a lot of Milwaukee stuff but their soldering iron was a huge miss - it's way too big.
I use both the hedge trimmer and the glue gun with my Milwaukee batteries using an adapter. The Milwaukee hedge trimmer was almost $200 and the Ryobi was $50 and works just fine for me, so I went that route. Already had the adapter from the glue gun.Thats another one I like using. The hedge trimmer. Easy to use, trims everything with a single battery and nice that the handle has a couple of positions. Much easier than pulling around the extension cord.

I think youre right about selling more of the P790s if they were in the tool area. I just happened to spot them when I was in the electrical dept. I use that light all the time in the garage. The small area lights also get a decent amount of use. I liked them so much I bought a couple for my son to keep around the house. He's just starting out. Started buying tools for around the house. He picked up one of the 18V drills that came with two batteries so he has them for the lights if needed.Echoing the others above, I absolutely love the P790 hybrid LED worklight. Home Despot sells them, but they aren't stocked with the rest of the tools - they are way in the back of the store with the other worklights in the electrical section (??? - they would sell 25x more of them if they were up front with the rest of the Ryobi tools).
I liked my first one so much that I bought two more. I don't use corded work lights any longer unless I am doing an extended project on a vehicle and I string one up underneath the hood.
Oh, one great feature (that I always forget about) on these: if your battery goes dead, it can be plugged into an extension cord, hence the "hybrid" in the name. I always have plenty of Ryobi batteries around so it really isn't an issue for me.
I just bought one of these as a HD return. $29I'm sure if they still make this, but I personally love there:https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07S2TLY1J/?tag=atomicindus08-20
I use my Ryobi glue gun a lot…zero problems and no cordRyobi makes so many little odd ball tools. Which ones are actually worthwhile? Anyone actually regularly use the cordless soldering iron or glue gun?
I wanted to try that, as a tile contractor we rely heavily on hot glue guns to set ornate trim tiles.The glue gun is awesome!
I wanted to try that, as a tile contractor we rely heavily on hot glue guns to set ornate trim tiles.
I have the box-shaped one. I had the first gen unit and it eventually failed after several years. Got the second gen currently and it's improved. The display is more robust. Works well for both high-volume and high-pressure air options.Ryobi has a jump starter now. Expensive, though compared to a dedicated jump pack.
I use the cheap pistol grip air inflator a lot and I wonder if the box shape one is a notable improvement