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Makita drill
Makita drill








makita drill

I was also planing to use some big screws in 4x4 wood (or maybe I won't, not sure yet) so I like that it has so much torque. about if I need that drill the answer is I don't think so (I'll do some cabinets and I'll expand the house making 2 rooms with metalcom), but buying it with no batteries wasn't much more expensive than another one so, the way I see it, the expensive things are the batteries. Wow, thanks you all guys for the answers. I hope my english is good enough so you understand my meaning Although you can perfectly fit a 1.5 Amp battery on those tools they will loose a littlebit of their power ( Because smaller capacity batteries cant give enough amperage to the tool like a bigger battery can ) but the runtime on these heavy duty tools with a small battery will not be too fantastic. These tools were designed with the use of a 3, 4 or 5 amp battery in mind. On a practical note: Both the jigsaw and the BDF458 are heavy power users. These jigsaws will be compatible with all 18V Makita LXt batteries of 1.5 Amp or more. Now, for a jigsaw in the LXT range there are different models: DJV180 / DJV181 / DJV182. If you buy cordless Makita -> Make sure you have atleast 1.5 Ah batteries IMHO. These batteries do not have electronics and protection circuits. You should never buy 1.3 Amp batteries anymore in my opinion. Any LXT battery of 1.5 Amp or more ( so 1.5 Ah, 2.0Ah, 3.0Ah, 4.0Ah, 5.0Ah ) will fit on the BDF458. These small capacity batteries cannot deliver enough amperage to feed the power hungry motor in that tool. 18V LXT 1.3 amp batteries will not fit on this drill. If so, these heavy duty drills will not take 1.3 amp batteries. Do you actually need such a heavy drill with all that power? The drill you have chosen ( BDF458 ) is a heavy duty powerhouse drill (92 newtons torque ).

#MAKITA DRILL PROFESSIONAL#

Most countries only have Makita's LXT range because that are the professional Makita's.īatteries of the LXT and the cost down 18V range are NOT interchangeable. I think they were designed for the cheaper non western markets. (The mentioned Jigsaw is part of this range )īut you only find these tools in some countries. These are cheaper cost down versions with cheaper batteries, no protection circuits in the batteries and a cheaper slower charger. Makita also has a very limited of Non LXT 18V tools. ( The mentioned BDF458 is part of the 18V LXT range )īatteries, chargers and tools inbetween the LXT range are interchangeable. Makita has 1 very big 18V range of cordless tools called LXT. Sorry to dissappoint you but that will not work.

makita drill makita drill

Thank you guys, and my apologies for the bad english. is there any difference between a cordless drill (i will work on wood) and another one that comes with hammer function? Because I don't need that and it's more expensive, so I want to know if there is another difference between them besides the hammer function, for example, Makita bhp458 and bdf458. I don't use it very much and I'm fine with it when i need it so. As I told before, they also sell drills with no batteries so.ġ) Can I buy a 18v drill alone (BDF458Z is what I have in mind) that, if you buy it with the complete pack, comes with 3Ah batteries and use those 1.3Ah ones with it? Will it work? Will it have less power or the battery will only last for less time?Ģ) Can I use that charger (I know there's more than one model) that comes with those 1.3Ah batteries, buy chinesse 18v 3.0Ah batteries and charge them with it? Will they work? Will it damage the charger or the batteries, or they will just charge slower? Maybe another model of charger is needed?ģ) I already have a Makita corded hammer drill. The thing is that I also need a jigsaw, and I found one (JV183DWE) that comes with 2 Li-ion 1,3Ah 18v batteries (the model of the batteries is BL1813G) and a charger (one hour charging time, the model is DC18WA). I was hoping to get a 18v drill and I found a place where they sell the tools with no batteries. I want to buy a makita cordless drill, for wood working mostly. I'm short on budget (and I will be for the rest of the year) and tools are kind of expensive in my country.










Makita drill