Decent quality and power for £60 I think and 3yrs manufacturers guarantee. Plenty in stock in my local stores.
OK so maybe not up to trade standard but good power for the price for the average DIYer.
Uses Worx powershare batteries so interchangeable with other Worx power tools and batteries can be purchased separately (even the 2.0Ah or 4.0Ah ones if your that way inclined)
20V battery power.
Dual speed.
Speed 0-350rpm/0-1300rpm.
Reverse function.
3 to 3 hours charging.
10mm keyless chuck.
2 gears.
20 torque settings.
Maximum torque 30Nm.
Drilling capacity for wood 30mm, steel 10mm and masonry 8mm.
Temperature overload function which shuts down unit automatically if it overheats.
LED power indicator.
Soft grip handle.
Depth stop handle.
1.3Ah Li-Ion battery.
2 batteries.
Genral information:
Double ended screw bit included.
Carry case included.
Drill weight 1.3kg.
Manufacturer's 3 year when registering online guarantee
I use a Ryobi for work use as well as diy. Nothing wrong with 1.3ah batteries. At full charge in a morning I can knock in quite a few no.12 x 3.5" screws as well as pilot holes and its still not flat at the end of the day. That's one battery not two. The only difference between the 1.3ah and higher is they flatten quicker. But then they don't take as long to charge. 30 mins on the Ryobi although it was more money, has a 13mm chuck but more important for me is 1650 rpm. Saying that this is a good buy for the money and If I didn't have a pair of Ryobi's plus the other one+ stuff I would consider this. Remember its just as easy to drop, lose or have stolen a cheap drill as it is an expensive one.
bayernhornch
18 Jan 16#20
heat added for good price had a word combi like this before, decent drill but be aware the 3 year warranty might not cover the batteries they usually only have 1 year. worth checking as strangely my batteries stopped charging the moment the year warranty ran out on them. If getting one for regular or heavier use might be worth looking at a dewalt or a makita.
phildove
18 Jan 161#19
give up it takes an hour to charge the battery, ive used this drill non stop since june and its great
RoySee
18 Jan 16#18
Top post. Cheers OP!
smugjojo
18 Jan 16#16
Maximum torque 30Nm + 6 year charge time. Save yre money
den169 to smugjojo
18 Jan 16#17
6 year charge time hell forget that.
fozzy17
18 Jan 16#15
voted hot, ignore the 10mm chuck this would be good for 99% of most house holds, I work as a handyman, you would use a larger drill for bigger stuff anyway, heat...
Rickardo
18 Jan 16#14
Heat anyway, OP.
Rickardo
18 Jan 16#13
That's better not only for the chuck size, but mainly the torque, I would say.
markdyer180
18 Jan 161#11
I paid £90 for this 4 months ago, I made some back gates for my back garden car port and it breezed through it. I've used this in wood, concrete and a number of other things and it was superb. In my opinion it's a great deal.
Rickardo to markdyer180
18 Jan 16#12
Glad you've found it useful, but I would have said that's too much for this with the stated level of torque, 10mm chuck etc. At that price, better off with Ryobi, Bosch and creeping into Hitachi, DeWalt, Makita territory (often on offer).
andyb83
17 Jan 16#9
1.3Ah and only 10mm chuck. Not great, even at that price.
I went for the cheaper one however as I didn't need the larger chuck as I only wanted it as a driver and preferred having the case the cheaper one came with.
Pigbristle
17 Jan 16#5
Does this have metal gears & does it come with a charger, they don't mention one in the Product Description?
Uridium to Pigbristle
17 Jan 16#6
couldn't tell you about the gears but it does include charger.
stevc2006 to Pigbristle
17 Jan 16#8
Have you tried Google?
stealth666
17 Jan 16#7
Wickes offer still on their own brand hammer... 18v 2 batts (Samsung cells) 13mm chuck, same 1.3ah, but 1hr charge. 2 yr warranty, got one for xmas, seeing so action on a bit of a loft conversion I'm doing. £49.99
CR_&_JR
17 Jan 16#4
Battery's Only 1.3Ah :disappointed:
Lazyoaf
17 Jan 16#3
great for DIY
Uridium
17 Jan 16#2
You do have to register on the worx website to register the 3yr warranty, but it takes only a couple of minutes. Just done mine.
Opening post
OK so maybe not up to trade standard but good power for the price for the average DIYer.
Uses Worx powershare batteries so interchangeable with other Worx power tools and batteries can be purchased separately (even the 2.0Ah or 4.0Ah ones if your that way inclined)
20V battery power.
Dual speed.
Speed 0-350rpm/0-1300rpm.
Reverse function.
3 to 3 hours charging.
10mm keyless chuck.
2 gears.
20 torque settings.
Maximum torque 30Nm.
Drilling capacity for wood 30mm, steel 10mm and masonry 8mm.
Temperature overload function which shuts down unit automatically if it overheats.
LED power indicator.
Soft grip handle.
Depth stop handle.
1.3Ah Li-Ion battery.
2 batteries.
Genral information:
Double ended screw bit included.
Carry case included.
Drill weight 1.3kg.
Manufacturer's 3 year when registering online guarantee
Latest comments (22)
and if you need a really cheap drill
http://www.homebase.co.uk/en/homebaseuk/worx-wx3693-18v-ni-cad-cordless-hammer-drill---2-batteries-091284
btw...this one is also available for £3 more with a 13mm chuck.
http://www.argos.co.uk/static/Product/partNumber/2482509.htm
I went for the cheaper one however as I didn't need the larger chuck as I only wanted it as a driver and preferred having the case the cheaper one came with.
https://register.worxtools.com/home