This is a great combo drill/driver/hammer sds to have in the house, will tackle most jobs you can throw at it and doesn't drop its charge like those nicd drills.
Best price I've seen for this with 20v 2.0ah battery included.
Currently selling for £79.99 at argos without the battery.
Key stats really are the weight (1.6 kg) and the impact energy (1.2 J). The impact energy is a little low for tools of this class (18V Makita's and the like will be generating in the order of 2 joules, which will speed up drilling a lot - but starting at 4 times the price). The weight is very low though - which should mean it's good to use on off a ladder etc. The loss of rotation stop isn't really a big deal either - 1.2 J is really too low to try and do any chiseling anyway.
I've ordered one as it appears to be a steal at this price. I'll probably also pick up a second small battery too - apparently the Erbauer ones from Screwfix fit, and the 2 Ah is only 20 quid there (http://www.screwfix.com/p/erbauer-eri621bat-18v-2-0ah-li-ion-battery/8352g). I'm hoping it'll fill the gap between my 10.8v drill/drivers (which are amazing but start to struggle above 8mm in brick) and my corded SDS beast (which is very heavy and overpowered for many uses).
All comments (78)
fingermouse
3 May 161#1
not half bad :smiley:
chrisjdhuckle
3 May 161#2
just ordered cheers already have to brushless drill and multi tool brilliant make
Thank you, been looking for a decent replacement for my really heavy SDS drill that I've had for years... just for some lighter jobs and some screwdriving mainly, this will do nicely :smiley:
KiretoX
3 May 16#6
How would you compare this to the Bosch PSB 1800 from the EuroCarParts deal ?
7777777 to KiretoX
4 May 161#10
The worx is more versatile, thisbBosch won't utilise the beauty of SDS drill bits, you may appreciate it once drilling in concrete.
If you get Stanley with good chuck you will be happy with it. No comparison once drilling in concrete or stone though, SDS is far better then
jimmyt11 to KiretoX
4 May 161#29
depends what you want it for... bare in mind that an SDS chuck is engineered to have more play in it than a standard chuck so is not as precise
Opening post
Best price I've seen for this with 20v 2.0ah battery included.
Currently selling for £79.99 at argos without the battery.
Top comments
https://images.worx.com/multi-lang-manuals/ne-5l-wx390wx390.1wx390.9-141125.pdf
Key stats really are the weight (1.6 kg) and the impact energy (1.2 J). The impact energy is a little low for tools of this class (18V Makita's and the like will be generating in the order of 2 joules, which will speed up drilling a lot - but starting at 4 times the price). The weight is very low though - which should mean it's good to use on off a ladder etc. The loss of rotation stop isn't really a big deal either - 1.2 J is really too low to try and do any chiseling anyway.
I've ordered one as it appears to be a steal at this price. I'll probably also pick up a second small battery too - apparently the Erbauer ones from Screwfix fit, and the 2 Ah is only 20 quid there (http://www.screwfix.com/p/erbauer-eri621bat-18v-2-0ah-li-ion-battery/8352g). I'm hoping it'll fill the gap between my 10.8v drill/drivers (which are amazing but start to struggle above 8mm in brick) and my corded SDS beast (which is very heavy and overpowered for many uses).
All comments (78)
Don't forget to register the drill on the Worx website, to receive the free 3 years warranty (main body only, battery/accessories are excluded).
If you get Stanley with good chuck you will be happy with it. No comparison once drilling in concrete or stone though, SDS is far better then