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Deleted member 174758
Yes. That's the DRT50 I mentioned in a previous post. Nice bit of kit and no cord to get in the way, either, which may well be advantageous in freehand workDoes the Makita have a direct cordless replacement with the LED light?
Also would there be any power difference between corded and cordless
In point of fact a 1/4in trim router with a small collet just won't be useable with large diameter or long cutters - that's just begging for the cutter to pull-out or slip - so for the small cuts you generally expect to make with this class of router, stuff like hinge recesses, edge round-overs, small rebates, small chamfers et al, there really is little or no discernable difference in power in real terms (that based on about 9 months usage of a DRT50 following a couple of years using an RT0700 and a Katsu - can't say about other manufacturers as I don't have the experience with their products). The Makita cordless tool also uses all the same bases, fences, etc as my RT0700 corded tool and shares the same batteries as my Makita cordless kit. That means in my own case it's a win-win situation. The only area I agree with B-A is that there is a cost penalty to going cordless, especially if you aren't already committed to a compatible battery systemcorded tend to be far more powerful than any battery tool but brushless are now approaching the 50% range on 18v and 75-100% on 36-54v tools but at a cost
But that doesn't reflect the sort of usage you should put a trim router to, if only because prolonged usage will make the motor run pretty hot - and your hand is wrapped around that hot piece of aluminium which is the motor body. TBH if you want to use a router for 30 minutes or continuously you really need to be looking at a larger heavier tool than a rim router, such as a deWalt DW621 or a Bosch GOF900CE or a Festool OF1000e, all of which are big enough to be able o dissipate the heat a lot betteri have a brushless dewalt dcd996 hammer drill its 870w on full power at 18v thats 5 mins on a 4ah battery off course you will be on perhaps 10-20 power most off the time so last for an hour or so
There really isn't much in it. For me, in trade use, I tend to go with Wealden Tool first (assuming they have an appropriate cutter available) simply because they've almost always managed a next day delivery, their range is good and their quality is more than good enough for trade use in shop/bar/restaurant fit-out workI have had a look at infinity and the others and the infinity and CMT seem to be the same price. Which is the better quality?