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| I’ve had A Bosch for about five years and it’s eaten up everything I’ve used it on - wood, metal, tile. I don’t think you are overestimating the tool at all. |
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| Might be the brand. I have a corded Dewalt, and a cordless Milwaukee and Ridged. I've no complaints, other than the price of blades.
_____________________________________________________ Sliced bread, the greatest thing since the 1911.
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| M12 cordless Milwaukee here and I love it except like cas for the cost of good blades. But an incredibly versatile tool.
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Be careful what you tolerate. You are teaching people how to treat you.
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| We have the Bosch cordless, added to an already growing collection of Bosch cordless tools. We have batteries for each one, plus one. The Bosch OT is great. My wife uses it for things I would never have thought of using it for. It her "go-to" tool for just about everything. The Starlock blade system is amazing. Blade changes are a few seconds job. The Starlock allows you to place the blade all the way around a 180 degree half circle, for those odd angle jobs.
When in doubt, mumble |
| Posts: 10887 | Location: South Congress AZ | Registered: May 27, 2006 |
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| quote: Originally posted by DaveL: I’ve had A Bosch for about five years and it’s eaten up everything I’ve used it on - wood, metal, tile. I don’t think you are overestimating the tool at all.
Same here. It's been most valuable in hard to access places.
"We're all travelers in this world. From the sweet grass to the packing house. Birth 'til death. We travel between the eternities." |
| Posts: 5559 | Location: Las Vegas, NV. | Registered: May 30, 2009 |
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Just for the hell of it
| Make sure the blade is attached tight. I've thought I had them on before and found it wasn't. Also, I've had the welds on the blade where the blade part attaches to the part that attaches to the tool. Just turn the tool off and grab the end of the blade and try and move it. If there is any movement there is a problem with the blade or the attachment point.
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Because in the end, you won’t remember the time you spent working in the office or mowing your lawn. Climb that goddamn mountain. Jack Kerouac
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| Love my Milwaukee 12 volt. I was a late adopter kind of but love having it now. I sure would like to know a source for good blade at a reasonable price.
Collecting dust. |
| Posts: 4199 | Location: Middle Tennessee | Registered: February 07, 2013 |
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| I have had a couple of oscillating multitools and like them. They're very versatile, and in particular, they can reach areas that are difficult with other common power tools (like flush cutting, sanding into corners, etc.).
Unless you have to get into one of those areas, though, it's worth noting that they are much slower than dedicated tools (sawing with an oscillating multi-tool is much slower than with a jigsaw or circular saw, sanding is much slower than with an RO sander or belt sander, and so on). |
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| I have done a number of laminated and hardwood floor renovations and these oscillating tools are absolutely wonderful, (around door framing/odd shapes in particular). Being able to cut bottoms of door framing without pulling off framing itself was a big time saver.
My first HF buy didn't last a month and I was lucky and caught a corded Fein Multimaster on sale. Top grade and made much better than the HF model which wore out quickly. I picked up a Bosch that has done well also. The blades do cost-
Watch for sales- |
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| quote: Originally posted by Rinehart: My first HF buy didn't last a month and I was lucky and caught a corded Fein Multimaster on sale. Top grade and made much better than the HF model which wore out quickly.
Besides inventing the oscillating multitool and making excellent ones, Fein also makes phenomenal shopvac/tool-dust-extractors. They're MUCH quieter and have MUCH higher airflow than most shopvacs, they are great. The only thing really comparable are the Festool ones, which are much more expensive. |
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| UGGGGHHHH, its harbor freight.
I have a cordless Dewalt that eats anything you put in it's way. |
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