Good post sir. My biggest comment-complaint with the new style drills is the keyless chuck, drilling metals the drill bit slips every time. I don't have any of the three sided shank drill bits and that is what i would have to have with the keyless
Great video thanks for putting that togeather, I have many Black & Decker Professional tools here in the UK including the drill from your review, fantastic range of tools as I'm still using them now some 35 years later.
Yes although there's more story to that they didn't sell their own products under the DeWalt name until 1994 and they sold the original radial arm saw design back to the original company which is now the "original saw company"
I have a 3/8 inch Black and Decker hole gun purchased in 1982. It gets frequent use and still fuctions like new. I prefir the 1200 RPM drills because drill bits last much longer drilling steel. They also have more torque when driving screws. I never bought into the cordless fad because I like tools that last. The box stores push the cordless because they know you will be replacing it every five or six years.
I loved the B&D tools while they were together. I had that drill until it started sounding like crap. Then I went to a Milwaukee keyless electric. I don't like the DeWalt yellow housings. The show dirt and something with the plastic, it degrades. I picked up my 12 inch chop saw one day and the handle just broke off along with part of the motor case. Luckily I found replacement parts and rebuilt it. Now with so much made in China, quality is not predictable. Thanks for the video
I like the review of old power tools. I see these old tools at garage and estate sales for little money but may need a little attention. Information like this video provides helps guide the decision process on which tools to buy or pass on. It would be nice to know how readily available parts are for repair on good brand names. I recently bought a 25 year Makita drill for $4 and found the switch and brushes needed. Good drill. Thanks
Catus Great Review , B&D of Course Owns Dewalt . The Older B&D's Before 90's weren't too good . But Were Cheap and Popular . I Never Tried Dewalt Corded Drills . 8 amp looks good. I Used A Makita 1/2" Drill 7 amp when I Was Framing . And That Was A Powerhouse ! If It Grabbed It Would Twist The Hell out of Your Wrist !
Nothing beats a good ole' corded drill. They are surprisingly powerful, if you are accustomed to a standard CORDLESS drill. If your drilling into heavy gauge material it is much much more efficient to get out the corded drill. Just keep in mind... a corded drill, at full throttle, will just about break your arm if your drill bit becomes seized in the material. It's a shockingly violent "jolt" to your arm when that happens. Good thing is, it usually only happens ONCE. After that, you hold on to the drill as if you were holding onto a bull by it's horns!!... As a side note... I would be very interested to see the inside of a corded drill from harbor freight and how it compares to one of these. They have a few ranging from $9.99 all the way up to $55.00+. I have been thinking about picking one up lately to keep plugged into my work bench. And I'm not sure which one to get or if to avoid them all together. That old Black & Decker looks nice, wish I could find one cheap.
I had the Black and Decker Professional drill that I bought brand new in the early 1990s. It was around $70.00 at that time. Somebody else wanted that drill more than me, so it disappeared. It was a very good drill.
They don't make them because they're unnecessary and corded tools the lifespan really isn't the motor it's the gears and everything else. I think Itachi before they sold out made a corded brushless motor rotary hammer but it was just hugely expensive almost twice as much as the Bosch and didn't offer much more performance. Corded tools don't have the types of power limitations and needs for extreme efficiency like cordless tools on batteries you can just put a bigger motor in if you need more power hence why so many corded tools like saws Etc are 15 amps which is over to horsepower
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Dewalt makes a corded brushless grinder I'm pretty sure look it up, dont know the model number
I have one such black decker drill in indonesia. Bought around 1996. different from today's black decker, which is mostly made in China. At that time everything was still made in America, Italy and England
i got, if it's not that exact model of dewalt, pretty damn close, the chuck is more or less garbage, the one on my drill anyway, not too impress w the keyless chuck so far, i use a drill mostly to mix concrete or mud, some drilling for wiring through studs but mostly more as a beefed up handmixer my wife won't kill me for using, the bits always come loose, you get mad, you torque it like crazy and it still come loose
Hopefully the chuck on the DeWalt isn't made in Mexico. I had a mid 90's Skill drill and the Mexican made chuck busted on me last year. It literally busted into pieces. Either way I say keyed chucks win unless you can get all hex shank bits.
Good post sir. My biggest comment-complaint with the new style drills is the keyless chuck, drilling metals the drill bit slips every time. I don't have any of the three sided shank drill bits and that is what i would have to have with the keyless
Great video thanks for putting that togeather, I have many Black & Decker Professional tools here in the UK including the drill from your review, fantastic range of tools as I'm still using them now some 35 years later.
Black and Decker bought DeWalt in 1960. Same manufacturer, great sales strategy. Mind game.
Yes although there's more story to that they didn't sell their own products under the DeWalt name until 1994 and they sold the original radial arm saw design back to the original company which is now the "original saw company"
cool. Current DeWalt 20v lithium cordless drill not as strong as older stuff
@@CatusMaximus The first DeWalt portable power tool line came out in 1992. I have the full-line catalog covering that inaugural year.
I have a 3/8 inch Black and Decker hole gun purchased in 1982. It gets frequent use and still fuctions like new. I prefir the 1200 RPM drills because drill bits last much longer drilling steel. They also have more torque when driving screws. I never bought into the cordless fad because I like tools that last. The box stores push the cordless because they know you will be replacing it every five or six years.
I loved the B&D tools while they were together. I had that drill until it started sounding like crap. Then I went to a Milwaukee keyless electric. I don't like the DeWalt yellow housings. The show dirt and something with the plastic, it degrades. I picked up my 12 inch chop saw one day and the handle just broke off along with part of the motor case. Luckily I found replacement parts and rebuilt it. Now with so much made in China, quality is not predictable.
Thanks for the video
I like the review of old power tools. I see these old tools at garage and estate sales for little money but may need a little attention. Information like this video provides helps guide the decision process on which tools to buy or pass on. It would be nice to know how readily available parts are for repair on good brand names. I recently bought a 25 year Makita drill for $4 and found the switch and brushes needed. Good drill. Thanks
Catus Great Review , B&D of Course Owns Dewalt . The Older B&D's Before 90's weren't too good . But Were Cheap and Popular . I Never Tried Dewalt Corded Drills . 8 amp looks good. I Used A Makita 1/2" Drill 7 amp when I Was Framing . And That Was A Powerhouse ! If It Grabbed It Would Twist The Hell out of Your Wrist !
Love my Black & Decker tools. This is a great review. Thanks very much.
Nothing beats a good ole' corded drill. They are surprisingly powerful, if you are accustomed to a standard CORDLESS drill. If your drilling into heavy gauge material it is much much more efficient to get out the corded drill. Just keep in mind... a corded drill, at full throttle, will just about break your arm if your drill bit becomes seized in the material. It's a shockingly violent "jolt" to your arm when that happens. Good thing is, it usually only happens ONCE. After that, you hold on to the drill as if you were holding onto a bull by it's horns!!...
As a side note... I would be very interested to see the inside of a corded drill from harbor freight and how it compares to one of these. They have a few ranging from $9.99 all the way up to $55.00+. I have been thinking about picking one up lately to keep plugged into my work bench. And I'm not sure which one to get or if to avoid them all together. That old Black & Decker looks nice, wish I could find one cheap.
I had the Black and Decker Professional drill that I bought brand new in the early 1990s. It was around $70.00 at that time. Somebody else wanted that drill more than me, so it disappeared. It was a very good drill.
An 8 amp 3/8s drill is a beast. It needs a side handle with that kind of power.
early 90s, 25 years ago? jeez
I liked the older B&D industrial drills better than the newer DeWalts .
AND I HATE KEYLESS CHUCKS .
What's wrong with keyless chucks? Many newer ones have a three click locking system.
I wish they would make corded brushless tools.
They don't make them because they're unnecessary and corded tools the lifespan really isn't the motor it's the gears and everything else.
I think Itachi before they sold out made a corded brushless motor rotary hammer but it was just hugely expensive almost twice as much as the Bosch and didn't offer much more performance.
Corded tools don't have the types of power limitations and needs for extreme efficiency like cordless tools on batteries you can just put a bigger motor in if you need more power hence why so many corded tools like saws Etc are 15 amps which is over to horsepower
Dewalt makes a corded brushless grinder I'm pretty sure look it up, dont know the model number
I have one such black decker drill in indonesia. Bought around 1996. different from today's black decker, which is mostly made in China. At that time everything was still made in America, Italy and England
An interesting comparo vid a quarter of a century later.
I thought Stanley tools merged with black and Decker tools which is now Stanley black and Decker.
Yes.
Wonder if it could be used on cars nuts and bolts hmmm my strip them!?
It’s a drill, not a wrench.
i got, if it's not that exact model of dewalt, pretty damn close, the chuck is more or less garbage, the one on my drill anyway, not too impress w the keyless chuck so far, i use a drill mostly to mix concrete or mud, some drilling for wiring through studs but mostly more as a beefed up handmixer my wife won't kill me for using, the bits always come loose, you get mad, you torque it like crazy and it still come loose
I have dwd 112s and am disappointed I advise others not to buy.
Hopefully the chuck on the DeWalt isn't made in Mexico.
I had a mid 90's Skill drill and the Mexican made chuck busted on me last year.
It literally busted into pieces.
Either way I say keyed chucks win unless you can get all hex shank bits.
I wonder if some of the power increase in the newer one is actually due to different gearing
they look a bit different.
They both sounded the same in the way they're twins in terribleness