I’m not trying to say things wrong but I feel that the Dewalt shouldn’t be in here because it’s not designed for woodworking. The Dewalt applications are more for industrial and high-grade steel. Also Dewalt has a cordless version of the same drill press that is specifically used for industrial purposes. I do agree that the WEN is in the position for affordable drill presses, but that’s because it uses a design that has been used by much more expensive drill prices for a very long time, and that is because it uses a drive system to operate the speeds like the much more expensive drill presses instead of a pulley system like the drill presses you get at Harbor Freight that break in about a week of use. The rest of these drill press with the exception of one of the brand are not very far off from the Harbor Freight presses. Mainly made cheaply and designed it cheaply to turn out a profit for the retailer, this means the safety of these tools regardless of how powerful they are is questionable.
@2:26 "... a 10 Amp motor ..." That says nothing about its power. If you use 240V, it's 2400W, if you supply 110V, it's only 1100w, If it runs on 24V, it's reduced to a mear 240W.
I think you've mixed up W and Hp. They are both measurements of "power" but they are very different types of power and are calculated using different factors. Watts is actually a measurement of heat dissipated by an electrical circuit where Hp is a measurement of the physical force produced by a motor. Speaking in very simple terms, amps are what do work when it comes to motors. That's why their Hp is rated by their current demand.
@@BigRalphSmith Not so my dear sir. W and HP are only different in that one is imperical and the other is metric. They both however describe the excact same thing. It is a fact that heating elements are never rated in HP, but motors are (at least in the USA, in the rest of the world they are almost always only rated in W). The reason for this is that the HP is as old as the Roman EMPIRE and power was only a mechanical thing, later came electricity that COULD move things but also heat them. For heating there is no mech movement, so no urge to use HP. HP and W both are a unit of power, just as an inch and a mm both are that of length. Another same difference is speed and distance over land or water/air. You'll almost always say a (air)ship travels at xx knots while a car moves at yy mph (or kph). Again a history thing (rope with knots tight in it to measure boat speed). Even worse, a mile on water or in the air are not the same as a mile on land, though they are given the same name AND measure the same thing.
@@davidmaes3253 Hey David, everything I said is accurate. You are welcome to think it's not. I am confident enough in my statements that I don't need to defend them. Thanks for sharing.
When people need rack and pinion steering wheel replacement for their benz... The smooth control of the drill, rebound, "suspension-dead-zone", ... Intercept - You no say...
I do feel promoting your self as testing tools, should require you to do more than recycle the manufactures promo :/
No speed ranges. No prices
Thanks for the suggestion.
How could you forget the price on each one, that’s like one of the biggest factors on a list 😐
Thanks for your suggestion. Stay with us
@@tools-zone no, no I’m not staying with you ✌️
I’m not trying to say things wrong but I feel that the Dewalt shouldn’t be in here because it’s not designed for woodworking. The Dewalt applications are more for industrial and high-grade steel. Also Dewalt has a cordless version of the same drill press that is specifically used for industrial purposes.
I do agree that the WEN is in the position for affordable drill presses, but that’s because it uses a design that has been used by much more expensive drill prices for a very long time, and that is because it uses a drive system to operate the speeds like the much more expensive drill presses instead of a pulley system like the drill presses you get at Harbor Freight that break in about a week of use.
The rest of these drill press with the exception of one of the brand are not very far off from the Harbor Freight presses. Mainly made cheaply and designed it cheaply to turn out a profit for the retailer, this means the safety of these tools regardless of how powerful they are is questionable.
Thanks for your valuable suggestion.
That blue "Bilt hard" seems to be same as Harbor freight drill press but just different colours.
Yes, they are same.
@2:26 "... a 10 Amp motor ..." That says nothing about its power. If you use 240V, it's 2400W, if you supply 110V, it's only 1100w, If it runs on 24V, it's reduced to a mear 240W.
I think you've mixed up W and Hp.
They are both measurements of "power" but they are very different types of power and are calculated using different factors.
Watts is actually a measurement of heat dissipated by an electrical circuit where Hp is a measurement of the physical force produced by a motor.
Speaking in very simple terms, amps are what do work when it comes to motors. That's why their Hp is rated by their current demand.
@@BigRalphSmith Not so my dear sir. W and HP are only different in that one is imperical and the other is metric. They both however describe the excact same thing. It is a fact that heating elements are never rated in HP, but motors are (at least in the USA, in the rest of the world they are almost always only rated in W).
The reason for this is that the HP is as old as the Roman EMPIRE and power was only a mechanical thing, later came electricity that COULD move things but also heat them. For heating there is no mech movement, so no urge to use HP.
HP and W both are a unit of power, just as an inch and a mm both are that of length.
Another same difference is speed and distance over land or water/air. You'll almost always say a (air)ship travels at xx knots while a car moves at yy mph (or kph). Again a history thing (rope with knots tight in it to measure boat speed). Even worse, a mile on water or in the air are not the same as a mile on land, though they are given the same name AND measure the same thing.
@@davidmaes3253 Hey David, everything I said is accurate. You are welcome to think it's not. I am confident enough in my statements that I don't need to defend them.
Thanks for sharing.
2:22 that’s a mag drill. Not a bench top drill press.
The inclusion of the Fiver actor guy in the intro was pretty...odd
Thanks for the suggestion.
When people need rack and pinion steering wheel replacement for their benz... The smooth control of the drill, rebound, "suspension-dead-zone", ... Intercept - You no say...
Steering column is one to go left and the other to go right thus making center feel.
thanks for sharing your knowledge
I did not find this useful. It is presented as an info-commercial.
Thanks for your comment.
sell out 😂 reviews