Ryobi drills - any ...
 

[Closed] Ryobi drills - any good?

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I'm after a cordless hammer drill and the Ryobi units look quite good. Only for occassional use, any horror stories?


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 9:10 am
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I've got a couple of the One+ ones (old blue/yellow and new lime green) they've been fine, will cope with drilling bricks for putting up shelves etc and more torque than my 10.8v Bosch stuff.


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 9:11 am
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Great for DIY , had mine 2 years now ,all my family got them ,no good for a tradesman though but great for light use DIY.
The colour makes me feel like I'm in a sci- fi movie, i have to point and make phaser noises??


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 9:14 am
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Excellent drills; after trying a De Walt and a Bosch, I bought the Ryobi because I liked the trigger speed control much more than the others. It's still 100% reliable after a couple of years of hard dusty work and then around seven of almost no use at all, the only thing that has failed was the battery, which I replaced from Eblag. It doesn't have as much torque as my old Bosch mains drill but you can't control the speed on that.

I bought mine as part of a two-pack with a fret saw but I've hardly used that at all. I also have a 14" Ryobi chainsaw, which is amazingly tough although the idling isn't too reliable.


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 9:29 am
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If you go cordless make sure you get the professional 18v version, used to use them at the window fitting company I worked for and I picked some up myself as a result!


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 9:32 am
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Looking ta the OnePlus 18v at B&Q for £50. Think I'll give it a whirl.

Like others I've had Bosch and DeWalt and for one reason or another they've bitten the dust after a few years so not sure its worth spending the extra.


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 10:01 am
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I'd make sure they're the Li-Ion ones - my experience with their NiCad batteries is that they don;'t take to long periods of not beign used too well.


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 10:08 am
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I rate them. better than bosch.

the 1+ system is good aswell


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 10:24 am
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as an aside, the Nomad portable pressure washers use One+ batteries (same company owns them) and you can (well I did) buy a 'bare' pressure washer for a discount if you want to use your existing batteries with it.


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 10:26 am
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Looking ta the OnePlus 18v at B&Q for £50. Think I'll give it a whirl.
Isn't that for a bare drill? Its another £75 for the battery and charger. OK if you already have other compatible bits but if not you can get a Makita LXT for similar money. That's what I'd get at that budget.


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 10:43 am
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Just no bag -

http://www.diy.com/nav/fix/power-tools/drills-drivers/Ryobi-OnePlus-18V-Hammer-Drill-and-1-x-1-3Ah-Battery-and-Charger-no-bag-13168696

As you can't do click & collect or web order I guess its limited stock


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 10:46 am
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As you can't do click & collect or web order I guess its [s]limited[/s] [i]out of[/i] stock
😈


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 10:48 am
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+1 for +1 18v same fitting for battery for years nicad and lion - later chargers charge both - many bare tools available if you want/need something else battery powered. Batteries will be available for years due to so many being sold - so a sound investment as the tools always outlast the batteries.


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 10:52 am
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I've got a one plus 18v ryobi drill (the twin pack one) and its very good for the money. It was on offer earlier this year for £90. It replaced a 10 year old 2.4 Ah lead acid DeWalt drill that was brilliant, but heavy.
The charging time is a bit slow compared to the makita's at work, but other than that its great.


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 1:00 pm
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So I went to B&Q and couldn't find the £50 ones, must be end of line. The nearest thing was £80 - exactly the same but with a natty nylon bag. Now I'm sure its still an excellent drill, but on principle I'm not spending £30 on a pointless bag.


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 1:23 pm
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I do not think they were ever on sale for 50 - they were on there earlier in week but no stock in store or for delivery.
If they were available for that price I would have got anaother one as it is a real bargain.


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 2:31 pm
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When we bought out first house about 7 years ago I bought a Makita LXT (the blue ones) with Li-ion batteries on recommendation from the chap who did the more serious building work required when we moved in. It's had a fair amount of abuse through a good amount of DIY and it, and batteries, still going strong regardless.

I think Homebase have some of the Makita on offer at the moment...


 
Posted : 25/07/2014 2:48 pm