They go under the name Mcallister in the UK. Ive had their Combi drill for 3-4 years. It's nothing amazing but I built a 8x10 shed from scratch with it and used over 800 screws. Still works just fine and the 1.5 AH packs still hold 1.35 AH now. And also used it to drill many many 10mm holes in 8mm mild steel for a project too. I in the Dewalt system as well but for a casual job or something lend out its perfect.
Get a REAL tool like a Milwaukee and time how long it takes to drill a lag screw into a 4×4 and see the 10 second difference, then run it on a construction job Every Day for a month or so and see if the Hart still goin like it was, or at All if it doesnt burn out by then
I own multiple platforms and can say because my friends will buy Hyper Tough and Hart , and have come over to compare. My personal opinion is they have a place for the basic experienced person. I am no expert but all these power tools are made by just a few companies. I personally do not like the feel or the color of Hart. I used a Hart impact driver and it has no place as a top tier tool. If the grip can flex when I squeeze it, I question build quality. I'd put Hart on level with maybe Ryobi in some ways
@@throttleblipsntwistedgrips1992 yeah ive never seen ANYONE in any shop ive worked in using ryobi or hart... even the lube techs dont use that garbage.
@@throttleblipsntwistedgrips1992 Don't get me wrong, I own Ryobi and they are usually used by my wife and boys for their projects. Their 10 inch compound miter saw in that battery platform isn't bad with the premium batteries. The HP stuff I'd recommend for newbies. Bang for buck reasons only. Of those four brands, I prefer Metabo when on jobsites, they look like Amazon tools. I have no worries with them walking off. At home it's Milwaukee for mechanic stuff and Dewalt and Makita for carpentry, Sometimes the Ridgid will get some love. Hilti is a another great tool line, but with price and performance, it's kinda embarrassing to own , even mentioning it here is something that should have been left unsaid. People are just trying to justify their decisions and find people like minded to agree with him.
I don't know about anyone elses motives, but I don't buy Hart tools because i'm already inbedded in two battery platforms and don't want to take another brand of batteries. Furthermore, I don't see after market batteries for Hart tools nor any tool adapters for Hart batteries.
They go under the name Mcallister in the UK.
Ive had their Combi drill for 3-4 years. It's nothing amazing but I built a 8x10 shed from scratch with it and used over 800 screws.
Still works just fine and the 1.5 AH packs still hold 1.35 AH now. And also used it to drill many many 10mm holes in 8mm mild steel for a project too.
I in the Dewalt system as well but for a casual job or something lend out its perfect.
so what trades do you work in that you use a hart 8+ hours/day??? lmfao... ive never seen anyone in a shop using ryobi or hart unironically.
Sign installer, hart never let me down
Get a REAL tool like a Milwaukee and time how long it takes to drill a lag screw into a 4×4 and see the 10 second difference, then run it on a construction job Every Day for a month or so and see if the Hart still goin like it was, or at All if it doesnt burn out by then
I own multiple platforms and can say because my friends will buy Hyper Tough and Hart , and have come over to compare. My personal opinion is they have a place for the basic experienced person. I am no expert but all these power tools are made by just a few companies. I personally do not like the feel or the color of Hart. I used a Hart impact driver and it has no place as a top tier tool. If the grip can flex when I squeeze it, I question build quality. I'd put Hart on level with maybe Ryobi in some ways
Yep. Ryobi, HyperTough, Hart are all for the wannabe weekend contractors. The rest of us are using Makita's, Milwaukee's, DeWalt's and Metabos.
@@throttleblipsntwistedgrips1992 yeah ive never seen ANYONE in any shop ive worked in using ryobi or hart... even the lube techs dont use that garbage.
@@throttleblipsntwistedgrips1992 Don't get me wrong, I own Ryobi and they are usually used by my wife and boys for their projects. Their 10 inch compound miter saw in that battery platform isn't bad with the premium batteries. The HP stuff I'd recommend for newbies. Bang for buck reasons only. Of those four brands, I prefer Metabo when on jobsites, they look like Amazon tools. I have no worries with them walking off. At home it's Milwaukee for mechanic stuff and Dewalt and Makita for carpentry, Sometimes the Ridgid will get some love. Hilti is a another great tool line, but with price and performance, it's kinda embarrassing to own , even mentioning it here is something that should have been left unsaid. People are just trying to justify their decisions and find people like minded to agree with him.
It's for noobs.
I don't know about anyone elses motives, but I don't buy Hart tools because i'm already inbedded in two battery platforms and don't want to take another brand of batteries. Furthermore, I don't see after market batteries for Hart tools nor any tool adapters for Hart batteries.
I wouldn't say I like Walmart these days. Most of the tools are behind glass.
Because of china
this is a strange video.