Knowing Tyler. Likelihood is, if he tried building himself a work bench, he would probably be missing a finger or two by end of video. He doesn’t seem all that competent when it comes to power tools. Just look what he did to the oscillating saw blades. You don’t put that much pressure when cutting unless ya want to damage the blade. Pluse, dude tried cutting hardened fasteners with it. Generally there are two types of fasteners out there. Hardened and standard.
***For the price, it's a bargain!*** For the basic needs of a home owner who needs light residential tools, or a guy who randomly works on stuff in the garage -> looks like a pretty decent set of tools.
Good things it's not garbage. Decent set of tools for somebody starting from nothing or for someone who just needs something for all around home repairs
I bought my Matrix June 22, 2017 according to my Amazon account. I've used it heavily, 90% of the time with the impact attachment, and it still works as well as it did when I bought it. I still use it almost daily working on motorcycles. It's easily been the highest performance per dollar tool I've ever bought. I also have the air pump attachment that works in a pinch.
Same here… I purchased mine in 2014.and it's still gets the job done. Got mostly all the attachments but mainly use the drill, impact, saw and inflator. Never used the router. Don't know how to use it either… lol
@@wesman6445haha small world! I bought. Bought a matrix a decade ago and It has by far been the most useful tool purchase I've ever made. I've moved on to the more powerful tools, but the matrix is great for people starting out.
B&D is definitely for the light DIY projects. And I have all 3 versions of the matrix system drill handles and all attachments and have had no problems using them for household repairs but would definitely not use them for bigger construction projects, that's what bigger and better brands are for. It's called right tool for the right job.
Exactly, B&D tools aren't meant for professionals, they're meant for, mostly, non-professionals that like to occasionally do light DIY stuff, like most basic home repairs.
I have a full contingent of high end Milwaukee stuff, so I'm not some Black and Decker fan or anything. I think the characterization of them as trash is far too aggressive. Would I buy them? No, but I know that I use my tools enough that tools that are specialized for each use, and will last, are worthwhile for me. Black & Decker is usually much better than one would expect looking at other things around the price point. Most people genuinely don't need high end performance, and usually Black & Decker delivers products that are, for somebody who wants to have tools for the rare just in case moment, acceptable performance with acceptable durability at a price only slightly higher than some of the competitors that often struggle to survive a few uses. I would be far happier with a full toolbox of Black & Decker stuff than like Chicago Electric or Performance Tools.
You didn't review the box itself and how to attach other stuff to it like I have a DeWalt drill bit set that attaches to the top of the lid. Also, I'd like to see you get other attachments. Black & Decker has a plethora of other attachments for the drill. Thank you for the review, and I'm glad you changed your mind a little bit about B&D. I'm a housewife, and I love it! It's a great item for the price for DIY projects.
I'm a woodworker who's heavily invested in Milwaukee M18/M12 tools. I have Milwaukee batteries that were considerably more expensive, for just a single battery, than the B&D kit reviewed in this video. I also have a well-equipped shop and the room to store all of these tools, batteries, chargers, and accessories. This B&D setup isn't going to make me abandon my Milwaukee tools. But, this kit isn't made for me. I think that this would be PERFECT for an apartment-dweller, college kid, retiree, or any other person who doesn't have a lot of space to store tools, doesn't have a lot of money to spend on tools, and/or wants a decent variety of tools so they can tackle the needs a homeowner or renter occasionally encounters. I wasn't expecting much, to be honest, but I can remember a time in my younger days where this would have been VERY useful to own.
I've owned the Matrix system and all of the attachments for over a decade. One of the original batteries is still good too. I have been EXTREMELY happy with them!
Those oscillating combo blades are more designed for tin snipping than cutting steel nails and screws. You'd use it for cutting out registers in ductwork. You need the carbide blade for the nails.
That shit had me dying. Rewatched it like 5 times. The pure disappointment in his face was prices. Instantly startin searchin the comments before I made a comment😂
I bought one of these about 12 years ago. I used it until the batteries gave out and then I upgraded. If I made a living off of my tools I would have bought better, but I don't. It took about 9 or 10 years before the batteries were shot, so I think that was a pretty good run
I've had two B&D 18v drills for over 10 years. I have TORTURED them on lots of home projects. I also have a complete set of Porter Cable 20v stuff (drill, impact, sander, saw, etc) for almost as long. I've built two sizeable decks, remodeled 5 bathrooms, 3 kitchens, finished two large basements and LOTS of other smaller projects. I have not had a single problem nor run into something any of them couldn't handle. Now I am not saying if you do this for a living they would last but for the amount of abuse I've put them through, I have zero complaints.
I have owned this tool set and all the accessories for several years they have out performed my expectations. Black and decker was always good enough for me.
It's always about the intended use. This thing for professional and daily use? No thanks! For the average joe that uses it every few months at best? Yes please!
I have had the original Black and Decker Matrix for about 5 years now. I have the drill, impact, reciprocating saw, and the air pump attachments. I love it! It is not for the everyday mechanic but it is perfect for at home use. Obviously the impact isn't for high torque applications but it works excellent in low torque applications. I find it to be a great tool.
@@electricheartpony he tried to make too deep a channel in one pass. It's better to take shallower bites over multiple passes, especially with an underpowered tool like that.
Use them properly bro it’s a shitty drill. We used one for normal construction and it couldn’t get anything done it was so slow and weak, and they all died. We’ve had a Bosch drill and put it through hell even left it outside in rainstorms. Go buy a real drill lol see how it feels.
@@davidpots9188 Yeah I put my set of Matrix and Bolt-on (craftsman version) through almost 7 and 10 years of hell and only recently burnt up the motors, Bought replacements for like $30 on Amazon and they are working perfectly fine. It sounds like you are just shit with your tools that I have seen in construction myself.
@@davidpots9188 "Go buy a real drill" -Bosch user... Um... I didn't know Bosch tools are in direct competition with DeWalt, Milwaukee, Makita or tooltruck -tools. You know the once that constractionsite's are full of, while Bosch is nowhere to be seen( like fr my dad works in construction and I have been on countless constructionsites and never seen Bosch tools used anywhere). :) To be clear, I'm not saying that Bosch (, B&D or Ryobi) are bad tools( for private/occasional/light use), but those sure as hell aren't professional grade (aka "real") tools. As for use around the house though, just about anything that can drive a screw in is good enough and anything extra you pay, you are paying for the brand not the tool.
@@silentferret1049 craftsman is different than black and decker, I don’t think u realize what I’m saying I’m attacking black and decker bc their drills are just so weak and bad quality. Craftsman isn’t as bad. How can I be shit with my tools when the tool doesn’t have enough power to do anything out of the box.
I've had this system for 4 years now and it still performs perfectly. Also the Craftsman Bolt-On system is the same and there are other attachments as well. I have the mini circular saw which works great too. Perfect for a home owner and is very well built...
Tyler!!! The reason why the impact driver head smells like grease is because the grease keeps it from over heating, it lubricates the gears inside. It's like that with all impact guns. I'm a mechanic so just some tool advice! Great video though 👌. Also routers are to make nice edges on wood not to cut straight through a piece. Thanks, Robert Aime
This is meant for people who just need the occasional drill to hang a picture frame or need an impact for a project. It's not meant to be a dedicated system to replace all the tools for a contractor.
Yeah this system is a lot more than that. Hell even a contractor can use some of these tools just fine. People underestimate these tools a lot more than they should.
@@silentferret1049 No, that impact drill, drill, router, and jigsaw would be a nightmare for "contractor" (which type of contractor are you talking about? general, electrician, mason, framer, plumber, hvac, carpenter, there's tons of types of contractors) work. I use all of these tools professionally in electrical, carpentry, and framing (general contractor). Impact drivers need to drive 3/8 screws WAY faster than that when you're doing a job anchoring and you have 100+ of them to drive. A good quality impact driver would drive that 3/8 screw/anchor in 2-3 seconds, not 15 like that B&D piece of junk. Same goes for the drill, it's got torque but no speed, you need both. That router had no guide, making it pretty useless, and the jigsaw is a joke, I've never seen one so slow. No, I'm pretty sure most contractors would NOT use this. This is strictly for home use.
I use my B+D equipment for household tasks, cutting laminate, drilling and screwing in walls and some sanding for DIY, the bennefit is that I just use 1 batteryplatform, also when 1 tool dies, I can use the battery for my other tools or battery vacumcleaner. Their sanders are quite good and cheap (as you already have the battery now), maybe check out their workmate as testbench. great video, didn't expect it to work so especially for the cost (thought it would cost around 250 and to struggle/die)
Hey Tyler, just thought you would want to know. By making blades and other accessories to fit only their product they can make the main product much cheaper. They don't care to sell the saw for far cheaper than the competitors if they know that you'll be dropping 10 bucks every time you have to buy a blade. Rather than take all of your money up front they just take it over time
Yeah this was a pretty obvious design decision, it's literally the whole point of proprietary parts unless the product uses such niche ideas there's nothing else out there like it.
I purchased the drill first and then all of the attachments over two years ago. Not as my main “go-to” cordless drill but as a take anywhere kit, and to that end it is brilliant. I use the circular saw attachment all the time for small jobs. I have lots of AEG (Ridgid), Ryobi and Makita tools, but this kit lives in my truck for emergency use and it rocks.
I've had a set similar to this for 7 or 8 years, all of it works ok, not the best by any means but for the Proho (Professional homeowner as wranglerstar would say) it will do just about everything you need. Mine has the circular saw, jigsaw, sawzall, drill, impact all of it works, dedicated items will always work better, but for the value if your not making a living and are on a limited budget, this will work for an average joe.
that dude gives me some incredibly strong serial killer/rapist vibes.. im not even totally sure what it is about him but he makes me really uncomfortable.
I agree, I've had my matrix set since 2013, And just used it cut out a for pet door on an exterior door Medel on both sides.. plus drill & screw holes to hang the door... it's not super fast, but then again, neither am I, so I'm pleased it does the odd jobs around the house when I need it to. + love that it comes with 5 tools to choose from & it's not too heavy.
Iv never been a black and decker fan but i bought a couple of those drills years ago and a couple attachments and they still prove me wrong to this day. Still running strong after being abused for over 5 years
I bought a B&D Storm All in One 14.4v set years ago, similar concept ~ all in one interchangeable attachments. Lasted me 10+ years easy, put in storage a couple years and forgot about it. Ordered some knock off brand 14.4 batteries and boom, back to working like new. I gave it to my brother as I upgraded to Craftsman 20v tools for the lithion batteries. He uses the B&D set often with no issues.
I build and repair doors and furniture for a living and although you used almost every "tool" wrong, it still got it done! For the price it's quite impressive! Even for me it's be a good bit of kit for the odd on-site repair job.
I've had a Matrix setup for a LONG time, in it's original Craftsman form (Bolt-On is what they called it). I've got a bunch of the attachments also. The drill chuck WILL end up going bad on you. I'm on my 3rd, but bare in mind that I've had it for probably 8 or 9 years). I find I use the drill and the 4.5" circular saw the most. It's not a perfect setup, but the Craftsman Bolt-on accessories are interchangable with the Matrix stuff, and vice-versa.
Protip for the router, you've got that bit sticking out WAY too much. Also, you usually run the edge of the tool itself along a straight edge to keep straight lines; free-handing is basically impossible. And routers are mostly used for rounding edges or trimming two pieces flush; digging channels like that is usually done with a CNC (which is technically a router) as it's basically impossible to do well by hand.
Lol no as someone who has worked with routers and all woodshop tools my whole life and works in a woodshop now making custom stuff no one else in the world builds. You can freehand it if you understand what you are doing.
So what you are saying is it's a good tool to use around the house but not something a construction company should buy 🤔 wonder if thats why those guys pay 200 for just a drill or saw because they want tools to last I'm honestly gunna buy this and use it around my house for project honestly any tool that has attachments aren't meant for everyday use
they are used for way more, but yeah, he wasnt doing anything right. i know its not his style, to research how to do something, but this guy could have really hurt himself doing this.
My perfect combo for my barber shop that I’ve built for my creative rustic furniture with a couple of charges up batteries that works with my budget thanks for the demo
Interestingly, I first bought my black and Decker matrix almost a decade ago now. It is still compatible with the new batteries and attachments at the store. Glad to see lineup is still kicking! Good ideas last long
I remember my first technically industrial job. I was a maintenance mechanic assistant at a pistachio huller. I got this kit because i could carry around the drill and impact and be relatively lighter weight than carrying 2 drills. This did everything I needed of it between removing bolts drilling holes. Is it extreme duty or even heavy duty? Hell no, but I still have my original kit from 2013 and everything still works great and now my little brother uses that kit to work on his dirt bike, since Ive moved onto needing heavier duty tools for working on boom and scissor lifts
Also, all the other compatible tools by Ryobi are conveniently sold at Home Depot, and Ryobi includes a 4 amp and 1.5 amp battery for that price. For something a person only uses occasionally, the Ryobi tools all work great.
I actually bought one of the drills for use around the house a few years back. It was like $30 for the drill and 2 batteries. I never even got to try it out, both batteries were fuct out the box. They would charge for an hour or so and then die immediately. I took it back and never looked back.
@@matthew6414 I got a old Bolt-on that is the twin to the Matrix system and thats been around 10 years now and it was working strong. Brushes worn out and had to replace the motor which was $30 on Amazon brand new. Still have the original battery too for it and still working.
I’ve had this set for about 4 years now and mostly use the impact when I’m working on my car. It’s been great. I also have the circular saw attachment but it’s only like a 3 inch blade so wont cut through a 2x4.
To get the best results from using routers to cut to a depth like you are doing, it's best to do it in increments, dig down a little at a time instead of going whole hog because all your doing is tying the blade up with material, it's gripping and sending you all over the place. Also, setting up a guide rail for your router will be a benefit as it will steady when your cutting, as well as it lets you do multiple passes on the same cut.
The router tool is generally for finishing work. Trying to cut a channel in wood you'd probably be using some sort of guide to press against to make it straight. The bit spins in a particular direction so if you approach the cut from the wrong way it will kick back. Best use for routers is to round over edges of wood so you don't have any really sharp corners on finished work.
While I agree that many B&D tools aren't that great, there are some, like this set, that aren't too bad. Interestingly, Stanley Black and Decker is the parent company for Craftsman, Porter Cable, and DeWalt. Yep, that DeWalt. Also, this set is PERFECT for your camping kit or RV as it gives you all these options without taking up a lot of space.
Not really parent company just bought them as the old brands went. The 20V line is pretty decent and most don't realize that its a 10+ year old thing B&D kinda got early on and a lot of other brands (outside the ones bought by B&D) are starting to go to the 20V Lithium system in the last few years.
I think it is important to remember that B&D tools aren't intended to be professional grade. Their purpose is to be a budget level tool. They do an OK job of that. My biggest issue with this specific set is the router. Routers are dangerous at the best of times, but they are designed the way they typically are for a reason. This configuration just seems like it increases the chances that someone will hurt themselves.
Routers are very high RPM and susceptible to violent kickback. This attachment doesn’t appear to spin as fast as an actual router, but it looks awkward to hold.
I've had this system for a decade or more. Just this morning I used metal cutting blades to chop up a couple of floor lamps to discard. It worked great. I'm surprised that I haven't heard anyone else say this, but I've only looked at a few comments -it would have been a good idea if he had read the instruction manual before doing this video.
Have to say I’ve recently bought a b&d drill and it was great. Had an issue and they sent a new one out within a couple of days. Can’t fault their customer service. If I hadn’t bought that I might’ve been tempted by this kit :)
A friend of mine who rents a very small house bought the 12pcs attachment for 180 dollars and it works excellent for him. It gives him the ability on a tight budget to do repairs and maintenance. The property owner allowed this within reason.
I'm impressed with the tool, seems like a decent home owner "as needed" closet shelf item. Lots of user error here Tylor, and exagerated expectations, after all it's Black and Decker. 1.5 amp hour battery tells you what it's intended for. Does it come in pink?
@@ThePrufessa from some internet site:Are Black And Decker Batteries Interchangeable With Other Brands? This is a question that we get asked a lot, and it’s one that we’re happy to answer. Black and Decker batteries are not interchangeable with other brands, but they are compatible with other products in the Black and Decker line. This means that you can use a Black and Decker battery in a Black and Decker power tool, but you cannot use it in a different brand’s power tool. There are a few reasons for this. First, Black and Decker batteries are designed specifically for Black and Decker products. They’re made to fit our products perfectly and to work optimally with them. Second, Black and Decker batteries go through a rigorous testing process to make sure they meet our high standards for quality and performance. And third, we offer a wide range of batteries to choose from, so you can find the perfect one for your needs. If you’re looking for a Black and Decker battery, we suggest checking out our website or your local home improvement store. We offer a variety of batteries to choose from, and our experts can help you find the perfect one for your needs.
I have a B&D 20v drill that has driven thousands of screws. Even a few paddle bits. And it's still going strong. It even let out a little "magic smoke" one time on a 1 1/2 paddle bit. I love that thing.
I bought it for my mom for light duty things. I really like it. Carry case is nice too and got her a sawsall attachment with extra batteries. Its more powerful than I expected.
Had the one that had a cord instead of the battery and it died after a year. It is an awesome concept just needs to be built stronger. The gears inside aren't great.
I used my B&D 18v Firestorm drill that I bought in the 90's to do the remodeling and upkeep on my 1900 built home. It all still works and only 2 of my 6 batteries don't hold long charges anymore. I don't use it anymore though because a couple years back I got the Matrix and bought several attachments. Mine wasn't the case kit, but I was able to buy the case. The reason you shouldn't use the jigsaw is because there is a circular saw attachment and I have used the heck out of that. A lightweight one hand circular saw is very handy. I have the air compressor attachment, also. The only B&D power tool that ever failed on me was a 1980's corded $8 jigsaw that I got my money's worth on.
Milwaukee needs this Also as a suggestion, in my years as maintenance technician I would always drill pilot holes for bigger screws. So you might want to add that in there
I upgraded to the 5v 20a battery. Works much better. Finally got the Reciprocating saw attachment and like it a lot. Definitely skipping the Oscillating tool if it won't take aftermarket blades like the reciprocating Saw does.
Hey... Black & Decker did a good. They used to make good, cheap reliable tools years ago... and to be fair... this tool fits that category. Every power tool for under $200 and actually works... is a good selling point.
I enjoyed your video. I agree with you that most folks would probably use separate specific tools like a router, a sander, a cut off tool, or an impact drill if you were doing a lot of it instead of using this cordless matrix tool system. But for small jobs and certain situations, this system seems like it would do perfectly fine and all for a good value.
I’m a contractor. I have *all* the tools. I bought an older version of this setup to keep at my mom’s house with a small tool kit so I can do a small unplanned task if she asks while I’m visiting her
Before I invested in my Milwaukee tools, I had the Matrix Tools, and it is great for homeowner type tools. Also back when I used them, the Craftsman Bolt On tools were interchangeable including the Batteries.
Yea will not buy Milwaukee anymore. Not a good investment. Non of my Milwaukee’s work, only three off my dewalts work (table saw, cordless circular saw, and saws all. My matrix drills last 5-10 years they cost 99$ soy they pay for themselves after one job. It just cheaper for me to buy the matrix.
people normally clamp a straight edge as a guide when they want to make a straight cut with the router and it normally takes a few passes to make a groove that deep, trying to do it in one go will ruin whatever you're trying to do.. overall i think this system is good for light duty DIY repairs or builds, definitely not something you would bring to a construction site, so i do agree with your assessment, sometimes i wish i had a certain tool to make some repairs, but i definitely don't want to spend 100-200 JUST for that tool alone... so for me personally, i could see myself buying this kit.
I really didn’t think it would drive those lag bolts, I’m impressed. It realistically would only ever be used to hang shelves or pictures if people actually bought it. It’s not worth $187 though, you could get a brushless Milwaukee or Dewalt drill/driver for the about the same amount and those will last forever if they’re taken care of.
Your getting one of those and maybe a battery with a charger. The kits here came with like 5 different tools. It would cost well over 500 for half the tools from DeWalt. These types of tools are perfect for home owners to do random things around the house. Go ahead and buy DeWalt for home projects. You'll be buying a new battery every other year because it's not charged often enough and will stop taking a charge. Now days you'll pay damn near the price of this kit for one 5 amp hour DeWalt battery.
Had one for about 6 years now, first drill I bought when I bought my house. Have the jigsaw attachment and the circular saw attachment not seen here. Not a bad tool but it’s not a good tool, but I haven’t used it much since I found dewalt a few years ago. Would be an ok first tool for a first time home buyer to tackle small jobs.
I have friend who sometimes needs one of the tools in the kit and I'm sure he'll fall in love this kit instantaneously. 😆👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻 Some people doesn't need workshop full of precious tools... 😇😆
I have that been having that set for about 7yrs and I love it haven’t had a problem with it yet and still use it I have remodel my mom house inside out and to mobile home with it and it done the job with no problem
@tylertube as someone that's pretty experienced with a router, please watch a few router safety videos. I've seen some horrific injuries come from router kick back. Also to router a straight line, you want to use a straight edge, router guide, or make multiple passes at shallower depths.
Looks like it's pretty well reviewed on amazon, and there's also a trim(circular)saw attachment-but it only uses 3 3/8" blade, a reciprocating saw attachment, and an air tool/inflator that are sold separately. Might be worth checking out for someone low on space, or that doesn't need real pro grade tools.
7 years in the trades and you buy dremel blades? I only buy Diablo. Anyone who has used Diablo knows they're superior in every way. Especially the carbide.
@@Chris.Rhodes believe it would be based on preference. Some people think that just because it has a certain name on it, it means it is better than others. Just because they prefer a different brand/line than yourself,does not mean they are not what they say they are. Ffs
@@miniard11b Take it you've never used the diablo blades lol If so, you'd know to quit wasting money and buy a blade that lasts 4x longer. It has nothing to do with preference. I'm stating that the diablo carbide blades are better. Has nothing to do with preference. It's proven. I've used both brands, and the diablo I don't feel like I'm throwing money in the garbage.
@@Chris.Rhodes I believe you missed the point. I have used both dremel carbide, diablo, lenox, etc. To be honest, lenox is my preference. It is about preference but most Importantly, the job you are doing and the best tool for said job. The point: just because someone believes other blades are better does not make them wrong or make them a liar.
i find that with oscillating tools if you dont apply pressure you cut better and preserve the blades alot better. the idea behind them is that they do minor scratches at high reps. so when you add pressure your trying to make it cut through instead of scratch through..
I remember when I first found out about this tool I had serious thoughts about getting it but then I ended up just getting the combo makita 12 drill and impact for half the price but because you already have all the attachments I would really like to see a comparison between the battery powered matrix and the corded one I think it’s like 30 on Amazon
The corded works about even with the battery. Corded has the slow wind down instead of the instant stop so its best for the sander or drilling constantly.
I have a black and decker weed trimmer which is pretty good. Works well I bought it cause my nephew killed my craftsman weed eater that I couldn’t get another one and this black and decker works with the same 40v battery that my craftsman used. So now I have three 40v batteries. 17:15 I would never use that attachment to router a project. I prefer actual routers that you can hold more steadily. That one you can’t really control. When routing a piece of wood you don’t want to do the full depth on the first pass. You want to start shallow and continue to the depth.
Wasnt that weed wacker/mower thing b&d also? As I recall you really wanted to hate it. You should check out Mista Gg's video on having manscaped as a sponcer. I hope they are paying you good, you deserve it! Keep up the good work 👏
Yep, and it uses the same battery as the drill. I have several items from their "set" since they all use the same batteries. The weed wacker was the first I'd bought, then a tool set with a trim saw, jigsaw, light, sander, and drill, then the Matrix drill, leaf blower, and pole saw, then their chain saw. They all came with batteries, so I also have 10 batteries, and rarely ever have to stop working around the house. I wouldn't use them for professional purposes, but they are definitely worth it for a homeowner doing some DIY.
I had this drill...it's not awful...it's not for a jobsite,. But for around the house or a truck kit, it's not bad. Mine had a reciprocating saw and a tire pump attachment. The pump saved me a couple times! My drill was just the battery and drill. The others I had to buy separate. May have been higher spec. It didn't struggle nearly as bad as this one. Neat idea! Like something from Makita
the router is fine. You dont go that deep on any single passes. Routers take multiple passes. You go that deep on 1st pass, and you'll ruin whatever it is your routing.
Watching you abuse that poor router bit was right out of a finish carpenter's nightmare. I'm impressed with anything that makes it thru one of your videos.
I live in the UK and over here most black and decker products work pretty good. It would be interesting to see any differences between the US versions and UK versions of some of the black and decker stuff.
Them and Bosch used to be all you could get years ago. I still have an old B&D drill that was my dad's and is probably 40 years old and still works. I think like a lot of things, the U.S. version is probably different... maybe even just a cheap brand using the name.
Impossible not to enjoy Tyler. I have all the Matrix tools for those edge cases which come up out in the field - use them maybe once a month. After five years, they have held up just fine. The router, impact driver, trim circular saw and sander exceed expectations, a lot. The jig-saw and multi-tool are OK. The drill is adequate.
Craftsman used to have an identical drill and attachments. Theirs was called "Bolt-On". I believe it's discontinued now but all the Craftsman attachments fit and work with the Black & Decker drill. I love my Matrix kit and have almost all of the attachments for it. They even have yardwork attachments. For an average guy it's great!
@@dadaisdown yeah, gets kind of confusing, but I believe the parent company is called "Stanley-Black & Decker" and that company owns Stanley tools, B&D, Craftsman and Dewalt. B&D stuff in North America runs on 110v, but in most of the rest of the World it's 220v & some of their power tools outside North America are much better quality. Most of the batteries sold in other markets are much better too. Such as the EVO multi tool which comes with 2x20v lithium ion batteries outside NA. The UK, EU & Australia stuff is actually pretty good, so are the Bosch ones that run on 220v. I believe they're trying to lift the brand up again to what it was like in the 1970s & 1980s when their power tools were more like Makita quality. Not exactly professional quality, but more than enough for the average home handyman or hobbyist.
I have a plug in Matrix from about 2015.. It's more of a spare drill. Aside from the chuck slipping sometimes, it and the accessories have been absolutely bullet-proof.
For the love of God, your fingers, and your eyes please learn some safety! Take the battery out while you're changing router bits. Don't hold the router with your fingers where they're almost touching the router bit. Get some eye protection. Other than that, thanks for the video!
I have a black and decker cordless drill. It's fine for light duty. If I need more power I use the Dewalt. The price is what makes it practical. Sometimes I will use the black n decker to drill 1/8" pilot holes and/or countersunk holes, and I use the more powerful drill to drive deck screws. It has value because plenty of lite duty tasks are needed for most projects. Re: jigsaw: They aren't designed for speed. If you want to make fast cuts, use a saws-all. re: Oscillating tool: Plunge cuts are probably what they do best. Yea you can cut metal, but screws and nails are really hard. It's gonna be very expensive to oscillate your way through hard metal. For hard metal, a cutting wheel would be my choice. As a router, I think the black n decker would be anemic, but it looked better than I thought it would.
Bought mine a few months ago on Amazon for $159.00. It's perfect for van life! I can leave most of my other tools behind! It's a win in my book. Thanks for your review 👍
bought this about 7 years ago, i dont remmeber what i paid but i have been using the impact and drill portion in the automotive field daily, mainly to drill small holes or remove screws/bolts from skid plates or air filter boxes, deff not heavy grade gets the job done
I still have my Black and Decker corded drill from 35 years ago. I also have a 12v lithium cordless drill from probably 10+ years ago and I love it. I have beat the crap out of it and it still runs perfect. My Black and Decker jig saw... well it runs but I have gone through them pretty fast. I rarely get 10 years out of them and they are falling apart pretty bad. My 25 year old plug in circular saw still runs great.
I have the corded version which they dont make anymore. But i have the rotary saw, the drill, router and jigsaw. I built all my kitchen cabinets with just that kit a pocket hole jigs and a clamp on fence. That alone was worth the investment. To be honest it struggled a little but i got thru it. Its not commercial grade but it did the job.
Tyler one thing I was thinking about as someone who has worked as a sawyer. Carbide teeth are really brittle when they are sharp! so usually you have to cut easily to smooth the tips out a bit then they should hold up better and not be so brittle. It might be worth giving it a try!
I have owned the Craftsman Bolt-on which are interchangeable with the Matrix for about 8 years. I have never had a problem with them and the battery is still in great shape. The Craftsman also had a skil saw and saws all attachments. The major down fall is finding the blades for the reciprocating saw. I also have the hammer drill and have used it drilling hole in masonry with no problem. Definitely not a tool for the professionals, perfect for the DIY crowd.
Before I could afford Dewalt tools I actually owned the 12 Volt version of this kit, they didn't have an impact or a router but it did what I needed it too back in the day. The main reason I stopped using it was the batteries wouldn't hold a charge anymore and the batteries were not as easy to come by as they are now with online shopping. There was no such thing as amazon back 20+ years ago, the internet wasn't as well known back then either. Good little kit for the small time fixer/ weekend warrior... If your going to do regular work with robust tools then Milwaukee or Dewalt is the way to go.
The multitool blade should lock in with the quick connect. The screw adapter is for one that don't fit. My craftsman brushless multiness has the quick connect and the adapter which came in handy cause it turns out the dremel drywall blades I bought would not work in the craftsman but the screw adapter worked fine. Pro tip for all you weekend warriors out there, Craftsmans power tools are just Dewalt tool but with cheaper plastics for 1/3 the price. Stanley owns Dewalt, Craftsman, and a few others. So far I have the v20 brushed impact and drill, 18ga Brad nailer, brushless multi tool, hacksaw, tire inflator, and the brushless impact and drill at work and I have to say I'm pretty impressed with them. The Dewalt versions are better but your also spending alot more. I recently had an issue with my Brad nailer jamming, contacted customer service bout it and they sent me a brand new one free, don't even want the old one back. So pretty good warranty
I've had this system for years, and I'm not nice to it and honestly it's super nice to have cause even with all the stuff I've put it thru, still runs just fine
Years ago, B&D had a similar set that used their old 14.4v NiCd batteries. It had a small circular saw instead of the oscillating one. I got it for computer and network installs. It turned out to be one of my favorite tools. I had Makita, Hitachi, DeWalt, etc..., but I ended up grabbing that multi kit B&D most often, for the convenience, and the odd reliability of it. I still have it, and would have continued using it regularly, except for the batteries. Like all NiCd, they're crap. Somebody really needs to come out with a lithium battery system for those millions of B&D tools that use that 14.4v and 18v batteries. Several months ago, when I saw they'd released the Matrix kit, I pounced on it. I also did a little searching, and found the circular saw attachment, as well as a couple extra batteries, and a better charger. It's been very good. And, very convenient. I rarely use it at home, or in my shop, primarily because of the small battery capacity, and the odd offset of the handle to most of the tools, but it's great for doing some maintenance at my mother's, or my daughter's, or... It's perfect for the average household that just has the occasional need for some power tools, for household maintenance and/or hanging a couple of shelves. It's definitely worth the money, even adding the extra bucks for the extra bits I picked up. BTW - that little circular saw is perfect for cutting trim, shelving, and thinner plywood.
I have done 101 things with this system. It is so handy, I locked away the corded tools. You can carry a complete shop in two small bags. Part of the problem with all these reviews is it is focused on what it isn't, not what it is. And there is nothing like it.
Matrix system here - amzn.to/3xcW6do
but does it mix bread dough? or make a milkshake? if not then wtf.
could you test taking off a tire with the impact attachment?
They have a little circular saw and a few other attachments you might want to look into for a possible part 2
This guy is such an embarrassment to men everywhere
can it make me a grilled cheese
You should use the multi-tool to build yourself a workbench? Would enjoy a video like that!
Definitely would enjoy that
Was gonna suggest this exact same thing lol
Would be a good video idea
Knowing Tyler. Likelihood is, if he tried building himself a work bench, he would probably be missing a finger or two by end of video. He doesn’t seem all that competent when it comes to power tools. Just look what he did to the oscillating saw blades. You don’t put that much pressure when cutting unless ya want to damage the blade. Pluse, dude tried cutting hardened fasteners with it. Generally there are two types of fasteners out there. Hardened and standard.
Agreed!
***For the price, it's a bargain!***
For the basic needs of a home owner who needs light residential tools, or a guy who randomly works on stuff in the garage -> looks like a pretty decent set of tools.
Unless, of course, you’re a Tyler. Instant breakage! I very much agree with you. I would love a set like this.
Hell no, even me as the avarge guy I will never use some garbage
Good things it's not garbage. Decent set of tools for somebody starting from nothing or for someone who just needs something for all around home repairs
@@ProphetAury Yeah when it breakes in the first 2 uses then what?
@@trxtech3010 Then you're abusing your tools and not using them
I bought my Matrix June 22, 2017 according to my Amazon account. I've used it heavily, 90% of the time with the impact attachment, and it still works as well as it did when I bought it. I still use it almost daily working on motorcycles. It's easily been the highest performance per dollar tool I've ever bought. I also have the air pump attachment that works in a pinch.
Same here… I purchased mine in 2014.and it's still gets the job done. Got mostly all the attachments but mainly use the drill, impact, saw and inflator. Never used the router. Don't know how to use it either… lol
@@wesman6445haha small world! I bought. Bought a matrix a decade ago and It has by far been the most useful tool purchase I've ever made. I've moved on to the more powerful tools, but the matrix is great for people starting out.
B&D is definitely for the light DIY projects. And I have all 3 versions of the matrix system drill handles and all attachments and have had no problems using them for household repairs but would definitely not use them for bigger construction projects, that's what bigger and better brands are for. It's called right tool for the right job.
Exactly, B&D tools aren't meant for professionals, they're meant for, mostly, non-professionals that like to occasionally do light DIY stuff, like most basic home repairs.
I have a full contingent of high end Milwaukee stuff, so I'm not some Black and Decker fan or anything. I think the characterization of them as trash is far too aggressive. Would I buy them? No, but I know that I use my tools enough that tools that are specialized for each use, and will last, are worthwhile for me. Black & Decker is usually much better than one would expect looking at other things around the price point. Most people genuinely don't need high end performance, and usually Black & Decker delivers products that are, for somebody who wants to have tools for the rare just in case moment, acceptable performance with acceptable durability at a price only slightly higher than some of the competitors that often struggle to survive a few uses. I would be far happier with a full toolbox of Black & Decker stuff than like Chicago Electric or Performance Tools.
I’m a handyman I use matrix I get 5-10 years.
You didn't review the box itself and how to attach other stuff to it like I have a DeWalt drill bit set that attaches to the top of the lid. Also, I'd like to see you get other attachments. Black & Decker has a plethora of other attachments for the drill. Thank you for the review, and I'm glad you changed your mind a little bit about B&D. I'm a housewife, and I love it! It's a great item for the price for DIY projects.
@@cynthiakgaddie1183i was wo deringbif the dewalt boxes are compatible the versa dn forget what dewalt names them
I'm just impressed that you didn't hurt yourself using the router like that!
I'm surprised he doesn't seriously get hurt in every video, considering his lack of common sense.
Yo I was so worried that thing was gonna fly back at him lol
@@Rottinblood I agree he is an idiot
lets be honest the only reason he didn't gut himself was because the tool is weak by router standards
LoL 👍
I'm a woodworker who's heavily invested in Milwaukee M18/M12 tools. I have Milwaukee batteries that were considerably more expensive, for just a single battery, than the B&D kit reviewed in this video. I also have a well-equipped shop and the room to store all of these tools, batteries, chargers, and accessories.
This B&D setup isn't going to make me abandon my Milwaukee tools. But, this kit isn't made for me. I think that this would be PERFECT for an apartment-dweller, college kid, retiree, or any other person who doesn't have a lot of space to store tools, doesn't have a lot of money to spend on tools, and/or wants a decent variety of tools so they can tackle the needs a homeowner or renter occasionally encounters.
I wasn't expecting much, to be honest, but I can remember a time in my younger days where this would have been VERY useful to own.
I've owned the Matrix system and all of the attachments for over a decade. One of the original batteries is still good too. I have been EXTREMELY happy with them!
To be fair there's been actual professional grade drill/impact drivers that have struggled with less material.
In all honesty, they don’t always use the best or newer bits for the material, so tests with new stuff isn’t always an accurate comparison.
but not Makita/Dewalt/Milwaukee.. you know, the brands contractors use? lmao
Where??
@@ministryofwrongthink6962 all 3 listed have trouble in certain areas when comparing cordless to powered efficiency.
Nope. This comment made me laugh! Thanks
Those oscillating combo blades are more designed for tin snipping than cutting steel nails and screws. You'd use it for cutting out registers in ductwork. You need the carbide blade for the nails.
Genuinely laughed out loud when he grabbed the bolt. The most honest reaction of pain. I loved the delayed reaction and was amazing.
That shit had me dying. Rewatched it like 5 times. The pure disappointment in his face was prices. Instantly startin searchin the comments before I made a comment😂
@@keeganholt281 hahaha same
I bought one of these about 12 years ago. I used it until the batteries gave out and then I upgraded. If I made a living off of my tools I would have bought better, but I don't. It took about 9 or 10 years before the batteries were shot, so I think that was a pretty good run
I’ve shopped for tools a lot and never saw these combo kits before. Can’t believe that! This is the way to go, all in one.
I do make a living and get 5-10 years. My dewalts last just as long and I pay way more.
I've had two B&D 18v drills for over 10 years. I have TORTURED them on lots of home projects. I also have a complete set of Porter Cable 20v stuff (drill, impact, sander, saw, etc) for almost as long. I've built two sizeable decks, remodeled 5 bathrooms, 3 kitchens, finished two large basements and LOTS of other smaller projects. I have not had a single problem nor run into something any of them couldn't handle. Now I am not saying if you do this for a living they would last but for the amount of abuse I've put them through, I have zero complaints.
I have owned this tool set and all the accessories for several years they have out performed my expectations. Black and decker was always good enough for me.
It's always about the intended use. This thing for professional and daily use? No thanks!
For the average joe that uses it every few months at best? Yes please!
@@penedradorI work as a handyman. Use matrix. Works great.
I have had the original Black and Decker Matrix for about 5 years now. I have the drill, impact, reciprocating saw, and the air pump attachments. I love it! It is not for the everyday mechanic but it is perfect for at home use. Obviously the impact isn't for high torque applications but it works excellent in low torque applications. I find it to be a great tool.
As a woodworker, damn I’m suprised that router bit didn’t snap on you on that first cut 😅 phew I was like o no
What did he do wrong? I've never used one but have plans that'll require one.
@@electricheartpony he tried to make too deep a channel in one pass. It's better to take shallower bites over multiple passes, especially with an underpowered tool like that.
I've had my Matrix set for 6 years with NO problems. When you use them properly, your table sucks, they all work great.
Use them properly bro it’s a shitty drill. We used one for normal construction and it couldn’t get anything done it was so slow and weak, and they all died. We’ve had a Bosch drill and put it through hell even left it outside in rainstorms. Go buy a real drill lol see how it feels.
lol i like the mid sentence attack on his table
@@davidpots9188 Yeah I put my set of Matrix and Bolt-on (craftsman version) through almost 7 and 10 years of hell and only recently burnt up the motors, Bought replacements for like $30 on Amazon and they are working perfectly fine. It sounds like you are just shit with your tools that I have seen in construction myself.
@@davidpots9188 "Go buy a real drill" -Bosch user... Um... I didn't know Bosch tools are in direct competition with DeWalt, Milwaukee, Makita or tooltruck -tools. You know the once that constractionsite's are full of, while Bosch is nowhere to be seen( like fr my dad works in construction and I have been on countless constructionsites and never seen Bosch tools used anywhere). :)
To be clear, I'm not saying that Bosch (, B&D or Ryobi) are bad tools( for private/occasional/light use), but those sure as hell aren't professional grade (aka "real") tools. As for use around the house though, just about anything that can drive a screw in is good enough and anything extra you pay, you are paying for the brand not the tool.
@@silentferret1049 craftsman is different than black and decker, I don’t think u realize what I’m saying I’m attacking black and decker bc their drills are just so weak and bad quality. Craftsman isn’t as bad. How can I be shit with my tools when the tool doesn’t have enough power to do anything out of the box.
I've had this system for 4 years now and it still performs perfectly. Also the Craftsman Bolt-On system is the same and there are other attachments as well. I have the mini circular saw which works great too. Perfect for a home owner and is very well built...
Tyler!!! The reason why the impact driver head smells like grease is because the grease keeps it from over heating, it lubricates the gears inside. It's like that with all impact guns.
I'm a mechanic so just some tool advice! Great video though 👌.
Also routers are to make nice edges on wood not to cut straight through a piece.
Thanks,
Robert Aime
This is meant for people who just need the occasional drill to hang a picture frame or need an impact for a project. It's not meant to be a dedicated system to replace all the tools for a contractor.
Yeah this system is a lot more than that. Hell even a contractor can use some of these tools just fine. People underestimate these tools a lot more than they should.
@@silentferret1049 No, that impact drill, drill, router, and jigsaw would be a nightmare for "contractor" (which type of contractor are you talking about? general, electrician, mason, framer, plumber, hvac, carpenter, there's tons of types of contractors) work. I use all of these tools professionally in electrical, carpentry, and framing (general contractor). Impact drivers need to drive 3/8 screws WAY faster than that when you're doing a job anchoring and you have 100+ of them to drive. A good quality impact driver would drive that 3/8 screw/anchor in 2-3 seconds, not 15 like that B&D piece of junk. Same goes for the drill, it's got torque but no speed, you need both. That router had no guide, making it pretty useless, and the jigsaw is a joke, I've never seen one so slow. No, I'm pretty sure most contractors would NOT use this. This is strictly for home use.
I use my B+D equipment for household tasks, cutting laminate, drilling and screwing in walls and some sanding for DIY, the bennefit is that I just use 1 batteryplatform, also when 1 tool dies, I can use the battery for my other tools or battery vacumcleaner. Their sanders are quite good and cheap (as you already have the battery now), maybe check out their workmate as testbench. great video, didn't expect it to work so especially for the cost (thought it would cost around 250 and to struggle/die)
Hey Tyler, just thought you would want to know. By making blades and other accessories to fit only their product they can make the main product much cheaper. They don't care to sell the saw for far cheaper than the competitors if they know that you'll be dropping 10 bucks every time you have to buy a blade. Rather than take all of your money up front they just take it over time
Yeah this was a pretty obvious design decision, it's literally the whole point of proprietary parts unless the product uses such niche ideas there's nothing else out there like it.
I purchased the drill first and then all of the attachments over two years ago. Not as my main “go-to” cordless drill but as a take anywhere kit, and to that end it is brilliant. I use the circular saw attachment all the time for small jobs. I have lots of AEG (Ridgid), Ryobi and Makita tools, but this kit lives in my truck for emergency use and it rocks.
I've had a set similar to this for 7 or 8 years, all of it works ok, not the best by any means but for the Proho (Professional homeowner as wranglerstar would say) it will do just about everything you need. Mine has the circular saw, jigsaw, sawzall, drill, impact all of it works, dedicated items will always work better, but for the value if your not making a living and are on a limited budget, this will work for an average joe.
Ha F Wranglerstar! Absolute trash of a channel influenced by god, companies, and his political views. I miss the old Wranglerstar
Same, use it for 5-8 decent projects a year, 2 batteries, no issues, not gonna beat a dedicated tool like my man says, but it saves a lot of space.
@@kennethfahr2708 and money if you used it ones in a while.
that dude gives me some incredibly strong serial killer/rapist vibes.. im not even totally sure what it is about him but he makes me really uncomfortable.
I agree, I've had my matrix set since 2013, And just used it cut out a for pet door on an exterior door Medel on both sides.. plus drill & screw holes to hang the door... it's not super fast, but then again, neither am I, so I'm pleased it does the odd jobs around the house when I need it to. + love that it comes with 5 tools to choose from & it's not too heavy.
Iv never been a black and decker fan but i bought a couple of those drills years ago and a couple attachments and they still prove me wrong to this day. Still running strong after being abused for over 5 years
I bought a B&D Storm All in One 14.4v set years ago, similar concept ~ all in one interchangeable attachments. Lasted me 10+ years easy, put in storage a couple years and forgot about it. Ordered some knock off brand 14.4 batteries and boom, back to working like new. I gave it to my brother as I upgraded to Craftsman 20v tools for the lithion batteries. He uses the B&D set often with no issues.
I build and repair doors and furniture for a living and although you used almost every "tool" wrong, it still got it done! For the price it's quite impressive!
Even for me it's be a good bit of kit for the odd on-site repair job.
Great light-duty setup. Been working with it for a decade, almost.
I've had a Matrix setup for a LONG time, in it's original Craftsman form (Bolt-On is what they called it). I've got a bunch of the attachments also. The drill chuck WILL end up going bad on you. I'm on my 3rd, but bare in mind that I've had it for probably 8 or 9 years). I find I use the drill and the 4.5" circular saw the most. It's not a perfect setup, but the Craftsman Bolt-on accessories are interchangable with the Matrix stuff, and vice-versa.
It's a 3 3/8" inch trim saw, not 4.5", just a FYI, lol.
Protip for the router, you've got that bit sticking out WAY too much. Also, you usually run the edge of the tool itself along a straight edge to keep straight lines; free-handing is basically impossible. And routers are mostly used for rounding edges or trimming two pieces flush; digging channels like that is usually done with a CNC (which is technically a router) as it's basically impossible to do well by hand.
Lol no as someone who has worked with routers and all woodshop tools my whole life and works in a woodshop now making custom stuff no one else in the world builds. You can freehand it if you understand what you are doing.
just make jigs to channel by hand...
So what you are saying is it's a good tool to use around the house but not something a construction company should buy 🤔 wonder if thats why those guys pay 200 for just a drill or saw because they want tools to last I'm honestly gunna buy this and use it around my house for project honestly any tool that has attachments aren't meant for everyday use
they are used for way more, but yeah, he wasnt doing anything right. i know its not his style, to research how to do something, but this guy could have really hurt himself doing this.
My perfect combo for my barber shop that I’ve built for my creative rustic furniture with a couple of charges up batteries that works with my budget thanks for the demo
This is a great idea and should have happened decades ago. Good on you, Black & Decker. Other companies need to follow suite.
There has been systems like this for decades lol
@@woodworkingandepoxy643 you're right! :) More companies should do it, too.
Interestingly, I first bought my black and Decker matrix almost a decade ago now. It is still compatible with the new batteries and attachments at the store. Glad to see lineup is still kicking! Good ideas last long
Dude literally just does Infomercial demo routines without editing it to make the product look perfect. Gotta love it.
I've been using this set for like 4-6 years. It's pretty fantastic and will do almost anything any home owner would need.
I remember my first technically industrial job. I was a maintenance mechanic assistant at a pistachio huller. I got this kit because i could carry around the drill and impact and be relatively lighter weight than carrying 2 drills. This did everything I needed of it between removing bolts drilling holes. Is it extreme duty or even heavy duty? Hell no, but I still have my original kit from 2013 and everything still works great and now my little brother uses that kit to work on his dirt bike, since Ive moved onto needing heavier duty tools for working on boom and scissor lifts
Seems good for stuff around the house, but a ryobi set would cost around 200 and get you a decent drill impact and MULTI tool.
Also, all the other compatible tools by Ryobi are conveniently sold at Home Depot, and Ryobi includes a 4 amp and 1.5 amp battery for that price. For something a person only uses occasionally, the Ryobi tools all work great.
@@litigioussociety4249 I know pros that use ryobi lmao
this is a totally decent impact driver for home use
I actually bought one of the drills for use around the house a few years back. It was like $30 for the drill and 2 batteries. I never even got to try it out, both batteries were fuct out the box. They would charge for an hour or so and then die immediately. I took it back and never looked back.
Good lord thats gone up alot over the past 13 years.
i have that exact same drill it has lasted me 6 yrs i love that drill thanks to that drill ive never had to buy another drill
My Dewalt drill and impact driver is almost 10 years and it's still going yet even the batteries are still good as well.
@@matthew6414 I got a old Bolt-on that is the twin to the Matrix system and thats been around 10 years now and it was working strong. Brushes worn out and had to replace the motor which was $30 on Amazon brand new. Still have the original battery too for it and still working.
I’ve had this set for about 4 years now and mostly use the impact when I’m working on my car. It’s been great. I also have the circular saw attachment but it’s only like a 3 inch blade so wont cut through a 2x4.
3 3/8 inch blade. But its only meant for 3/4 inch material which is why its called a trim saw. You can double cut a 2/4 as I have done that before.
To get the best results from using routers to cut to a depth like you are doing, it's best to do it in increments, dig down a little at a time instead of going whole hog because all your doing is tying the blade up with material, it's gripping and sending you all over the place.
Also, setting up a guide rail for your router will be a benefit as it will steady when your cutting, as well as it lets you do multiple passes on the same cut.
I was hoping to see a comment like this, good info about safety and technique.
The router tool is generally for finishing work. Trying to cut a channel in wood you'd probably be using some sort of guide to press against to make it straight.
The bit spins in a particular direction so if you approach the cut from the wrong way it will kick back.
Best use for routers is to round over edges of wood so you don't have any really sharp corners on finished work.
While I agree that many B&D tools aren't that great, there are some, like this set, that aren't too bad. Interestingly, Stanley Black and Decker is the parent company for Craftsman, Porter Cable, and DeWalt. Yep, that DeWalt. Also, this set is PERFECT for your camping kit or RV as it gives you all these options without taking up a lot of space.
Not really parent company just bought them as the old brands went. The 20V line is pretty decent and most don't realize that its a 10+ year old thing B&D kinda got early on and a lot of other brands (outside the ones bought by B&D) are starting to go to the 20V Lithium system in the last few years.
I think it is important to remember that B&D tools aren't intended to be professional grade. Their purpose is to be a budget level tool. They do an OK job of that. My biggest issue with this specific set is the router. Routers are dangerous at the best of times, but they are designed the way they typically are for a reason. This configuration just seems like it increases the chances that someone will hurt themselves.
@@wairgald What is the reason?
Routers are very high RPM and susceptible to violent kickback. This attachment doesn’t appear to spin as fast as an actual router, but it looks awkward to hold.
I was thinking the same thing. Perfect for my rv.
I've had this system for a decade or more. Just this morning I used metal cutting blades to chop up a couple of floor lamps to discard. It worked great. I'm surprised that I haven't heard anyone else say this, but I've only looked at a few comments -it would have been a good idea if he had read the instruction manual before doing this video.
Have to say I’ve recently bought a b&d drill and it was great. Had an issue and they sent a new one out within a couple of days. Can’t fault their customer service. If I hadn’t bought that I might’ve been tempted by this kit :)
A friend of mine who rents a very small house bought the 12pcs attachment for 180 dollars and it works excellent for him. It gives him the ability on a tight budget to do repairs and maintenance. The property owner allowed this within reason.
I'm impressed with the tool, seems like a decent home owner "as needed" closet shelf item. Lots of user error here Tylor, and exagerated expectations, after all it's Black and Decker. 1.5 amp hour battery tells you what it's intended for. Does it come in pink?
You can't put a bigger battery on it? Is that the only battery that works with it?
@@ThePrufessa if anything it's probably Makita or DeWalt clone battery
@@kevinmontoya7318 black and decker makes DeWalt so it should work.
@@ThePrufessa from some internet site:Are Black And Decker Batteries Interchangeable With Other Brands?
This is a question that we get asked a lot, and it’s one that we’re happy to answer. Black and Decker batteries are not interchangeable with other brands, but they are compatible with other products in the Black and Decker line. This means that you can use a Black and Decker battery in a Black and Decker power tool, but you cannot use it in a different brand’s power tool.
There are a few reasons for this. First, Black and Decker batteries are designed specifically for Black and Decker products. They’re made to fit our products perfectly and to work optimally with them. Second, Black and Decker batteries go through a rigorous testing process to make sure they meet our high standards for quality and performance. And third, we offer a wide range of batteries to choose from, so you can find the perfect one for your needs.
If you’re looking for a Black and Decker battery, we suggest checking out our website or your local home improvement store. We offer a variety of batteries to choose from, and our experts can help you find the perfect one for your needs.
@@achecase I didn't ask if it was compatible with other brands. Read my comment again and this time actually comprehend the question I'm asking.
I have a B&D 20v drill that has driven thousands of screws. Even a few paddle bits. And it's still going strong. It even let out a little "magic smoke" one time on a 1 1/2 paddle bit. I love that thing.
Came from your twitch channel, was on there last night and this morning. Genuinely think tyler deserves a bigger fan base
I bought it for my mom for light duty things. I really like it. Carry case is nice too and got her a sawsall attachment with extra batteries. Its more powerful than I expected.
Had the one that had a cord instead of the battery and it died after a year. It is an awesome concept just needs to be built stronger. The gears inside aren't great.
I have the cord and its still going just fine. Some of the later heads for the drills got cheap but I had mine for over 5 years now.
I used my B&D 18v Firestorm drill that I bought in the 90's to do the remodeling and upkeep on my 1900 built home. It all still works and only 2 of my 6 batteries don't hold long charges anymore. I don't use it anymore though because a couple years back I got the Matrix and bought several attachments. Mine wasn't the case kit, but I was able to buy the case. The reason you shouldn't use the jigsaw is because there is a circular saw attachment and I have used the heck out of that. A lightweight one hand circular saw is very handy. I have the air compressor attachment, also. The only B&D power tool that ever failed on me was a 1980's corded $8 jigsaw that I got my money's worth on.
Milwaukee needs this
Also as a suggestion, in my years as maintenance technician I would always drill pilot holes for bigger screws. So you might want to add that in there
Y when they sell each tool for $129
@@travissmith5739 what? What does this have to do with pilot holes for bigger screws/bolts?....
@@TylerRichardson14 I believe he was referring to your comment about Milwaukee.
I upgraded to the 5v 20a battery. Works much better. Finally got the Reciprocating saw attachment and like it a lot. Definitely skipping the Oscillating tool if it won't take aftermarket blades like the reciprocating Saw does.
you should test the other attachments!! they have a trim saw, sawzall, air pump, too.
Hey... Black & Decker did a good. They used to make good, cheap reliable tools years ago... and to be fair... this tool fits that category. Every power tool for under $200 and actually works... is a good selling point.
Try to build a work bench with that kit. Maybe a good series and could test longevity of the different heads or tools haha
I enjoyed your video. I agree with you that most folks would probably use separate specific tools like a router, a sander, a cut off tool, or an impact drill if you were doing a lot of it instead of using this cordless matrix tool system. But for small jobs and certain situations, this system seems like it would do perfectly fine and all for a good value.
I’m a contractor. I have *all* the tools. I bought an older version of this setup to keep at my mom’s house with a small tool kit so I can do a small unplanned task if she asks while I’m visiting her
Before I invested in my Milwaukee tools, I had the Matrix Tools, and it is great for homeowner type tools. Also back when I used them, the Craftsman Bolt On tools were interchangeable including the Batteries.
Yea will not buy Milwaukee anymore. Not a good investment. Non of my Milwaukee’s work, only three off my dewalts work (table saw, cordless circular saw, and saws all. My matrix drills last 5-10 years they cost 99$ soy they pay for themselves after one job. It just cheaper for me to buy the matrix.
people normally clamp a straight edge as a guide when they want to make a straight cut with the router and it normally takes a few passes to make a groove that deep, trying to do it in one go will ruin whatever you're trying to do.. overall i think this system is good for light duty DIY repairs or builds, definitely not something you would bring to a construction site, so i do agree with your assessment, sometimes i wish i had a certain tool to make some repairs, but i definitely don't want to spend 100-200 JUST for that tool alone... so for me personally, i could see myself buying this kit.
I bought this set before it had the oscillating attachment. Still works to this day. Had it for almost 9 years
I really didn’t think it would drive those lag bolts, I’m impressed. It realistically would only ever be used to hang shelves or pictures if people actually bought it. It’s not worth $187 though, you could get a brushless Milwaukee or Dewalt drill/driver for the about the same amount and those will last forever if they’re taken care of.
Your getting one of those and maybe a battery with a charger. The kits here came with like 5 different tools. It would cost well over 500 for half the tools from DeWalt. These types of tools are perfect for home owners to do random things around the house. Go ahead and buy DeWalt for home projects. You'll be buying a new battery every other year because it's not charged often enough and will stop taking a charge. Now days you'll pay damn near the price of this kit for one 5 amp hour DeWalt battery.
Had one for about 6 years now, first drill I bought when I bought my house. Have the jigsaw attachment and the circular saw attachment not seen here. Not a bad tool but it’s not a good tool, but I haven’t used it much since I found dewalt a few years ago. Would be an ok first tool for a first time home buyer to tackle small jobs.
I have old and new Black and Decker tools-most of them ever made, needless to say I like them and the selection is great.
Most of them ever made? What does that mean?
I have friend who sometimes needs one of the tools in the kit and I'm sure he'll fall in love this kit instantaneously. 😆👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻 Some people doesn't need workshop full of precious tools... 😇😆
So I’ll let you in on a not so secret fact: when sanding or routing, RPMs are you best friend. The faster it is, the cleaner the route. ☺️
I have that been having that set for about 7yrs and I love it haven’t had a problem with it yet and still use it I have remodel my mom house inside out and to mobile home with it and it done the job with no problem
@tylertube as someone that's pretty experienced with a router, please watch a few router safety videos. I've seen some horrific injuries come from router kick back. Also to router a straight line, you want to use a straight edge, router guide, or make multiple passes at shallower depths.
He could start by, you know, wearing basic protetion like eye protection.
I cringed when he was pulling the router towards him, be careful homie
but where is the fun in all that?
Looks like it's pretty well reviewed on amazon, and there's also a trim(circular)saw attachment-but it only uses 3 3/8" blade, a reciprocating saw attachment, and an air tool/inflator that are sold separately. Might be worth checking out for someone low on space, or that doesn't need real pro grade tools.
Dremel hands down makes the best blades. 7 years in the trades and I wouldn’t buy anything else and they fit any oscillating tool on the market
7 years in the trades and you buy dremel blades? I only buy Diablo. Anyone who has used Diablo knows they're superior in every way. Especially the carbide.
@@Chris.Rhodes believe it would be based on preference. Some people think that just because it has a certain name on it, it means it is better than others. Just because they prefer a different brand/line than yourself,does not mean they are not what they say they are. Ffs
@@miniard11b Take it you've never used the diablo blades lol If so, you'd know to quit wasting money and buy a blade that lasts 4x longer. It has nothing to do with preference. I'm stating that the diablo carbide blades are better. Has nothing to do with preference. It's proven. I've used both brands, and the diablo I don't feel like I'm throwing money in the garbage.
@@Chris.Rhodes I believe you missed the point. I have used both dremel carbide, diablo, lenox, etc. To be honest, lenox is my preference.
It is about preference but most Importantly, the job you are doing and the best tool for said job.
The point: just because someone believes other blades are better does not make them wrong or make them a liar.
i find that with oscillating tools if you dont apply pressure you cut better and preserve the blades alot better.
the idea behind them is that they do minor scratches at high reps. so when you add pressure your trying to make it cut through instead of scratch through..
I remember when I first found out about this tool I had serious thoughts about getting it but then I ended up just getting the combo makita 12 drill and impact for half the price but because you already have all the attachments I would really like to see a comparison between the battery powered matrix and the corded one I think it’s like 30 on Amazon
The corded works about even with the battery. Corded has the slow wind down instead of the instant stop so its best for the sander or drilling constantly.
I have a black and decker weed trimmer which is pretty good. Works well I bought it cause my nephew killed my craftsman weed eater that I couldn’t get another one and this black and decker works with the same 40v battery that my craftsman used. So now I have three 40v batteries. 17:15 I would never use that attachment to router a project. I prefer actual routers that you can hold more steadily. That one you can’t really control. When routing a piece of wood you don’t want to do the full depth on the first pass. You want to start shallow and continue to the depth.
Wasnt that weed wacker/mower thing b&d also? As I recall you really wanted to hate it. You should check out Mista Gg's video on having manscaped as a sponcer. I hope they are paying you good, you deserve it! Keep up the good work 👏
Yep, and it uses the same battery as the drill. I have several items from their "set" since they all use the same batteries. The weed wacker was the first I'd bought, then a tool set with a trim saw, jigsaw, light, sander, and drill, then the Matrix drill, leaf blower, and pole saw, then their chain saw. They all came with batteries, so I also have 10 batteries, and rarely ever have to stop working around the house.
I wouldn't use them for professional purposes, but they are definitely worth it for a homeowner doing some DIY.
I had this drill...it's not awful...it's not for a jobsite,. But for around the house or a truck kit, it's not bad. Mine had a reciprocating saw and a tire pump attachment. The pump saved me a couple times! My drill was just the battery and drill. The others I had to buy separate. May have been higher spec. It didn't struggle nearly as bad as this one. Neat idea! Like something from Makita
Please wear some safety glasses my dude, a blade breaking and getting stuck in your eye can totally happen
I have the original version of this, and it's been the most useful tool I've ever had. The es also an air pump.
The oscilating multi tool and the router look really awkward to use from that grip. The blades don't impress me either
the router is fine. You dont go that deep on any single passes. Routers take multiple passes. You go that deep on 1st pass, and you'll ruin whatever it is your routing.
Meh, I haven't found a multi material blade for those things that isn't crap
Watching you abuse that poor router bit was right out of a finish carpenter's nightmare. I'm impressed with anything that makes it thru one of your videos.
I live in the UK and over here most black and decker products work pretty good. It would be interesting to see any differences between the US versions and UK versions of some of the black and decker stuff.
Them and Bosch used to be all you could get years ago. I still have an old B&D drill that was my dad's and is probably 40 years old and still works. I think like a lot of things, the U.S. version is probably different... maybe even just a cheap brand using the name.
@@FlyboyHelosim yeah I have some of my grandfather's 30yr old plus power tools and they're still going strong.
Impossible not to enjoy Tyler. I have all the Matrix tools for those edge cases which come up out in the field - use them maybe once a month.
After five years, they have held up just fine. The router, impact driver, trim circular saw and sander exceed expectations, a lot. The jig-saw and multi-tool are OK. The drill is adequate.
How not to use a router lol
Craftsman used to have an identical drill and attachments. Theirs was called "Bolt-On". I believe it's discontinued now but all the Craftsman attachments fit and work with the Black & Decker drill. I love my Matrix kit and have almost all of the attachments for it. They even have yardwork attachments. For an average guy it's great!
Black & Decker owns Craftsman now.
@@tlevans62 damn really? I thought Stanley owns Black & Decker and Dewalt owns Stanley? Idk anymore lol.
@@dadaisdown yeah, gets kind of confusing, but I believe the parent company is called "Stanley-Black & Decker" and that company owns Stanley tools, B&D, Craftsman and Dewalt. B&D stuff in North America runs on 110v, but in most of the rest of the World it's 220v & some of their power tools outside North America are much better quality. Most of the batteries sold in other markets are much better too. Such as the EVO multi tool which comes with 2x20v lithium ion batteries outside NA. The UK, EU & Australia stuff is actually pretty good, so are the Bosch ones that run on 220v. I believe they're trying to lift the brand up again to what it was like in the 1970s & 1980s when their power tools were more like Makita quality. Not exactly professional quality, but more than enough for the average home handyman or hobbyist.
Yeah I’m all my time of using jig saws I’ve never seen anyone try to cut a 2x4 with one.
I have a plug in Matrix from about 2015.. It's more of a spare drill. Aside from the chuck slipping sometimes, it and the accessories have been absolutely bullet-proof.
For the love of God, your fingers, and your eyes please learn some safety! Take the battery out while you're changing router bits. Don't hold the router with your fingers where they're almost touching the router bit. Get some eye protection. Other than that, thanks for the video!
I have a black and decker cordless drill. It's fine for light duty. If I need more power I use the Dewalt. The price is what makes it practical. Sometimes I will use the black n decker to drill 1/8" pilot holes and/or countersunk holes, and I use the more powerful drill to drive deck screws. It has value because plenty of lite duty tasks are needed for most projects.
Re: jigsaw: They aren't designed for speed. If you want to make fast cuts, use a saws-all.
re: Oscillating tool: Plunge cuts are probably what they do best. Yea you can cut metal, but screws and nails are really hard. It's gonna be very expensive to oscillate your way through hard metal. For hard metal, a cutting wheel would be my choice.
As a router, I think the black n decker would be anemic, but it looked better than I thought it would.
Bought mine a few months ago on Amazon for $159.00. It's perfect for van life! I can leave most of my other tools behind! It's a win in my book.
Thanks for your review 👍
bought this about 7 years ago, i dont remmeber what i paid but i have been using the impact and drill portion in the automotive field daily, mainly to drill small holes or remove screws/bolts from skid plates or air filter boxes, deff not heavy grade gets the job done
Been doing construction 5 years Diablo does make really good circular and miter saw blades keep up the good work!!
I still have my Black and Decker corded drill from 35 years ago. I also have a 12v lithium cordless drill from probably 10+ years ago and I love it. I have beat the crap out of it and it still runs perfect. My Black and Decker jig saw... well it runs but I have gone through them pretty fast. I rarely get 10 years out of them and they are falling apart pretty bad. My 25 year old plug in circular saw still runs great.
I have the corded version which they dont make anymore. But i have the rotary saw, the drill, router and jigsaw. I built all my kitchen cabinets with just that kit a pocket hole jigs and a clamp on fence. That alone was worth the investment. To be honest it struggled a little but i got thru it. Its not commercial grade but it did the job.
Tyler one thing I was thinking about as someone who has worked as a sawyer. Carbide teeth are really brittle when they are sharp! so usually you have to cut easily to smooth the tips out a bit then they should hold up better and not be so brittle. It might be worth giving it a try!
I have owned the Craftsman Bolt-on which are interchangeable with the Matrix for about 8 years. I have never had a problem with them and the battery is still in great shape. The Craftsman also had a skil saw and saws all attachments. The major down fall is finding the blades for the reciprocating saw. I also have the hammer drill and have used it drilling hole in masonry with no problem. Definitely not a tool for the professionals, perfect for the DIY crowd.
Before I could afford Dewalt tools I actually owned the 12 Volt version of this kit, they didn't have an impact or a router but it did what I needed it too back in the day. The main reason I stopped using it was the batteries wouldn't hold a charge anymore and the batteries were not as easy to come by as they are now with online shopping. There was no such thing as amazon back 20+ years ago, the internet wasn't as well known back then either. Good little kit for the small time fixer/ weekend warrior... If your going to do regular work with robust tools then Milwaukee or Dewalt is the way to go.
The multitool blade should lock in with the quick connect. The screw adapter is for one that don't fit. My craftsman brushless multiness has the quick connect and the adapter which came in handy cause it turns out the dremel drywall blades I bought would not work in the craftsman but the screw adapter worked fine. Pro tip for all you weekend warriors out there, Craftsmans power tools are just Dewalt tool but with cheaper plastics for 1/3 the price. Stanley owns Dewalt, Craftsman, and a few others. So far I have the v20 brushed impact and drill, 18ga Brad nailer, brushless multi tool, hacksaw, tire inflator, and the brushless impact and drill at work and I have to say I'm pretty impressed with them. The Dewalt versions are better but your also spending alot more. I recently had an issue with my Brad nailer jamming, contacted customer service bout it and they sent me a brand new one free, don't even want the old one back. So pretty good warranty
I've had this system for years, and I'm not nice to it and honestly it's super nice to have cause even with all the stuff I've put it thru, still runs just fine
Years ago, B&D had a similar set that used their old 14.4v NiCd batteries. It had a small circular saw instead of the oscillating one. I got it for computer and network installs. It turned out to be one of my favorite tools. I had Makita, Hitachi, DeWalt, etc..., but I ended up grabbing that multi kit B&D most often, for the convenience, and the odd reliability of it. I still have it, and would have continued using it regularly, except for the batteries. Like all NiCd, they're crap.
Somebody really needs to come out with a lithium battery system for those millions of B&D tools that use that 14.4v and 18v batteries.
Several months ago, when I saw they'd released the Matrix kit, I pounced on it. I also did a little searching, and found the circular saw attachment, as well as a couple extra batteries, and a better charger. It's been very good. And, very convenient. I rarely use it at home, or in my shop, primarily because of the small battery capacity, and the odd offset of the handle to most of the tools, but it's great for doing some maintenance at my mother's, or my daughter's, or...
It's perfect for the average household that just has the occasional need for some power tools, for household maintenance and/or hanging a couple of shelves. It's definitely worth the money, even adding the extra bucks for the extra bits I picked up.
BTW - that little circular saw is perfect for cutting trim, shelving, and thinner plywood.
I just know whenever Tyler gets a new work-bench, i can't wait for the "Destroying my old work station" video
I have done 101 things with this system. It is so handy, I locked away the corded tools. You can carry a complete shop in two small bags. Part of the problem with all these reviews is it is focused on what it isn't, not what it is. And there is nothing like it.