I love the newer digital inflator it seems more accurate than the analog gauge ever was. HD had the digitals on sale for $23 last year and I bought all they had in stock. I put one in the trunk of each car with some of my older batteries, one in the garage and one in the lawn mower shed. Very convenient and POWERFUL. Plus, they don't seem to drain the battery much for the inflation power that you get. I'm very impressed. Usually the lawn mower is the biggest pain for cheap leaky tires. But I bought a chrysler 200 a couple of years ago that sat in my garage for 8 mos last year while I worked out of town. When I came back it had a flat tire looks new. No big deal. But ever since then it seems to lose a couple of pounds per day. Took it to a couple of shops and they couldn't find a problem. Consensus was that maybe its a bad bead. I didn't want to throw $22 at a remount and balance at the time not knowing if it would solve, so have just been filling it once a week when I drive it. The inflator is a great tool for that. Quick and easy!
In Canada they're a little more expensive. I think it's close to $40 Canadian I believe I would have to check the home depot Canada. The Canadian version of direct tools so far is only one store in Toronto Ontario.
I bought the lamp to use in a blackout, and it had become one of my most used tool, I have it on my work bench to give extra light when I am doing persion work, very handy
I have all of these products, except for the BT/radio you showed. In some cases, I have a couple of them. Good picks and all very useful tools! That said, you should stop reading my comment here, unless you want to hear a real earful about the P727 lights... which are fantastic and super useful, until they break. Which they will, because they have two major, inherent design flaws. The first problem with the P727 is that green plastic ring piece located on the pivot point of the light. Apparently just cheap PVC or styrene, it is not a tough enough material for the task. It isn't just cosmetic, it's also serving as a cap to hold a screw in place inside, which is the actual thing holding that joint together. They should've used all metal fastener parts, because trust me brothers and sisters, eventually that green plastic part is going to fail on you. I own two of these lights, and on BOTH of them, that green ring part broke down. It cracked up and eventually crumbled into pieces on one of them, and on the other, it's begun cracking but is holding together (barely) for the moment. I have had to work out a way to use appropriate steel washers and 1/4" bolts to bolster the whole damn joint so that it still functions. At least mechanically, that is. Which brings me to "flaw number two...." The second issue is electrical failure. Where the power wires bridging the near and far LED segments are wrapped inside the aforementioned pivoting joint, the wires eventually become fatigued and break. You'll know it's happening when the distal LED segment becomes unreliable or dead entirely, as one or both conductors begin to fracture. The type of wire they used is thin and fairly stiff, does not flex well... so the large amount of movement they experience when you rotate the joint eventually leads to wire failure. To make matters worse, it is a very confined space in there, and doing a solder repair in-situ is terribly challenging -- and it's only a matter of time before it fails again. You might as well take off all the clear plastic covers and just bridge through a new run of wire if you want to fix it yourself. Expect that you'll be doing this periodically, unless you have some super-tough but thin wire to use. BOTH of these failures (green ring, wire breaks) happened to BOTH of my P727s. To Ryobi's credit, they replaced both P727s under warranty and mailed new ones directly to me. However, my warranty is now expired, and there is little doubt that both will break again. My P727s enjoy a very cushy life of clean/dry/warm indoor use, so it's truly not a matter of rough use. They're just poorly designed. Ryobi should upgrade this product's engineering and eliminate both of these major flaws.
How can you suggest I have these tools when 2 of them you said you haven't used yet? Do you just collect tools for fun? I only buy tools I need for working.
The little blower or inflator you'll like as well too. I use it sometime just to clear out as an example the stick vacuum canister that I have. To clean it up after being used. The filter being used in that particular tool I'll use my oiless air compressor with about 20 psi to clear the dust off of that. It does a good job for what I bought it for. So I don't have a huge complaints about them. Unless they are hhe one offs of being dead on arrival of new tools that I'll bring back and exchange out due to an internal connection breaking on the switch or some other unfortunate problem that wasn't caught before it was shipped out you know.
I have a collection of Ryobi tools, I like the fact that they are affordable and dependable. Also the batteries work even if you own the older generation of tools which I do. I have to disagree on the glue gun, I have it and have found it to be the only Ryobi tool that I regret buying. No matter what style battery I use, the results are the same I cannot get much trigger time. Maybe I have a bad glue gun but I can never seem to finish a job without running out of juice. I even turn it off during stand-by time, doesn't matter the batteries seem to not last long.
Don't forget it'll be the same even with a corded hot glue gun as well. When ever you pull the trigger to add more glue. What has already come out. The new glue going in which is coming in as a solid needs to be heated up and to liquefy into a usable state. I've done more than enough boxes from Suleman beer and Boris beer that. The sticks being used don't instantly go into a liquid state that easily. And the heater inside the gun draws a a fair amount of power from a 4ah battery at 18v. They will last about 2.5 to 4 hours depending on usage.
i let a friend borrow my ryobi inflator for a camping/ float trip, he told me there were other guys there with $200+ dollar portable inflators and my little $20 dollar inflator blew them out the water, inflated their floats, beds etc before other guys could get a single bed inflated, i love that little beast, i use it in particular to clean out exhaust fans, or on a super hot day nothing feels better than sticking the nozzle up your shirt and going to town. i swear by ryobi all day.
@@Greeves421a yeah basically I think my point was 4 out of the 5 he was like I haven’t actually used this or it was only 1-2 uses haha but it would be a great tool
I have the glue gun and it's been one of the most used tools I have from Ryobi. Oddly, it won't work with the P103 battery but it works fine with every other one I have. The only thing I noticed is the P103 has one additional contact that the other batteries don't. But the P103 works with everything else.
That is unusual. That's a hp battery if I'm not mistaken. The you can use any of the 18v line from ryobi. Just anything smaller than a 4ah the battery won't last long. Because it needs to warm or heat the glue up to become viscous. I've used a 4ah and a 6ah hp+ battery without a problem.
I have the glue gun and the tire inflator. Work great! Thinking about getting the new tire inflator with digital gauge, but might go for the bigger unit they make. The light is interesting. My son has that radio. He likes it. I like the blower. A possible near future purchase. I was almost worried I'd get Covid-19 with all that coughing going on! Lol. Take care of that. Sounds nasty! 👍
How would you know if we would need that glue gun You haven't even used it yourself It could be a piece of crap. And then you want to suggest it to us.😮 And use it first before you say it's good for us to buy. Thanks
I'm sorry to hear that you may not find it useful for you personally to use in your projects that you have there. There are other people like myself and others that may have a useful in project that we have coming up in our projects that are in the works. We can agree to disagree that we al do not always need the latest and greatest tools from ryobi. I know I personally need the new line of brushless tools that Ryobi has. But that's okay for me. So long as I am happy with the current line of tools that I already have from them. That is all that matters.
I love the newer digital inflator it seems more accurate than the analog gauge ever was.
HD had the digitals on sale for $23 last year and I bought all they had in stock.
I put one in the trunk of each car with some of my older batteries, one in the garage and one in the lawn mower shed. Very convenient and POWERFUL. Plus, they don't seem to drain the battery much for the inflation power that you get. I'm very impressed.
Usually the lawn mower is the biggest pain for cheap leaky tires. But I bought a chrysler 200 a couple of years ago that sat in my garage for 8 mos last year while I worked out of town. When I came back it had a flat tire looks new. No big deal.
But ever since then it seems to lose a couple of pounds per day. Took it to a couple of shops and they couldn't find a problem. Consensus was that maybe its a bad bead. I didn't want to throw $22 at a remount and balance at the time not knowing if it would solve, so have just been filling it once a week when I drive it. The inflator is a great tool for that. Quick and easy!
In Canada they're a little more expensive. I think it's close to $40 Canadian I believe I would have to check the home depot Canada. The Canadian version of direct tools so far is only one store in Toronto Ontario.
I have the light. It’s the most used of all my tools. It won’t light up a room but is good light for the bench or to augment room lights.
I bought the lamp to use in a blackout, and it had become one of my most used tool, I have it on my work bench to give extra light when I am doing persion work, very handy
I have all of these products, except for the BT/radio you showed. In some cases, I have a couple of them. Good picks and all very useful tools!
That said, you should stop reading my comment here, unless you want to hear a real earful about the P727 lights... which are fantastic and super useful, until they break. Which they will, because they have two major, inherent design flaws.
The first problem with the P727 is that green plastic ring piece located on the pivot point of the light. Apparently just cheap PVC or styrene, it is not a tough enough material for the task. It isn't just cosmetic, it's also serving as a cap to hold a screw in place inside, which is the actual thing holding that joint together. They should've used all metal fastener parts, because trust me brothers and sisters, eventually that green plastic part is going to fail on you. I own two of these lights, and on BOTH of them, that green ring part broke down. It cracked up and eventually crumbled into pieces on one of them, and on the other, it's begun cracking but is holding together (barely) for the moment. I have had to work out a way to use appropriate steel washers and 1/4" bolts to bolster the whole damn joint so that it still functions. At least mechanically, that is. Which brings me to "flaw number two...."
The second issue is electrical failure. Where the power wires bridging the near and far LED segments are wrapped inside the aforementioned pivoting joint, the wires eventually become fatigued and break. You'll know it's happening when the distal LED segment becomes unreliable or dead entirely, as one or both conductors begin to fracture. The type of wire they used is thin and fairly stiff, does not flex well... so the large amount of movement they experience when you rotate the joint eventually leads to wire failure. To make matters worse, it is a very confined space in there, and doing a solder repair in-situ is terribly challenging -- and it's only a matter of time before it fails again. You might as well take off all the clear plastic covers and just bridge through a new run of wire if you want to fix it yourself. Expect that you'll be doing this periodically, unless you have some super-tough but thin wire to use.
BOTH of these failures (green ring, wire breaks) happened to BOTH of my P727s.
To Ryobi's credit, they replaced both P727s under warranty and mailed new ones directly to me. However, my warranty is now expired, and there is little doubt that both will break again. My P727s enjoy a very cushy life of clean/dry/warm indoor use, so it's truly not a matter of rough use. They're just poorly designed. Ryobi should upgrade this product's engineering and eliminate both of these major flaws.
I love my Ryobi powers tool very handy for fixing lawnmowers and small petrol and diesel equipment
How can you suggest I have these tools when 2 of them you said you haven't used yet? Do you just collect tools for fun? I only buy tools I need for working.
I've started using them after I had made this video when I had posted.
The tire inflator from Ryobi I like is the P747 model. It will inflate four tires without motor heating up and still have 3/4 charge remaining
i personally have all the tools you mention with the exception of the blower and i toally agree with you
The little blower or inflator you'll like as well too. I use it sometime just to clear out as an example the stick vacuum canister that I have. To clean it up after being used. The filter being used in that particular tool I'll use my oiless air compressor with about 20 psi to clear the dust off of that. It does a good job for what I bought it for.
So I don't have a huge complaints about them. Unless they are hhe one offs of being dead on arrival of new tools that I'll bring back and exchange out due to an internal connection breaking on the switch or some other unfortunate problem that wasn't caught before it was shipped out you know.
I have a collection of Ryobi tools, I like the fact that they are affordable and dependable. Also the batteries work even if you own the older generation of tools which I do. I have to disagree on the glue gun, I have it and have found it to be the only Ryobi tool that I regret buying. No matter what style battery I use, the results are the same I cannot get much trigger time. Maybe I have a bad glue gun but I can never seem to finish a job without running out of juice. I even turn it off during stand-by time, doesn't matter the batteries seem to not last long.
Don't forget it'll be the same even with a corded hot glue gun as well. When ever you pull the trigger to add more glue. What has already come out. The new glue going in which is coming in as a solid needs to be heated up and to liquefy into a usable state. I've done more than enough boxes from Suleman beer and Boris beer that. The sticks being used don't instantly go into a liquid state that easily. And the heater inside the gun draws a a fair amount of power from a 4ah battery at 18v. They will last about 2.5 to 4 hours depending on usage.
i let a friend borrow my ryobi inflator for a camping/ float trip, he told me there were other guys there with $200+ dollar portable inflators and my little $20 dollar inflator blew them out the water, inflated their floats, beds etc before other guys could get a single bed inflated, i love that little beast, i use it in particular to clean out exhaust fans, or on a super hot day nothing feels better than sticking the nozzle up your shirt and going to town. i swear by ryobi all day.
The glue gun heats up quickly. Have used it on the job for transition strips or other pieces of wood until I nail them or things in the car
Top 5 must haves that I haven’t actually used
I was just about to say the same thing...used this twice.....haven't used this yet.....Must have tools I like the idea of having.
@@Greeves421a yeah basically I think my point was 4 out of the 5 he was like I haven’t actually used this or it was only 1-2 uses haha but it would be a great tool
The Ryobi P731 inflator does the job of both the inflators you feature here, and the tire inflator has an automatic shut-off feature.
Tire inflator is a little weak but great in a pinch
The bluetooth has great volume outside and loud indoors!
I like your idea of using the glue gun to temporarily tack something together. Makes DIY easier to do
I have the glue gun and it's been one of the most used tools I have from Ryobi. Oddly, it won't work with the P103 battery but it works fine with every other one I have. The only thing I noticed is the P103 has one additional contact that the other batteries don't. But the P103 works with everything else.
That is unusual. That's a hp battery if I'm not mistaken. The you can use any of the 18v line from ryobi. Just anything smaller than a 4ah the battery won't last long. Because it needs to warm or heat the glue up to become viscous. I've used a 4ah and a 6ah hp+ battery without a problem.
Can't think of one of the five that I have any use for.
I have the glue gun and the tire inflator. Work great! Thinking about getting the new tire inflator with digital gauge, but might go for the bigger unit they make. The light is interesting. My son has that radio. He likes it. I like the blower. A possible near future purchase.
I was almost worried I'd get Covid-19 with all that coughing going on! Lol. Take care of that. Sounds nasty! 👍
I love the digital tire inflator
Love my glue gun. You can get different tips or different colors of glue.
I think at home depot they sold through there. I have just the regular tunes for it.
I don't see why you dont have a drill or an impact wrench in your must haves
I call the impact my boom boom gun
"I have used this at least twice"... Well that doesn't tell me anything about the quality.
how do you do reviews without actually showing the product being used?
I test them out personally before making the the video.
At the drive in
How would you know if we would need that glue gun You haven't even used it yourself It could be a piece of crap. And then you want to suggest it to us.😮 And use it first before you say it's good for us to buy. Thanks
For the fact I have used it several times myself Andrew. Before and after I made this video.
Go back to your video where you said I haven't used this one yet. Now that's the only reason I'm saying it. Specifically the glue gun.
Some more tools that you don't really need.
All useless tools to me...
I'm sorry to hear that you may not find it useful for you personally to use in your projects that you have there. There are other people like myself and others that may have a useful in project that we have coming up in our projects that are in the works.
We can agree to disagree that we al do not always need the latest and greatest tools from ryobi. I know I personally need the new line of brushless tools that Ryobi has. But that's okay for me. So long as I am happy with the current line of tools that I already have from them. That is all that matters.