Jump to content

Hilty tool


golem

Recommended Posts

I think I will choose option C.

Hilt(i)y does not have a 18v Lithium drill.

yes they do.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=miLpnDTtt-A

Now, this is a 22A which is a 21v drill, spec sheet

http://www.hilti.co.uk/data/editorials/-30840/SF_22_A.pdf

RPM is 370/1250/2140 for hilti and 1500 for 2nd gear DC927

So running 16% faster, having a bit lower voltage and having a piece of shit motor didn't help it here. Not very fair comparison but still impressive. I have a feeling there are 26mm cells in that hilti.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3445448.1.jpg

CORDLESS DRILL DRIVER SFH 18-A 2.6 115V

* Battery Capacity 56.16 Wh

* Weight 5.5 lb

* Voltage 21.6 V

* Battery Capacity 2.6 Ah

* Battery Type B 18/2.6 Li-Ion

* Number of cells 12

* Adjustable Torque Yes

* Number of torque settings 17-106 in-lb with 15 settings

* For Use With B18/2.6 LiIon

* Triaxial vibration value for drilling into metal (ah,D).........

It's called 18+ for a reason. They use 12 of the same Sony cells Makita uses.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3445448.1.jpg

CORDLESS DRILL DRIVER SFH 18-A 2.6 115V

* Battery Capacity 56.16 Wh

* Weight 5.5 lb

* Voltage 21.6 V

* Battery Capacity 2.6 Ah

* Battery Type B 18/2.6 Li-Ion

* Number of cells 12

* Adjustable Torque Yes

* Number of torque settings 17-106 in-lb with 15 settings

* For Use With B18/2.6 LiIon

* Triaxial vibration value for drilling into metal (ah,D).........

It's called 18+ for a reason. They use 12 of the same Sony cells Makita uses.

Ahh, the wonders of marketing. Well, the extra 3.6v cell does give it an advantage, and based on 2.6 Ah they are not *exact* same as makita, they are "VT" cells like Bosch, which have a 21 A discharge current compared to 17 makita's "V" series has.

golem, Hilti has higher torque because the motor winding has lower resistance and hence higher current consumption which in return rapes the battery. So I bet battery runtime and life is mediocre. I'm sure Dewalt's 28v will beat that in torque test.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hilti 750 in-lbs of torque SFH 18-A 18 V Cordless Hammer Drill/Driver 21.6Volt in reality

Dewalt mayby around 500+ in-lbs of torque  XRPâ„¢ 1/2" (13mm) 18V Cordless Hammerdrill/Drill/Driver Kit - DC988Ka is older model whit 500 in-lbs 420 uwo the new one 1/2" (13mm) 18V Cordless XRPâ„¢ Li-Ion Hammerdrill/Drill/Driver Kit - DCD970KL 450 uwo torque???

Milwaukee 550 in-lbs or 650 in-lbs M18â„¢ Cordless 1/2" Hammer-Drill Driver Kit 2602-22  or M18â„¢ Cordless High Performance 1/2" Hammer-Drill Driver 2611-24 dont know de model is used on this video.

Hilti battery 21.6 v 2.6 Ah = 28 1/2 hole

Dewalt battery 18v 2.2 Ah = 11 1/2 hole

Milwaukee battery 18v 2.8 Ah = 15 1/2 hole

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for posting these up. Always great to see tools go head to head.

For reference, the Dewalt drill in the video is a DC927. Had the used the DCD970, they would have seen a 30% lift in holes. I've done countless test's with the Milwaukee drill and it's never outperformed the DCD970. Hilti on the other hand has outperformed Dewalt in all of my test's. I'd personally like to see each to wired to the Hilti battery.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Member Statistics

    18,197
    Total Members
    6,555
    Most Online
    lamparina
    Newest Member
    lamparina
    Joined
×
×
  • Create New...