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- From: gary_preckshot@lccmail.ocf.llnl.gov (gary preckshot)
- Newsgroups: rec.woodworking
- Subject: Re: 9.6v vs 12v cordless drills
- Message-ID: <147605@lll-winken.LLNL.GOV>
- Date: 25 Jan 93 20:47:40 GMT
- References: <9301182103.AA14866@TIS.COM> <1993Jan20.173021.15039@mloeff01.cpchq.cpc.gmeds.com> <C17zDM.Mux@hfglobe.intel.com>
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- In article <C17zDM.Mux@hfglobe.intel.com>, gregt@hfglobe.intel.com (Greg Tollefson) writes:
- >
- >
- >
- >
- > I am looking into cordless drills. What is the performance gain by
- > going to the 12v cordless. The cost adder is 20-30%. Can both
- > handle 3" drywall screws into 2x4's? Any other WOW.
- >
- A lot of people have posted stuff about getting higher torque with 12 volt
- as opposed to 9.6 volt driver-drills. As a practical matter, they are
- probably correct, since most drill makers assume that the public will
- equate higher voltage with more "power".
-
- This doesn't need to be true from a technical standpoint at all. It just
- depends on how the maker designed the drill. By using thicker windings, the
- maker can get more current at the lower voltage and therefore more torque.
- Design, of course, is just a matter of tradeoffs made to produce a final
- (maybe) well-balanced product.
-
- What's the point? The point is that you can't tell just from the voltage.
- The maker may have made the higher voltage drill with higher torque, larger
- batteries, and better gears, but you won't really know until you review
- the specs. Probably the maker assumed that you'd assume that higher
- voltage meant a better product. After all, not all purchasers are electrical
- engineers.
-
- So what should you look for? Electrically, you want high numbers in the
- following specs: High torque *at* high rpm. Long battery life. These are
- mutually exclusive, since if you have high torque at high rpm, battery drain
- is ferocious. The only solutions are more battery or a battery with higher
- energy storage density per pound.
-
- As far as high torque at low rpm goes, you can always get that by gearing.
- What you can't get by gears alone is the ability to drive a hard screw fast.
- So your major tradeoffs are battery weight and torque at high speed, assuming
- you want reasonable battery life.
-
- There are other considerations, such as convenience, battery charging speed,
- and physical balance that may be significant to you. I prefer the
- Panasonic 12 with 15 minute charger for these reasons.
-
- Gary
-
-