G'day all,
Just wondering if any of you blokes use something like this:http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/160857702...84.m1423.l2649
If you do, any pros and cons.
Cheers
Moat
G'day all,
Just wondering if any of you blokes use something like this:http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/160857702...84.m1423.l2649
If you do, any pros and cons.
Cheers
Moat
Last edited by Moatmonster; 17th July 2013 at 04:23 PM.
08 TI 3 litre manual CRD ,Steel Bullbar with 240Lightforce spotties,145 Litre Long Ranger Fuel tank, Warne winch, Snorkel, Dual Battery system, 60 litre Waeco fridge, ARB Roof Rack, DPchip,UHF,2"Lift.
I have the Kangaroo Creek imports 12 volt rattle gun if that's the term. Fully rebuildable great on stubborn nuts.
Plus saves my back as not using a wheel brace, Quicker when changing wheels at home.
Cost was $80 and think they aren't much more these days. Never tried the 240v jobs but can see you are limited to home use only.
18-24 volt jobs way too pricey so this may be just the thing for home workshop.
Had mine since 94 and never let me down yet.
04 ST 3lt auto, not enough Mods to keep me happy, but getting there
What would be the main use for the gun?
1999 GU 4500 dual fuel
Il dado è tratto
great shop that AGR machinery BTW
04 ST 3lt auto, not enough Mods to keep me happy, but getting there
G'day all,
Gun would be purely used for tyre rotations at home. I try and do it after dropping the oil but sometimes
cannot be buggered swinging a tyre brace especially when its 40+ degrees in the shade,just thought this
might make life a bit easier and motivate me a bit more.
08 TI 3 litre manual CRD ,Steel Bullbar with 240Lightforce spotties,145 Litre Long Ranger Fuel tank, Warne winch, Snorkel, Dual Battery system, 60 litre Waeco fridge, ARB Roof Rack, DPchip,UHF,2"Lift.
Stropp (17th July 2013)
If you've got cordless drills at home, then have a look for the skin-only rattle guns in the same model and use your existing batteries.
used to have a hitachi one years ago it was a crack wonder whos using it now, and as threedogs said good company to deal with I have had good dealings with them in the past. cant see a problem with item for home use.
07 crd,,bridgestone 697lt, 2.75 buedesert ex,SOLD theres a lot of my blood, sweat and money in that troll.
92 gq ti tb42efi my brothers gq extractors dual batteries brake controller uhf alloy bullbarSOLD with a heavy heart but gone to a nice young fella
13 y62 the beast that burbles
I've got cordless and pneumatic and I know others that have the style that threedogs is referring to and rate them but I don't think they would last with regular use
For what you guys do it's probably a little overkill... But as a diesel mechanic I payed $900 for a 1/2" Snap-On 18v cordless jigger, it's a big gun, but for a cordless gun it's got balls that match and sometimes outperform pneumatic guns (outperforms my JBS pneumatic gun) but with the portability that means I can nearly forget the compressor on the work ute!
Honestly the best $900 I have spent so far, but if you guys want any suggestions I reckon Makita make the best in the 2-300 $ range, we have between us makita's ryobis and hitachi s and I would definitely say Makita wins hands down.
Matt
"Teamwork is essential; it gives the enemy someone else to shoot at"
And I say $2-300 as you can get cheaper ones, I just have seen them in action and they aren't worth the box they come in!
"Teamwork is essential; it gives the enemy someone else to shoot at"