DeWalt corded drill DW106 Type-2 keyless chuck, bits slipping out?

Chris1956

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Mar 25, 2004
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those battery powered drills are real convenient. unfortunately, when the battery fails, it drives me nuts. after tossing some of those drills, after a couple of years with bad batts, i stick with corded ones, as they last 20 years or so.
 

Mc Tool

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those battery powered drills are real convenient. unfortunately, when the battery fails, it drives me nuts. after tossing some of those drills, after a couple of years with bad batts, i stick with corded ones, as they last 20 years or so.
I have a Makita xlt something 18v drill , probly had it 20+ years, always immediately charged a flat (3ah) battery . Never really used the hammer action thing and then only in mortar . Used it to install ac for 5 years at work . Apart from that I have done nothing in the way of maintenance and its still going like it was new .
Also have a 14v makita drill....same age ,the motor crapped out almost straight away ( smoked the fields )replaced motor and still going. I had to replace both nmhi batteries ....maybe 2 years ago .
Now just to say .......I ran a service dept and a one point I bought 2 Dewalt suitcase kits for my tradies ,drills ,saws ....5 or 6 different tools ,cost me a couple of grand each . They had not long come into the NZ market ........and they were crap . I mean like if you supply tools to tradies they are not going to treat them as their own but even so . They didnt actually break but stuff stopped working properly and they just seemed to wear out real fast .
Ill stick with my Makita .......ya sorta get trapped coz all my batteries are Makita so when I want a new thing .....grinder or skill saw , I buy a Makita skin and used the charging system I already have .
I did have to buy 9ah batteries for the grinder and skillsaw as my original 3ah batteries didnt have enough grunt .....specially for the grinder .....saw was marginal on 3ah .🙂
 

bruceb58

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Mar 5, 2006
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Cordless is handy. I have 2 with of them with 20 volt batteries I use all the time but it is the corded drill I grab when I am cutting holes in steel.
My cordless drill is WAY more powerful than any corded drill I ever owned. I can drill through steel easily.
 

Pmt133

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Jan 6, 2022
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I have both. We have a couple larger cordless SDS drills which are convenient... but if you need to spend all day on a job the corded usually is better as you need to swap out batteries every 20 minutes or so otherwise.

On the smaller stuff... I'll start WW3 before I give up my cordless. I couldn't even tell you the last time I used a corded drill it was the last time I did drywall... has a depth stop on it for that purpose. For the once every 10 years it's used that's fine.
 

dingbat

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Nov 20, 2001
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My cordless drill is WAY more powerful than any corded drill I ever owned. I can drill through steel easily.
Specs on your cordless?

Have not been able to find anything close to the capabilities of my hole shooter in cordless.

Hole Shooter is 400W, variable speed, 0-1000 rpm, reversible
 

alldodge

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Hardly use my corded drills but almost every corded drill I have has more power than the cordless.
 

flashback

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Jun 28, 2002
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I have a 1/2 inch milwaukee probably 20 years old and it will turn a 5 inch hole saw with no problem other than when the saw binds up. All you can do is turn it loose. Hopefully the trigger lock is not in use.
 

dingbat

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Nov 20, 2001
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I have a 1/2 inch milwaukee probably 20 years old and it will turn a 5 inch hole saw with no problem other than when the saw binds up. All you can do is turn it loose. Hopefully the trigger lock is not in use.
Back when drills where drills.

Still have 0222-1 (3/8") and 1650-1 (1/2") Milwaukee Hole shooters that date back to my days (80's) as a metal fabricator.

I've seen the 1650-1 throw more than a couple of guys off their feet locking up a drill bit hen breaking thru the other side of a piece of 3/8" angle.

The 3/8" drill did a number on my wrist more than a couple of times. Tons of torque. Infinitely variable speed. Tapped a lot of holes with that thing over the years
 

alldodge

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Back when drills where drills.
I've seen the 1650-1 throw more than a couple of guys off their feet locking up a drill bit hen breaking thru the other side of a piece of 3/8" angle.

This was my Dad's, it's a Craftsman 60, just 3 amps and 425 RPM. It takes a few seconds to spin up and a bit longer to stop. Watched my Dad drill something on the patio as a kid and then get spun a 1/2 revolution before he could let it go

20260316_114736.jpg
 
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