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expired Posted by giveNforgive • Dec 16, 2022
expired Posted by giveNforgive • Dec 16, 2022

Amazon Brand - Denali by SKIL 20V Cordless Drill and Impact Driver Combo with (2) 2.0Ah Lithium Batteries, 2.4A Charger, and Carry Bag: $77.97

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Model: Amazon Brand - Denali by SKIL 20V Cordless Drill and Impact Driver Combo with (2) 2.0Ah Lithium Batteries, 2.4A Charger, and Carry Bag

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8 Comments

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Dec 16, 2022
643 Posts
Joined Nov 2016
Dec 16, 2022
ToolNut
Dec 16, 2022
643 Posts
Since these are made by Skil ie Chevron they are probably a decent set for homeowner usage. Honestly I cannot figure why to purchase them however as you would most likely want to add on to the tool platform and who knows if this brand will stay available? You can purchase the 4 pc kit for $229 but at that price point you can get a Ryobi similar set with the ability to add lots of tools later on.
Dec 16, 2022
362 Posts
Joined Dec 2020
Dec 16, 2022
BlueChicken884
Dec 16, 2022
362 Posts
The Skil pwrcore20 gear is ok . What drives me bonkers is the small limited lineup of tools and the outrageous price of their batteries. To invest in that lineup is not really a good value compared to the other brands.
This little kit here Is a very nice bargain if it is the same quality as the pwrcore stuff. If the batteries and charger are pwrcore compatible I would buy this myself.
I see now it is brushed , oh well

TU and repped
Last edited by BlueChicken884 December 16, 2022 at 03:37 PM.
Dec 17, 2022
91 Posts
Joined Feb 2022
Dec 17, 2022
NavyWallaby579
Dec 17, 2022
91 Posts
Quote from ToolNut :
Since these are made by Skil ie Chevron they are probably a decent set for homeowner usage. Honestly I cannot figure why to purchase them however as you would most likely want to add on to the tool platform and who knows if this brand will stay available? You can purchase the 4 pc kit for $229 but at that price point you can get a Ryobi similar set with the ability to add lots of tools later on.
Ya I really see no reason to get something like this over Ryobi or even Craftsman if you only have blue stores. Ryobi is made by the same manufacturers as Milwaukee and Craftsman is made by the same manufacturers as Dewalt and you can find both at prices similar to this with patience. While Skilsaw is a reputable name, Skil has become their budget entry level diyer lineup. The Skil 12v lineup looks a little intriguing but their 20v lineup is bottom of the barrel performance wise and overpriced. Most likely these are going to be a step down from that even. Chevron hasn't really figured out how to make competitive 20v tools.
1
Dec 17, 2022
228 Posts
Joined Jan 2015
Dec 17, 2022
marcwsu1978
Dec 17, 2022
228 Posts
Do I throw them away after receipt? Just checking on how they should be used... LOL!
Dec 18, 2022
280 Posts
Joined Nov 2016
Dec 18, 2022
CatsoM
Dec 18, 2022
280 Posts
Quote from ToolNut :
Since these are made by Skil ie Chevron they are probably a decent set for homeowner usage. Honestly I cannot figure why to purchase them however as you would most likely want to add on to the tool platform and who knows if this brand will stay available? You can purchase the 4 pc kit for $229 but at that price point you can get a Ryobi similar set with the ability to add lots of tools later on.
Seems like the name is Chevron, an American Oil conglomerate, but it's actually CheRVon, a Chinese company. The original Skil factory was right in my neighborhood and I bought a lot of stuff from them over the years.
Dec 19, 2022
590 Posts
Joined Sep 2011
Dec 19, 2022
Ruslan09
Dec 19, 2022
590 Posts
Quote from NavyWallaby579 :
Ya I really see no reason to get something like this over Ryobi or even Craftsman if you only have blue stores. Ryobi is made by the same manufacturers as Milwaukee and Craftsman is made by the same manufacturers as Dewalt and you can find both at prices similar to this with patience. While Skilsaw is a reputable name, Skil has become their budget entry level diyer lineup. The Skil 12v lineup looks a little intriguing but their 20v lineup is bottom of the barrel performance wise and overpriced. Most likely these are going to be a step down from that even. Chevron hasn't really figured out how to make competitive 20v tools.
Ryobi is not made by same people as Milwaukee. They are owned by the same Chinese parent company. Other than that, they share nothing in common.
Dec 19, 2022
22 Posts
Joined Jan 2018
Dec 19, 2022
AntonB1916
Dec 19, 2022
22 Posts
Quote from Ruslan09 :
Ryobi is not made by same people as Milwaukee. They are owned by the same Chinese parent company. Other than that, they share nothing in common.
That is what Milwaukee and its parent TTI like to tell people but if you dissect their tools you quickly learn that even if they are made in different factories (and often different countries) with different castings there is a lot of cross-engineering and sharing of part designs between Ryobi, Milwaukee, Ridgid/AEG, and now even Hart. TTI keeps the outsides different but the insides are often almost identical, it wouldn't make sense to waste a good design, TTI often just tweaks its designs for each subsidiary.
DeWalt does the same thing, within their brand offering different almost identical tools with different feature sets, targeting different markets, pro, prosumer, contractor grade, homeowner, etc., and now they have Craftsman too doing the same alongside DeWalt.

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Dec 28, 2022
590 Posts
Joined Sep 2011
Dec 28, 2022
Ruslan09
Dec 28, 2022
590 Posts
Quote from AntonB1916 :
That is what Milwaukee and its parent TTI like to tell people but if you dissect their tools you quickly learn that even if they are made in different factories (and often different countries) with different castings there is a lot of cross-engineering and sharing of part designs between Ryobi, Milwaukee, Ridgid/AEG, and now even Hart. TTI keeps the outsides different but the insides are often almost identical, it wouldn't make sense to waste a good design, TTI often just tweaks its designs for each subsidiary.
DeWalt does the same thing, within their brand offering different almost identical tools with different feature sets, targeting different markets, pro, prosumer, contractor grade, homeowner, etc., and now they have Craftsman too doing the same alongside DeWalt.
That is simply not accurate, the price point and reliability between brands a clear testament to that.

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