markharro Posted yesterday at 09:00 Posted yesterday at 09:00 I'm (finishing) a house build too and I have now got a pretty decent collection of Makita 18V tools. Started with drill/driver then hopped to impact driver and of course lots of other things too. For heavy drilling into concrete I use a corded Screwfix Titan SDS drill which cost less than £100 I think and is night and day compared to the battery tools.
saveasteading Posted yesterday at 10:16 Posted yesterday at 10:16 1 hour ago, SimonD said: going to gasp in horror, Not at all. That bucket one looks really handy for moving around or hung on the wall. Decent price too and finding it brought up other makes that the Google search had decided to ignore. Re sundry tools and fixings for a project where I'm moving around, I use a b and q orange bucket or a wickes yellow trug because it is findable and not picked up by someone else as a handy bucket. 1
SimonD Posted yesterday at 10:23 Posted yesterday at 10:23 4 minutes ago, saveasteading said: I use a b and q orange bucket or a wickes yellow trug because it is findable and not picked up by someone else as a handy bucket. That's what I used to do too, but what is it about people picking up and using buckets? Our gardener did this the other day. I had 2 buckets outside the front door for plastering and then found one of them later in the day filled with crap from the gardening exercise. He used it even though it was stacked together with another bucket that had the plastering tools in it! 1
Mike Posted yesterday at 10:47 Posted yesterday at 10:47 2 hours ago, saveasteading said: I'm coming to realise that tools need to come in a customised box. You may eventually also realise that it's useful if those boxes can stack together too. Most of the 'pro' brands must now have stackable boxes available with customisable foam inserts for non-standard tools; certainly Dewalt do in the Tstak range (a.k.a. Stanley Pro-Stack). Though at more than £5 each. 1
saveasteading Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago 1 hour ago, Mike said: boxes can stack together To some extent. But my hedge cutter and leaf blower won't stack on the drill or jigsaw. If I was a working trade then there's a big advantage in stacks on wheels. But at home it goes on shelves, and excessive size isn't any help. Btw tippex on the box is an easy marker of the contents.
saveasteading Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago 2 hours ago, SimonD said: what is it about people picking up and using buckets? I want a bucket. There is a bucket. I have a bucket. (The orange ones are not strong, hence the price.) 1
jimseng Posted 18 hours ago Author Posted 18 hours ago (edited) I feel like this thread has got away from me. Also. Now I want a bucket. Edited 18 hours ago by jimseng 3
saveasteading Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago 2 minutes ago, jimseng said: this thread has got away from me Join the club. It happens with interesting subjects. We've all been engaged and you have had good advice. Now, re buckets: get a couple of the better ones from a BM, as they usually have a choice of cheap or good: then hide them. Plus an orange one.
Bancroft Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago On 09/05/2026 at 16:13, jimseng said: I appreciate the point about getting a drill and impact driver. One hidden benefit of having both is the ability to do things like drill pilot holes then screw into them - without the need to keep swapping a drill bit for a screwdriver bit. Even with a quick change system it can become a real pain. 1
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