Kobalt 80v max 6 ah battery qbm99r8
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The MTD did good but if the snow got too wet / heavy it would burn through belts. First had an MTD with a Tecumsuh Snow King engine and have had a Toro 21" 221QR with the Lawnboy Durforce engine on it for the past 10 years. I've always had a 2-Cycle single stage snow blower at my house and I'm the last house on a dead end. Replacement charger is $41.18 which is not much different then a GW 40V Charger.Ĭertainly hope we don't get anymore snow this season for me to try it out !! These Kobalt 80V MAX batteries are not cheap !! GW is a toy compared to this beast and I thought I paid a decent price for it last Spring on clearance from HD ($256.25+tax w/ 4Ah bat & chgr).Ĥ0V 4Ah battery weighs 2.88 lbs.
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States 60 minutes recharge time for the 5Ah (or 30 min 2Ah / 75 min 6Ah), which is pretty crazy considering my Greenworks 40V 4Ah take 120 minutes. Reg $499.00 … clearance $399.00 and I used the 10% off OPE coupon (good thru 5/8) and got it for $359.10 + tax.
#KOBALT 80V MAX 6 AH BATTERY QBM99R8 PORTABLE#
For standard tools, the new 9 amp hour 18 volts will probably kill most of the 30+ volt portable market except for specialized stuff you would need to order from Fastenal etc.They still showed 5 in stock, so I went to Lowes today and picked one up.
#KOBALT 80V MAX 6 AH BATTERY QBM99R8 PLUS#
The 18 volt plus stuff is 99% about battery capacity, not extra real power. 18 to 20v Dewalt is just marketing as those are re-packed 18volts.
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Which is mostly due to a lack of orbital capabilities and stroke length which are super important in recip saws.Īs you jump from 12 to 18 there is a monster difference. HOWEVER, my 12 volt recip saw that would have cost a fortune is on par with the crappiest 18 volt cordless one I have (and doesn’t remotely compare to a good 18 volt). I think for 99% of DIYers a high end 12 volt set will do everything you need and more. I still know folks in the industry and saying “hey thats neat” usually gets me a new tool pretty quickly. I have more tools than Home Depot and Lowes put together, and some insane specialty stuff I have no right to own. Let me preface this by saying I used to work in a power tool company, and my wife worked in a competing power tool company (different times, different stages of our careers). 12 volt vs 18 volts made a huge difference, but I didn't look at other factors such as torque.
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Gee wrote: ↑ drew my conclusions from power tools. You really need to look at the whole package. With a lawnmower, there is a defined max RPM for the blades so really 40v and 80v are going to spin the same with a very small slight edge to 80v UNLESS you are hobbled by the battery capacity size. The 24v being about capacity, not making the tool work harder. As voltages got into 18v or 24v that difference became almost non-existent and for a while many tools were dual voltage. When I worked in tools what I saw was higher cordless volts usually equaled faster motors, or more strokes of a recip saw, etc. The difference, though, is generally negligible.įor all practical intents and purposes, a 1V 80A motor delivers the same power as an 80V 1A motor. The machine's internal wiring would carry current to the motor with slightly lower percentage of voltage drop, delivering very slightly more total power to the motor, in the 80V machine. Mathematically they both output 160 Watts, but that’s not what happens in real world conditions.Īll other factors and characteristics (except current, obviously) identical, the 80V version would be very slightly more powerful than the 40V version.