A really obvious point, but have you checked the torque setting is not on something low?
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Any ideas? I've got a Makita cordless that's only a few years old and is only used for odd jobs around the house.
It spins but there is absolute no torque whatsoever. It's brushless aswell so its not that.
(Thinly veiled, make this a five-pager).
A really obvious point, but have you checked the torque setting is not on something low?
Don't want to hammer this home but I dont think there's enough diy puns around to make this a 5 pager.
Where did you get it from and when? Screwfix are pretty brilliant with returns.
So it's definitely not the battery and definitely not the clutch? If your battery and charger are still good, you can pick up a brand new drill with no accessories on eBay for cheaper than it would cost to get it repaired.
Have you looked on YouTube?
Just chuck it out.
(obligatory pun)
Is it a drill or a screw driver? It won't help solve the problem, I'm just nosy.
Chuck it away ,( no pun intended).
I've had every expensive brand name cordless , but the one I use most came from Aldi for £39 or something. I do a lot of heavy work with it because I do property development and build all sorts of stuff such as log cabins for fun in my retirement. I don't generally buy cheap tools, but this was bought for an emergency job and it's become my first choice.
Pop into Aldi then, but in any case my experience is that once these things go wrong they're not worth the time buggering about to try and fix them so replace it.
Mate of mine had a tool hire/repair business, he eventually had to wrap it in, we’re a chuck away society now, very often cheaper to buy new rather than hire or get repaired.
Showing my age here, but when I first started in the building trade, I used to use a ratchet screwdriver. What a god send battery tools have been.
My lads have their own carpentry company so I've repaired a few of these for them.As you say not much that can go wrong which leads me to believe that the trigger switch is faulty.The repair cost varies with the model number but is fairly straightforward to do.Before you go down that road though check the drill with different battery first.
Any news?
I have a lot of Makita gear, so I'm interested to hear how this pans out.