Have had a Makita BHP458 (non-brushless) hammer drill for years, I love it, it's pretty indestructable and the torque's great, but the chuck's finally going.
They seem to be moving to brushless motors now (for most of their combi drills). I've only recently bought a battery SDS drill (after 2 jobs in a row needing sockets sinking into brick walls and no available power sockets for my Hitachi 230V SDS beast), and the Makita brushless SDS drill I got (DHR242) is rather disappointing in one respect, in that the trigger is really tetchy. I'm sure there isn't a fault with it, but the minimum speed is too fast (at least for chiselling), and although you get some degree of variable speed by how much you squeeze, the nature of SDS drills means the drill's jumping around too much to control it accurately (particuarly since the lowest pecussion speed is quite fast). So it's kinda ok for chasing/sinking holes in brick, but put some lightweight engineering block in the way and you can't control it accurately enough. So I end up using the (much beefier) Hitachi 230V drill, because you can accurately control the impact rate and take it right back down to "lazy".
I'm just a bit concerned that brushless drills have a "minimum" speed, and/or that the speed can't be as easily controlled. Is that generally the case, or is my Makita SDS drill just a bad design on the trigger?
They seem to be moving to brushless motors now (for most of their combi drills). I've only recently bought a battery SDS drill (after 2 jobs in a row needing sockets sinking into brick walls and no available power sockets for my Hitachi 230V SDS beast), and the Makita brushless SDS drill I got (DHR242) is rather disappointing in one respect, in that the trigger is really tetchy. I'm sure there isn't a fault with it, but the minimum speed is too fast (at least for chiselling), and although you get some degree of variable speed by how much you squeeze, the nature of SDS drills means the drill's jumping around too much to control it accurately (particuarly since the lowest pecussion speed is quite fast). So it's kinda ok for chasing/sinking holes in brick, but put some lightweight engineering block in the way and you can't control it accurately enough. So I end up using the (much beefier) Hitachi 230V drill, because you can accurately control the impact rate and take it right back down to "lazy".
I'm just a bit concerned that brushless drills have a "minimum" speed, and/or that the speed can't be as easily controlled. Is that generally the case, or is my Makita SDS drill just a bad design on the trigger?