BEST TOOL BRANDS for Construction and Woodworking!!

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If you're a beginner woodworker, here's the best tool brands you need to check out! New carpenters, construction workers and woodworking enthusiasts need these!

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Nate Halverson "Tmbrman" has grown his passion into a lifestyle through building furniture and decor from wood where he lives in Idaho and nationwide. TMBRMAN TV is all about inspiring you to live out your passion, teaching you to build handmade product and a business around it. Be sure to SUBSCRIBE and watch our other inspiring and informative videos.

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I have started with Dewalt just because everyone around me was using it...then I bought couple Milwaukee tools because of all the hype. Finally wanted to see what makita was about and never looked back. Right after trying that impact driver I knew that was it. Sold most of my Dewalt and Milwaukee tools and replaced them with makita. I did keep some of the m12 Milwaukee tools since they are compact. Not saying all the tools makita makes are the best, but for me it's the most convenient. They are light, smooth quiet and built well.

UncleIvan
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I always heard start cheap, and then buy better if that tool broke. As a DIY, I started with all Ryobi, and anything replaced was Milwaukee. Ryobi always held up so well, it was always a matter of I had the money to upgrade to something nicer. Just my personal experience.

jupiterprime
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The big problem I've noticed with DeWalt is they have a ton of different models of the same tools especially with impact drivers and drills and it's easy to think you're getting a great deal without realizing that you bought DeWalts budget model of a given tool and the quality between the lines is pretty big IMO. This can be great because it gives more flexibility in picking what level tool you need but you have to be way more educated on it before you buy. Makita which is what I've used as a cabinet maker for like 12 years basically have 2 versions of any given tool, brushless and brushed versions and whichever you get will be great for what it is. I still have my first Makita drill and impact set from 12 years ago and have only had to buy 2 new batteries and a charger, the tools themselves are still 100% functional like they were new. Don't know if they are still built to the same quality level these days but that's my experience. I do use a cheaper DeWalt drill as well and it does ok but doesn't have anywhere near the power or lasting battery life that my Makitas do. Also my boss has had a Ridgid hammer drill we used for drilling into brick walls for cabinets at places like schools and whatnot and it's been going strong for probably 20 years at this point. Making me kinda want to try out some Ridgid stuff.

ShootingUtah
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In my wood working shed it looks like a rainbow. Dewalt, kobalt, skil12v, makita subcompact, black and decker, ryobi nailer, metabo hpt nailer, portercable air compressor. Ridgid recip, m12 screwdriver.
Old craftsman tablesaw.I think you can save little money when you buy a cheaper tool if you use it occasionally. And spend a little more on the ones you use all the time in your shop.

tigercat
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I have Craftsman miter saw, Black and Decker Skill Saw, Dewalt Sawzall, Bosh and Porter Cable Cordless drills (Porter Cable battery died way way before Bosh still going strong), Dewalt corded drill, my preference is Milwaukee but I don't own anything from them in woodworking but I have a friction saw from them it's really the best one (cast aluminum base), I've used them at work and they really make excellent tools. Overall the best tool is the one you have that is in working condition!

davidgadreau
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I've been woodworking for years and I use Ryobi tools exclusively.

MIShopRat
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Ryobi is my arsenal right now but upgrading to Dewalt as $$$ allows.

leewright
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I'm a Ryobi and Porter Cable user. They both work great for my applications as a home improvement guy and small hobbies. Still looking to purchase a circular saw in the future since my old band me down Craftsman crapped out on me.

jimkimbro
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I was just looking through projects to build out of pallets and stumble upon your channel. I was watching and thinking he's like one of those big woodworking channels. But how the hell do you only have 3k subsribers ???? You deserve so much more!!!!

lukaszpotok
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Great video, I currently use Makita love the tool line. Your right Milwaukee, Makita, and Dewalt are all very good tool lines. Thanks again for sharing.

steveguzman
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Really enjoying this videos. Honest at straight to the point. I've been been with dewalt. Had my combi drill 10 years and still going strong but when the batteries go ill probably stick with dewalt

nic.o
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I started off with Porter cable. not bad. It got me through for 10 years. then they went another direction.

williamw
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$350 is for a Combo Kit (the Milwaukee that you pointed out) and $300 is for the DeWalt Kit. Neither of those are bare tool and as you know, nobody pays $190 or a 6AH battery. More like $100 when you get them on a promo sale with another bare tool or in a 2 pack on sale etc. I roughly agree with the general “tool grades” but you could do a better job of describing “realistic pricing”. Most all tools and even the larger batteries (5-9ah) can all be had for around $100 each when bought smartly. This usually means you’ll spend at least $200 or more but you will get a tool and battery or 2 batteries etc. Sometimes you can spend $400 and get 3 bare tools worth around $200 each and 2 batteries (MSRP around $200 each). So roughly $1200 worth of MSRP for $400 or less

americanguns
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I started out with DeWALT back in '98. Began getting serious about woodworking in 2013. Began getting even more serious about FINE woodworking in 2018. Festool brand tool and equipment will be making their way into my shop soon! 😊

AdamTheCarpenter
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This is great! I actually have Ryobi for all tools but only because my brother accumulated those over the years throughout work since he’s a mechanic, but he’s got Matco and Cornwell stuff now so the ryobi stuff is at home, but I’m looking to upgrade for something better and newer and I just can’t seem to find which one is best for me since they are all so great!

justjae
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I'm new in the craft and have started with Ryobi

jeffreybrunner
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Thanks for the honest and experienced commentary on the many tools available out there. I've always like Dewalt, just haven't had the funds to buy them. I currently have a mix of Ryobi and Hart tools

hunterallenrobinson
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I think that you missed an important point about Ridgid, their Lifetime Service Agreement. This should be the brand for any hobbyists or DYIer. Money is finite, and the LSA guarantees that they will fix your tool or battery if they fail. And most people that I have talked to have stated that the Ridgid products are not that far behind the "Big 3" in power and definitely not behind at all in function, innovation, comfortability. Again, maybe not for pros, i dont know, but Ridgid is what DIYers should be buying.

techinitiate
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I have porter cable and ryobi. I'm entry level, hopefully will get to upgrade in a couple years when I'm more comfortable with my skills

CM-qyqo
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That Milwaukee saw was a whole kit for the $350.

johnbcardin