Amazon's Best High Torque Impact Wrench vs Milwaukee

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Today we check out the latest from Worx, their Nitro High Torque ‎WX276L up against the Milwaukee 2767 it matches in the specs as well as the Avid Power ‎ACIW338 - the latest impact from the top selling brand on Amazon.

~We may earn from purchases via the any links above~

As always, the creator of this channel works in product development for Astro Tools, always consider multiple sources when looking at a tool!
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I imagine that long suffering engineer at Worx, long forced to make weak budget tools, finally given permission to make something actually good, a victory for consumers and budget tool designers!

Kingsoupturbo
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In a world teetering on irreversible chaos, TTC is a calming island of stability. For a few brief minutes, all is right in the world 🙂

RetiredEE
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Fridays at work always are complete with TCC uploads!

andrestoodrip
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I suspect the worx uses an energy management chip that ramps up the current to the motor and therefore neuters below a certain battery, on purpose, to protect the battery/tool. Hence the spool up on a DC motor... the mass can get there almost as fast as they want, the power is definitely being metered, which is interesting.

etherealrose
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I spent the day throwing up since 3am to the point of dehydration, and just got home after being discharged from the ER... Seeing a new TTC video in my feed after getting home is a much appreciated blessing. Especially on high torque impacts.

alex_thecarguy
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I could totally see the Avid Power as something that just never leaves my small home garage where we mostly break down parts cars to support our racing habit. You don't need finesse but you often need a 36" wobble extension with an 18mm deep on it for those top bellhousing bolts (yes, both FWD and RWD this seems all to common). A single battery would not matter either as you have the daily driver impact right there you use for you personal car that uses the color you chose 22 years ago before it was lime green.

michaelkrenzer
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I had a dead trigger assy in my Milwaukee, and ended up finding a replacement (on Ali) advertised as being from a Worx.
Milwaukee would only sell the trigger with the entire control PCB - meaning the one part was as much as the whole tool.

DrFiero
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I don't get how Positec manages to stay in business with how universally mismanaged their tool lines are.

orijimi
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My favourite videos are the ones where you test cheap stuff.

freedomofmotion
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Thanks, been waiting for worx for a while. Now onto Masterforce!

portmanteau.
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You Should Test The 3017-20 Milwaukee Blower and the DCBL777B Blower

Thanks For All You Do Its Great!!

jessedyck
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I'd like to see reliability tests, to see if something breaks or melts with repeated use.

abrahamlincoln
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I'd like to see how many beans the worx would make on a 20 second run. I know it's not a standard test but it seems like that one like a little more time to shine.

towboatjeff
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The bearing pressed into the housing is a design that was mentioned as criticism of the Bauer impact. Of course, that was before Milwaukee started using it.

nickthompson
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Can you test a little lineup of these tiny, commonly like 12v, impact drivers? For wrenching on a bike I could see them being useful

Gamogamer
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Please test the difference in power with an impact wrench with an extended anvil vs a normal anvil with an extension adaptor

Kennysam
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The Avid Power looks like good bang for the buck, but how reliable/durable is it on the long haul?

bmwracer
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I recently bought the Eworks 3/4 impact based on your testing and am VERY pleased with it. Nothing I've thrown at it stops it. Main bearing bolts on a Detroit Series 60 and lugs on a semi truck both came right off and for the price I wouldn't trade it for any high cost gun.

tonyrmathis
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Thank yall for every video you have made to date

johnspence
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Hey just had a big brain thought, not related to this video but idk how far back you read comments.
They make adjustable box wrenches. If you cranked one of those down super tight on the nut do you think it would achieve more torque than a quality 6-point box wrench (or spline) before rounding the nut?

Could it be used instead of a spline to remove partially rounded nuts? What if you were to also cut serrations into the "jaws". The Craftsman ones that are most popular it seems have a knurled knob for adjustment, what if you modified it for a bit more leverage and really got some gripping force on that nut.

stug