Hey, it’s Monday, time for a good laugh. Nothing can be more rewarding then getting a little extra versatility from your tools and I think the future is the kitchen. Thanks to Guygrub Guy for putting this into perspective.
Dremel has a combo kit of the Driver (little compact drill), which I’ve been thinking of getting, and the Stylus, called “Dremel Duo™ 2-Tool Kit” - I guess the 2 stands for version 2 since duo stand for two and I don’t see 4 tools… or would you multiply that? My old Dremel is wired, and as some of you know by now, I hate wires, plugs, extensions…
Coming from the old school Dremel user, what I always hated was the grip on the tool. But the new ones have this really impressive grip, for palm as well as fingers. Also the thing that takes me so much time is changing bits on my drill, wish I would have two at times. But this gives a better alternative, small and compact Driver can offer an alternative to the big drill since it gets into smaller places and is light and small. Anyways, just thought I’d let you know… that I’m old, old school that is.
See Dremel site for more details, they also include list of various resellers. Here ya go…
www.LoveMyPlace.com is a “female-freindly” blog about home improvement. Featuring writeups on cordless tools, drills all the way to home maintenance and financing. I sometimes get questions from friends that are green to tools and lets face it, I don’t consider myself an expert, but I have some saw dust on my hands. Sometimes I tend to forget the basics of what lead me to buy that beast of a drill, or router that does everything. Then when I’m asked by someone “what should I get”, I lean towards a “get what i got, can’t go wrong” sort of attitude. But in reality it most likely isn’t the case for their needs. In fact there is no straight answer appart from what is clearly crap to avoid.
So I consider this site very useful for these types of questions, it’s like everything else, jump in and take a chance ot buying the right thing, or read and research a little before and avoid wasted money and disapointement. Here is a direct link to “Buying your first drill” here…