actiomax said..
You could have probably got a fencer to come & core drill all the holes for you cheaper than the hire or the cost of the core drill you now will be tripping over for the rest of your life..
And as its so cheap it is not really going to have any resale value now its used .
But i do think the quality of the cheap tools has improved dramatically .
If its a limited use i go with them i can flog them to death just like ever other tool i buy & there usually heaps better at replacing with no problems than expensive tools that seem to want to be sent away for repairs so you don't even have the tool for a month.
Which is a total pain . You paid more & can't get the job finished no loan of a replacement while yours is in for repair.
One thing I'm not really understanding on these threads about tool is people saying cheap tools are not as accurate . I actually think thats a bit of crap a tools only as good as the operator . A trade who knows all the tricks of the trade can do the job the same no matter what tool you give them a not very handy man with limited skills will still do a crap job no matter what tool they have.
This might be true if you are a tradesman calling another tradesman, probably one that you know, but its not the same for everyone.
It is more likely to be 'hey, can you come over and drill some holes for me?' with the answer being 'mate, that jobs too small for me, I can drop over next month, possibly on a Tuesday, and it'll be $100 a hole.... plus GST'.
Seriously, getting small jobs done is difficult or can cost the earth.
I don't agree with your idea that its the operator at fault. There are cheap tools, and they do have poor alignment and bearings. The difference is that a decent tradesman would say 'this is a piece of crap' and throw it away.
I have a drop saw that is not accurate, but as long as you calibrate it every now and then its good. I am sure that a decent name brand would not have this problem.
All these people that regurgitate the saying 'a good tradesman never blames his tools' has never used crap tools and/or has no idea of what it involves. I think the saying should be 'a good tradesman recognises quality tools and knows when the tools are to blame and when its their fault'.