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Have had other Denali tools and have been very happy with them BUT this one I just got their reciprocating saw and attached the new battery fully charged and I hit the trigger and it went BURRrrr and froze up in less than a heart beat. very disappointed. WHAT THE.
All Denali Tools have been fantastic, the only concern is longevity. the blade is par at best, buy good blades and the tool performs. i bought this, used it and loved it so i bought 2 more. i figure at $14 i can buy 5 before i have even touched a dewalt (even then i still have some more money to spend).
I know that is nuts but they were very inexpensive. Pushing a 9" blade between a couple of 2x4's creates a lot of drag as does pushing it between the tightly nailed sheathing and the back side of the wall stud with the blade bent at about 45 degrees. I am pleased to say it worked great. I don't know how long it will last, but for what it cost I can buy 4 or 5 of them for the price of an industrial rated name brand tool. Plenty of power and it quickly cut all the connecting nails.So far I have worn out 3 Milwaukee demolition blades using this saw to do overhead cutting of plaster over plaster board with embedded expanded metal reinforcing. This type of use realy puts a strain on the tool. I own several cordless reciprocating saws, a 36 volt DeWalt, 18 volt DeWalt, a Milwaukee 18 volt and a Milwaukee 18 volt "hatchet".
I have only had the Denali a couple of days, but I have to say using the same Milwaukee and Dewalt blades that I use in my other saws it cuts wood as good as anything I own. I think it is the perfect homeowner saw. They are all great tools. I have worn the teeth completly off the blades but the saw is holding up well so far and sems to have a lot of power. They have a feeling of quality when you turn them on.The Denali feels and sounds a little crude by comparison. I was impressed enough by its performance that I bought 2 more to have as spares. Battery life is better than I expected, considering the amount of work being done.
I used this saw yesterday with a 9" Bosch metal cutting blade to reach behind wall studs and cut the sheathing nails and also to cut the heavy framing nails thet had been used to "sister" the wall studs at this location.
The first issue I had was that the blade chuck (or whatever you call it) came loose after one battery discharge. It has since been trashed, and been replaced (for now) with a Ryobi cordless and a Dewalt corded that have not had any issues as of this posting. From what I could tell, the main reciprocal gearing had become stripped, and the tool would no longer work. Bought this in a combo, and worked okay for a little bit. This meant that I had to take the plastic casing off of the tool to tighten the screws.not a big deal.but a pain (they loosened again, but i used some loc tite to prevent a third dissasembly). I would look elsewhere for this type of tool, unless you would be using it very lightly. Six months after purchase, the tool started to make horrible grinding sounds, and would not operate.
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