Slowly things change, management, ownership, design, service.
I had Dewalt in the early 90's, corded. I ended up giving all my tools to my father, long story, anyway, I bought Dewalt less than 10 years later and they weren't half the tool. Still OK, but not nearly the quality. We had a Bendix washing machine as a kid, lastest the family 25 years, so I got one as an adult. Seven warranties calls in the first 12 months, junked it after the warranty ran out. I can go on, and on... it seems that a brand is either building and good or some asshole is milking its history for max $$$ return and screw the brand. So many greats have died.
Then one day we realize what we thought we had no longer exists.
Ahmen...
"You get what you pay for" is no longer applicable!
"You never get what you don't pay for. Otherwise, it's a crap shoot" needs to replace that saying.
For serious work I still love those tools with long cords and three prong plugs....
Me too... but I hate cables. Mine are all bobtail with XLR connectors now. Works well with the added benefit that most people will not walk off with a tool that has an odd looking plug on it.
On tools, was a Makita guy in the 80's, then converted all to dewalt first 12v then 20v and have had good service with them.
They are still good from all reports, the range is OK but skewed more to woodwork. That does suit me somewhat.
It's this whole committing to a battery platform that's an issue.
I've had great life out of Bosche Blue Jacket tools and their cordless stuff is well priced down here... but the range sucks. That said, they have some great low voltage tool designs that the others just don't do.
This palm router is genius, total control...
I can see that I will probably end up with a couple different battery platforms, Probably 12v and 18v...