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Ozito PXC 18V Brushless Compact Drill Driver Kit $49.99 + Delivery ($0 C&C/ in-Store/ OnePass with $80 + Order) @ Bunnings

670

Seems like a good price. Was $79.98

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  • Powerful Brushless Motor
  • Drill, Drive & Fasten Screws In Timber, Plastics & Metals
  • 10mm Keyless Chuck
  • 2 Speed Gearbox
  • 21 Torque Settings

This 18V Brushless Compact Drill Driver Kit from the Ozito PXC range is great for drilling holes and fastening screws in timber, plastics and metals. Assemble flatpack furniture quickly, build an entertainment zone for the backyard, raised planter boxes for the garden or mount storage units in the garage with this small but mighty tool.

Brushless motor technology provides higher efficiency and longer runtimes, letting you tackle bigger, tougher jobs in one charge. With a 2.5Ah Battery and Compact Fast Charger in the kit, get started on your next DIY project right away.

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  • Ripper deal!

  • Good find OP!

  • This or wait for good deal for the brushless hammer drill?

    • +1

      Do you need the hammer function? If you do will u use it often enough that a cheap corded version + this wouldn't do both jobs? 🙂

    • +1

      A brushless Ozito is like a supercharged 1995 Hyundai Excel. Just why?

    • Really depends on use case? 13mm vs 10mm chuck, and do you need the hammer function? Por que no los dos? I've got the hammer one but will pick this up for dicking around inside the house because the form factor looks a lot better for furniture, light drilling, confined spaces etc.

    • have the brushless hammer and driver but just bought this as I wanted a lighter drill. This is lighter than the non brushless.

      • You have digital kitchen scale? Whats the weight difference? surely its marginal..

        • +1

          based on the pdfs on the site the skin is half the weight of the the brushless hammer drill. .8 kg vs 1.6 kg The regular drill is like 1.1

    • wait for one with a hammer function so you only buy 1 tool, instead of getting 2 tools.
      i thought i would never need the hammer function until i had to install my ring doorbell on my brick outside and so happy i had a hammer function on my existing drill.

      so wait for a hammer drill or buy twice. i guess you can get this to put together ikea furniture, lol.

  • Perfect timing. Thanks, OP!

  • +1

    Had ordered $39 battery & fast charger.
    This is $10.99 more with added drill!
    Ordered & cancelling previous order👍

  • +2

    No hammer, no deal! In WA most homes are double brick construction. Hammer is essential over here therefore IMHO.

    I own the brushless hammer version of this drill and it's just as good as my Hitachi.

    • You should have got this: https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/624658

      hot knife through butter.

      • Yes I have this, I can say this is the best for brick house in WA even concrete wall or the driveway.

        Too easy. But you will need a set of chuck drills.

    • Waiting for a deal on the brushless hammer version :\

    • If you are drilling into brick often just get a proper sds drill.

      I have the brushless hammer but still got a corded sds for the brickwork.

  • +9

    Just keep in mind this has a 10mm chick instead of the usual 13mm

    • I suffered through a 10mm chuck for years. It's OK for occasional home use but as soon as you need to drill a 12mm hole you're stuck :(

      At least this model is brushless which helps

        • +1

          If it was an order of magnitude less cost then definitely, but at nearly $20 it would be much better spent towards a 13mm drill instead.

          • @Switchblade88: Possibly. Depends if you also need a battery and charger (included in the $49 kit).
            Plus you'd still have to buy the 12mm bit anyway.
            Just saying you could have bought a reduced shank bit rather than suffering or going to the extent of buying a new 13mm drill.

    • These days, many drill bits larger than 10mm have a reduced shank or hex shaft. So it's not as big of an issue as it used to be. Also many options to use auger bits, faustner bits, step bits, hole saws etc if you need a larger hole.

  • +2
    • +1

      Is this drill kit eligible for free delivery via Onepass?

      • +2

        I think you need to spend over $80 at Bunnings to get free delivery with Onepass.

  • Can anyone educate me on the difference of the driver with the one here

    i.e. the difference between compact vs non-compact

    • +1

      I am not an expert, but i believe as mentioned above this compact one has a chuck size of 10mm where as the non-compact size is 13mm. So the maximum size drill bit you can put on this compact drill is 10mm.

      Other possible difference might be the amount of torque (or how powerful the drill is).

      • +1

        To be technically correct, 10mm is the maximum size of the drill bit shank. Lots of larger drill bits out there now with reduced shanks to fit in 10mm chucks.

    • Another 10nm of torque (40 vs 50nm) and slightly faster max spindle speed (1450 vs 1800 rpm).

      I'm tempted to just get the compact one for light use and wait for a better deal on a proper drill.

    • +2

      Yeah essentially….

      $49 - 10mm chuck, 40nm torque, 1450rpm, 2.5Ah battery, charger
      vs
      $59 - 13mm chuck, 50nm torque, 1800rpm

      Personally I'm leaning towards the $49 kit, if not just for the extra battery and charger.
      I don't think I'll notice the extra speed and if I need more torque I'll use my impact driver with a hex bit. :p

      • I needed a battery, so I bought this to replace my old brushed drill driver. I actually didn't think of checking the manual for the specs, glad to see the compact brushless is similar to my non-compact brushed one (except for the chuck size).

      • Changed my mind due to how small this drill is.
        They're not wrong when they say compact. I have an average sized hand and it just felt all wrong.

        • +1

          Not sure if I got the downvote for changing my mind, calling the drill small or having average sized hands! 🤣

        • I picked one up yesterday. I like it! Small, but quite powerful. I actually got it because I find my other drill heavy after a few hundred tec screws!

  • +1

    I thought - I don't need another drill, or another charger, but then realised that I could probably gut a charger and use the case as a shell for this: https://hackaday.io/project/190764-soldering-station-for-mil…
    Have a kit like is referred to an that, and am part way through making a 3D model to make it fit on these batteries - but gutting the case for one of the surplus to requirements chargers I have might be easier.
    So, thanks @FEELS, your post had me think of this!

    • That's a cool hack you are doing!

    • Love the grind, but you know these exist on AliExpress for $60 for Einhell/Ozito batteries?

      • +1

        vs $23, plus the pleasure of knowing I put it together for this other way

  • Needed a battery. Ended up with another drill.

  • Damn it, purchased it at the regular price on the 24th of April.

    Too late to return?

    • What if it were to 'break'? ;-)

      A long as you have proof of purchase there'd be no trouble at all returning it, just ask for store credit instead of your money back and grab the other one.

    • +3

      But a new one and return it with the old receipt, should be fine

  • Was all ready to pull the trigger on this.

    But man, this drill is surprisingly small!
    Guess that's why they call it compact.

    I have an average sized hand but the trigger aligned with the middle section of my index finger (rather than the tip) which just felt wrong, and not great for any extended use.

    It also didn't fill me with confidence that such a small drill would be able to stand up to much. But happy to be wrong on this occasion.

    Ended up going with my gut and paying $10 more for the (full size) 13mm Brushless PXBDS-180 reduced from $79 to $59. It just felt so much more comfortable, solid and reliable in the hand.

    But if you need the battery and charger then still def worth considering. I didn't.

  • Does Bunnings do a price match? (I forgot the exact term what it's called)
    I bought this 2 weeks back, will they refund the remaining? (considering it's less than 30days since purchase)

    • +1
      • Tried this - worked fine. I now have an $80 drill for $50 :)

        • @petergriffinoz: 👍🏻 I've done it a few times myself. I figure that's why Bunnings haven't bothered with a "Price Guarantee" policy - they have a de facto one with their no questions return policy.

  • Small but still plenty of torque. Add the $49 ozito impact driver skin for a cool set: https://www.bunnings.com.au/ozito-pxc-18v-impact-driver-skin…

    • If we had to buy one for little projects around the house and furniture assembly will it be drill driver or impact driver?

      • +2

        A drill/driver is what you want for "fragile" jobs like furniture assembly. You can set the torque, so you don't strip screws or furniture. Impact drivers are great for heavier jobs, involving larger screws, eg roof screws, or coach bolts. And for $49, you can get the full set with drill/driver, battery & charger. A bargain :)

  • Can i use it as screw driver.

    • Thats why it has 'driver' in the name.

      I'd get an impact driver for screws though. Link in the comment right above yours.

    • Yes you can use it as a screw driver or to drill holes, but if you will using it a lot for screw, as mentioned by others an impact driver really makes a difference.

      Before I used a drill driver for everything but once I bought an impact driver I realise why everyone says they are much better for doing up screws.

    • Yes you can. I used the screw bits from Ikea set and worked fine for me.

  • If I need to drill into concrete walls (e.g., to put in a wall mounted garden hose), is this the one I should be purchasing? https://www.bunnings.com.au/ozito-pxc-18v-brushless-rotary-h…

    • Again i am no expert but i believe yes that one should work well, otherwise a hammer drill might work too like this one https://www.bunnings.com.au/ozito-pxc-18v-brushless-13mm-ham… which will be a bit cheaper and more versatile depending how often you would need to drill into concrete. Both these do not include battery or charger.

    • That sort of thing is great for brick and concrete.

      The bricks on our place take ages to drill with a regular hammer drill (i have a brushless PXC and a large corded bosch hammer drill)
      A rotary sds drill did it in a few seconds.

      Personally id just get a corded one though. Much cheaper and dragging a cord out isn't a big deal for the occasional odd job.

      https://www.bunnings.com.au/ozito-900w-3-5j-rotary-hammer-dr…

      • Thanks to both of you

  • Thanks OP picked one up (plenty left at Vermont South VIC)
    Now to go buy something at Ikea to build….

  • This is ideal for our camper trailer. There's 4 stabilisers to wind down then up, 5 screwpegs for the awning, and 4 screwpegs for the ground sheet. Smaller the better - that's our use case.

  • Love it when there are mistakes in orders (in my favour)👍

    Finally picked up my Ozito PXC 18V Brushless Compact Drill Driver Kit….

    But they gave me the 13mm Brushless Hammer Drill (with battery & fast charger) for $49.95🎉

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