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Ozito PXC 18V Cordless Heat Gun (Skin Only) $38.99 (Was $89.98) + Delivery ($0 C&C/ in-Store/ OnePass) @ Bunnings

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A hot deal! spotted on PriceHipster… most stores seem to have stock of this item. See also https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/832528

Description :

  • Auto shut-off cooling
  • Nozzle ejector function
  • Convenient hanging hook
  • Inbuilt LED worklight
  • 3 x Interchangeable nozzles

This compact and portable Cordless Heat Gun from Ozito’s 18V Power X Change range is great for localised heating or drying applications. With 3 specialised nozzles, use this to spot dry patches of paint, soften adhesives for removal, thaw frozen pipes, shrink wrap plastics or cure window tints.

Battery not included.

Related Stores

Bunnings Warehouse
Bunnings Warehouse
Marketplace

closed Comments

  • +6
    • -5

      That didn't come up in the duplicate checker.
      It's also not a duplicate as it mentions the High Pressure Inflator in the title and not the Cordless Heat Gun…

        • +1

          the search on Ozbargain is poop

    • +3

      Unless it's directly listed in the title of the post it's not considered a duplicate, I thought the same thing too.

  • +2

    OzB mods will probably merge since it is mentioned in the other post already.

  • +7

    18v doesn't produce much heat, for much time. If you need hotter and longer go 240v.

    https://www.bunnings.com.au/ozito-2000w-variable-temperature…

    • Yes, but wait for the special for the 240V when it goes for $19.95.

    • Yeah, was wondering how long this would run for on 2 ah battery.

      • I presume best case 8.5mins (likely less) given the site things it can run for 17mins with ideal conditions on full 4Ah battery

    • +3

      I have a 240V, BUT ordered one for those quick jobs on the car or on the roof when extension lead is a nuisance, e.g heat shrink tubing, could use gas lighter but it sometimes overheats shrink tube, and flame goes vertical so doesn't work in all lcoations.

    • Would this be decent to fix a hole on a poly water tank?

      • +1

        Won't get hot enough. Even the good one arent very hot.

        • Thanks mate

          • @Robot16: plug tank from inside and water pressure will seal it,

    • Really depends what you need it for, I used mine to heat up a phone case so that I could dismantle it not sure if you would do that with a 240v.

      Having said that it's not a bargain, cheaper than the rip off bunnings RRP maybe, but I got mine for 10 bucks on clearance from autobarn (Aldi compatible)

  • +1

    "A hot deal!" I see what you did there :)

  • These work really well for heatshrink and removing supports on 3d prints. This and the mini blower/inflator are the last two Ozito tools i have instead of Ryobi.

  • Any good as a hairdryer?

    • Yes, if you love the smell of burnt hair in the morning.
      More seriously. No, not enough air flow for the amount of heat to safely dry hair.

    • +1

      dries then removes then ensures that hair will never grow again.

  • Will this be good to remove double tapped stuff from the walls?

    • Any wall that's been double tapped ain't gonna be fixed with a heat gun. Need spackle etc.

  • Can't see how this could justify the original price tag. Isn't it just a simple heater?

  • +2

    I bought one of these at full price and returned it. It takes quite a while longer than corded cousins to get hot, and the limited heat output makes it less versatile. It's also power hungry. For context, I was using a 4Ah battery. At the deal price it may be useful for some, possibly those doing small electrical jobs, melting soft glue, and the like.

    • Full price!?! Off to the Ozbargain vestibule of shame for you!

      • I needed one in a pinch, haha. But yes, I felt the shame both buying it and returning it.

  • What are some common uses of heat guns…

    • +2

      Bending pvc.
      Working with heat shrink tubing.
      Removing adhesive backed labels.
      Spot drying paint.

    • +1

      staying warm in winter. ymmv

  • +2

    I have a powerG version that uses aldi batteries. At $10 on clearance hey why not. Loved the concept but it was pretty useless. So i bought a makita cordless one for a lot lot more and realised cordless heatguns aren't that great. They take a long time to heat up even to a temp to shrink heat shrink. Creating heat uses a lot of power so run time isn't that good either.
    240V is definitely the way to go.

  • thaw frozen pies
    that's what I need.

    • +1

      use microwave to thaw pie and heat gun to crisp the thawed pie.

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