I refuse to buy my own drill because its expensive and i would never use it again.
>>1193995
sage dumbshit
there is no place for lazy fugs like you
>>1193995
Buy a cheap drill use it then stick your dildos on it for that gay ass play you like fag
>>1193995
>its expensive
Interesting, I didnt realize that walking into walmart and spending $17 on a drill and a few bucks on some drillbits was prohibitively expensive.
But I barely DIY at-fucking-all and my drill gets used a lot. I got one of the small craftsman nextech or whatever drills, I got the impact driver a few years ago. Does everything from drilling wood to turning wire wheels to being a fat screwdriver. Best $40 I ever spent.
>>1194037
Well the craftsman nextec or whatever I mentioned has been great, nice and small but enough power to take off rust with a wheel or drill whatever you need while still being small enough to use as a handy little driver. Battery charge lasts a fair while too.
>>1194037
A basic drill for a basic toolset?
Cheap and corded, and it has a clutch.
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Ryobi-5-5-Amp-3-8-in-Variable-Speed-Reversible-Compact-Clutch-Driver-D48CK/205216292
If you dont understand how a clutch works, its really useful for when you are going to be driving screws. Here is a video explaining it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tAqxnlqEMGI
The Ryobi is the only corded drill with a clutch you can really find nowadays. For the occasional and light use, corded is the way to go
>>1194041
ive been looking into a hitachi drill. my dad had one of those for like 20 years and the only problem he had ended up being the battery. i wonder what the quality of the drill is now vs 20 years ago though
>>1193995
That's like asking where to rent a pineapple.
>>1193995
>i would never use it again
Then get off /diy/
My $.02 worth: If you don't use a power tool very often, get the corded version. Nothing worse than putting the battery pack away and finding it dead in 6 months.
>>1193995
Op, even if you only use it once a year to speed up assembly of Ikea furniture it's still worthwhile.
>>1194017
>>1194133
Thanks for your input. i will now spend 20-50 dollars to drill two holes.
>>1194122
I have rented a pineapple before.
>>1194140
You're probably going to have more to drill and screw eventually, unless you're planning a suicide.
Do your caretakers know you're on this website?
Ask someone else who has a drill you fucking idiot.
Or buy one and resell it on craigslist.
>>1194037
anything plug in variable speed reversible with a keyless chuck
>>1193995
>its expensive
>>1194122
So you listen to Stuff You Missed in History Class, Holly is so fucking annoying.
>>1194140
>I have decided that I will live the rest of my life without any handyman or repair skills
If you have decided to be a fucking woman, why are you bothering to drill 2 holes right now?
Cant your grandmother come over and do it for you?
>>1194182
If OP starts on this, he would be more legit than most of /diy/
>>1194003
>$17 walmart drill
Enjoy barely drilling through a cardboard box and the thing dying.
>>1193995
Barrow from friend/neighbor?
Rent one. Find a local store. Even home depot will rent them. Get it for the minimum amount of time. Don't forget the bit. Tell them what you need.
>>1194298
For the milktoast OP, it would work perfect
>>1193995
>i would never use it again
Are you a brain in a vat? What the fuck kind of person never uses a drill?
>>1194188
Never heard of that.
>>1193995
You can join a hackerspace for a monthly fee and then you don't need to own a drill.
A $25 corded Black & Decker would probably get the job done. What are you making? Are you aware the holes will not be round but subtly tri-lobed if using a standard chuck?
>>1193995
You *can* drive a screw into wood by hand with a screwdriver. Of course, that's the hard way and you lack the intelligence to look up a rental place, the interpersonal skills to ask a neighbor if you could borrow theirs, or the slyness to buy a used one at a pawn shop, Craigslist or yard sale and then sell it for what you bought if for.
I was just thinking there might be a hardware store that allows their employees to do something like that, since i had heard of one a while ago and couldn't remember the name of it.
Obviously i have no friends or neighbors, the only devices i ever see at my thrift shop are broken food processors, and i am very fucking poor.
I didn't trust a 17-25 dollar drill but i guess i'm convinced?
stop murdering me please? let thread die nao? > w O;
>>1194887
>I didn't trust a 17-25 dollar drill but i guess i'm convinced?
No worries. Cheap corded drill will do you fine.
>>1194374
Maybe it was Foodstuff, annoying women podcasts all flow together.
>>1194971
Never heard of that one either. Podcasts are not the origin of that historical curiosity. I was at a restaurant with metal pineapple ornamentation with my mother several years ago, and she explained pineapples are symbol of hospitality. I later read about it on my own. My particular set of dietary ideologies has necessitated a broad knowledge of anything I'm eating, and I'm always interested in learning the history of any of it. I could tell you the origin of all the ingredients of any processed bullshit at a supermarket.
>>1194978
Of course podcasts aren't the orgins of history, you autistic fuck. Good on you for finding a niche to cling to, when I was a kid I knew everything that started with an "a" because my parents were poor and the first volume of encyclopedias were free.
>>1194887
Do you not have a dad?
The cheap corded drills are plenty powerful for wood.
The last thrift shop I went to had an old metal body drill, and a very heavy hand mixer. I think it actually weighed more than my blender that couldn't be any more powerful on 120 volts, 15 amps.
>>1194980
It's not a niche I'm clinging to. I just take a minute to know what something is before putting it inside me.
>>1194983
What do you know about my dick, faggot?
>>1194994
It's not up to spec.