![]() ![]() ![]() It’s going to give you the worst results.Īlso, let me tell you that DeWalt is a professional and premium brand. So, the same thing will happen when you use a DeWalt battery for a B&D electronic. So, when you try to put something else in place of the correct batteries, it’s going to ruin whole system.ī&D has worked with a lesser amount of electronics intensive. It has some trigger of tool and that’s the reason behind. So, using the right battery for your electronics is a must and there is no other way.Ī 20-volt MAX DeWalt battery will have zero electronics. Electronics are designed in a way that goes well with their specific batteries. It would make no sense if the power system gets complete damaged because of such curiosity.īatteries have some factors to monitor with their electronic components. It’s a huge risk, especially if tool you’ll use the battery in is expensive. I was never fond of the idea of going for an interchanging. So, trying something like this is going to get you insane (Sometimes unsafe) results. They are made with different materials and compatibility. Even with some kind of similar background, the batteries are actually pretty different. So, there might be chances that you can try interchanging.īut the point isn’t so simple. We all got to know that these both brands actually come from some family relationship. I know, this is a common question because of some obvious reasons. The Truth Behind Such Replacement (Breaking Down Gradually)! Are They Interchangeable? That brings us to our today’s hot question, are DeWalt 20v batteries interchangeable with black and decker? So, you might want to use it for other brand tools as well. It goes well with rugged usage and for moderate power, the choice is perfect. The slider battery is excellent for portability. Along with that platform, their original hit was 20-volt MAX style. It was usable for saw, compressors and also low power tools. The first ever multi-power battery system was this platform and so, it got quite hyped that time. They came up within an extremely popular FlexVolt platform since then. Kinda like the gig they had selling rebadged Ryobi as Craftsman C3 - if they didn't do it, Sears would have just found someone else to make Craftsman power tools (Chervon didn't waste any time sliding in when the TTI/Sears relationship soured).If you are not an update keeper of DeWalt then let me tell, they started their cordless power tool line on the 2016 year. Walmart would never have signed on for a similar deal, and if TTI didn't sell power tools to Walmart, someone else would have. Selling Hart to Walmart generates revenue, and doesn't threaten the Home Depot/Ryobi exclusivity benefits. All direct competition in the same store. Using Lowe's as an example, if TTI started marketing Ryobi in Lowe's stores, Ryobi would be positioned against Craftsman, Porter-Cable and Kobalt. It's a typical "good/better/best" positioning, and at that level, Ryobi has no competition inside Home Depot. Market positioning puts Ryobi at the "bottom", with a step-up to Ridgid, and Milwaukee/DeWalt at the high-end (with Makita and Bosch positioned anywhere from Ridgid to the top). Home Depot sells Ryobi, Ridgid, Milwaukee, DeWalt, Makita and Bosch. because inside Home Depot, there's no other brand positioned against them. Ryobi has no competition, inside of Home Depot, with similarly market positioned tools. "Ultimately, why would TTI want to compete against similarly market-positioned tools in same-store stuff?" Selling Ryobi outside of Home Depot just hurts the market they've crafted with Home Depot, and encourages Home Depot to carry other similarly market-positioned competition.įunny - I missed the part where Home Depot is selling Hart, and Walmart is selling Ryobi. Ultimately, why would TTI want to compete against similarly market-positioned tools in same-store stuff? They don't have any positional competition in Home Depot, and HD is a nationwide retail and Internet chain. Home Depot markets Ryobi to the consumer far more than they do Ridgid, so I'd argue that Ryobi is more of their "house brand" of power tools than Ridgid is. The Ridgid brand is licensed to TTI from Emerson, and TTI sells it through Home Depot, likely part of another exclusivity agreement. Likewise, Home Depot owns no part of Ridgid. TTI "owns" Ryobi (perpetual license for the brand name) in the US market, European market, Oceania market and (Southern?) African market. A complementary benefit to that agreement is that Home Depot is the exclusive "big box" retailer of it's type to sell Milwaukee. TTI has an exclusivity agreement with Home Depot in the USA for the Ryobi brand. Ryobi is in no part, no way, owned by Home Depot. ![]()
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