Buy Ryobi P239 18V One+ Brushless Lithium-Ion Impact Driver (Bare Tool Only) Ryobi P239 18V One+ Brushless Lithium-Ion Impact Driver (Bare Tool Only) Ryobi P239 18V (Bulk Packaged)

The powerful design can make up to 2,000 in. / lbs. of torque, which makes it easy to drive or tighten large fasteners.

When you’re driving fast, you can have up to 4,350 IPM (impacts per minute).

14 in. quick connect coupler for quick and easy changes to the bits.

The tool itself, the battery, and the charger are all sold on their own.

To make shipping easier, this item has been taken out of its retail packaging (Bulk Packaged). It will come in a generic box.

Battery and charger are not included in the sale of the tool. The powerful design can produce up to 2,000 in. / lbs. torque, which makes it easy to drive or tighten large screws. As many as 4,350 IPM (impacts per minute) can be used for fast-moving applications. To make shipping easier, this item has been taken out of its retail packaging (Bulk Packaged). It will come in a generic box.

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Immediately after I got it, I plugged in my battery and began to use it. As soon as it hit the screw, I heard the sound. This noise sounded high-pitched, like a small hammer hitting something metal with a very loud clunk sound. As a follow up, I saw that my drill bit had slipped out of the screw. My drill bit then changed. Same thing. Something must be wrong because it was the same when I tried a third time. 3 new bits came out of a screw. Try a different screw. It hit the screw but didn’t do anything. After that, I took my old Ryobi P238 and used it to drive the screw into the wood. I put a battery and a bit in it, and it did it right away. You could hear a much bigger, stronger hammer hit the screw. I switched between the P239 and P238. On the front of this drive, there’s a small metal hammer. I looked at the metal part where the hammers that hit the screws are housed. It’s only 1/3 the size of the P238. The next day, I thought about it for a while and then asked Amazon to send it back. I’m going to send it back now. This thing works. ..sort of. But it’s only half or third as powerful as the other Ryobi drills. I, like most people, was excited by the “brushless” markings. A brushless motor running a bad hammer assembly is pointless. To say it another way: It will never be used because it doesn’t work. I’m going to buy another P238 as a backup for the Ryobi impact I already own, which is the third one I’ve had. A side note: I had the blue impact for a long time, then I got a P238. The brushes on both of them wore out, so I bought new ones. This one will never wear out, not because it’s brushless, but because it has no guts.

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