After a nice introduction by Paul Fry on the history and direction of the cordless tool line, we got to check out some of the new cordless tools available from the 2011 Milwaukee Tools Media Event. This was probably the most anticipated part of the media event โ I mean, who doesnโt like new cordless tools? Tom Simeone, who I got to spend some quality time with over dinner later that evening, showed us the new M18 Cordless Caulk and Adhesive Guns. There are four different configurations which are available as separate SKUs and also as accessories for the main gun. They are particularly well-suited for high-force applications like high-viscosity urethane. This stuff gets really hard, particularly at low temperature. The new guns have 950 pounds of force. Taking a tube of urethane that he had store well below 50 degrees, Tom laid down a nice even bead with the toolโs variable speed trigger. When he let off the trigger, the tool automatically releases and it engages the drip-free feature.
To avoid seam breaks, the tool also makes clean 90 degree turns. This is perfect for glass installation, where you donโt want any breaks. Flow rate control is controlled simply by varying the trigger. The other thing we found innovative was that the tool uses a new piston design comprised of a cone that reaches up into the nozzle to use far more of the sausage packs than other guns weโve seen. When youโre going through tens or even hundreds of packs per month, this is going to save a lot of money.
The tools can be purchased with a standard 10 oz caulk barrel, an aluminum sausage pack barrel, a clear sausage pack barrel, or a model that takes a full quart cartridge. And get this: you can empty 250 tubes on a single compact M18 battery! Thatโs going to make this a very convenient tool to have around, particularly if youโre in the glass or insulation business.
All of the accessories thread into the adapter and it looks super-easy to swap out the heads for different applications if necessary. The first two tools, the standard 10 ounce and the 20 ounce aluminum barrel sausage-style model, are due out in September for approximately $299 and $329 respectively.


Available in October, both models shown off at the 2011 Milwaukee Tools Media Event will retail for around $150-$160.
Corey Dickert presented the newest inspection camera from Milwaukee, the M-Spector 360. A bunch of competitor cameras were set up at a focal length of 1โณ. At this range most inspection cameras fall apart. Since those of us using inspection cameras arenโt always thinkning in terms of staying within the desired focal length, the close-capabilities of the new M-Spector 360 is a welcome change. We also liked how detailed and colorful the new camera is. It has a really narrow 9mm camera head that outperforms most 17mm heads. The lack of washout and the clarity of the image was very impressive. We saw close-ups of jean material, circuit boards, and Cat 5e cable and it did a good job of revealing definition. This is a tool that is going to be very popular.
The new toolโs display even rotates 360 degrees to adjust the image to where you are. Milwaukee also demoed how current extensions have 4โณ inflexible points along the cable. To solve this and simplify the most common uses, Milwaukee opted to provide the M-Spector 360 with both 3โฒ and 9โฒ cables and do away with extensions. A new pipe guide attachment letโs you snake through some impossible places and were able to get it nearly all the way to the bottom of a standard Kohler toilet.
The new M-Spector 360 will be available in October for between $199-$229 for the 3โฒ version kit and theย 9โฒ kit will retail for roughly $249.
Excited to see more of these tools? We are, too and will be sure to review most of these as they become available to us.








