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The Ryobi is around four times the price of the Lidl Parkside heat gun, but is it four times as good?
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Good afternoon, all this is the ryobi r18 hg heat gun 18 volt powered by a battery. Now i use this primarily for off-grid heat shrinking and it's very good. It was about 75 pounds or thereabouts and that's without the battery - and this is the parkside uh ph lga 20-li a1. Also, a cordless heat gun um again comes without a battery, but you can buy the battery for it.

This one's a 4 amp power. Now this was only 15 pounds and, of course, the batteries are so much cheaper as well in the parkside range. So if you include the heat gun and the battery, this is probably about five or six times cheaper. So is it any good? Does it compare with the ryobi? Well, let's find out i'm going to do some heat shrinking now.

The ryobi uh comes with two attachment nozzles. I use this sort of reflecting uh folded back nozzle for heat shrinking and it's just sort of. We have to release that security catch, but it's just press and go there's only one setting on the ryobi. The park side comes with three nozzles in total.

It also comes with this sort of handle and a triangular scraper thing for scraping wallpaper. I presume, but interestingly, this one has got three heat settings high, medium and cold. Why you'd want cold with such a puny? Blower, i don't know. The only thing i can think of is that you run it for 10 seconds after you've used it to cool it down.

Now, if you run the ryobi and that's got four bars on the battery, run it and then look at the battery, that's showing three bars. It's obviously putting a fair bit of current. Let's do the same on the park side. So on this one, we've got three bars on there.

Let's run it, that's still saying three bars but of course that's on the half heat, let's put it on the high heat and that's showing only one bar, of course, if you put it on cold, the pitch goes up and there's no load or very little on The battery anyway, i'm going to do a very unscientific test. I'm going to make up some of these black and red cables you can see. I use them to link the junction boxes for my workshop lighting, so i'm just going to make up some of these cables in various different lengths and for that i'm going to use these terminal. These are crimp ones, but i take the crimp piece off first and then i'll use some heat shrink sleeving once i've soldered that on so let's get started so i'll start with a 18 inch length.

That's 18 inches on my inch. Spaced led flashing, light measuring board. So, let's tin, these two wire ends that are one that's the negative and that one that's the positive and now oh, i must put the heat shrink on these before i solder them onto the terminals. Okay, soldering, the negative one on that's good and soldering.

The positive one on like that: okay, ready to slip the heat shrink on and start off-grid heat shrinking, okay, so first the ryobi, which i know and it works fine, that's the negative! Now, let's do the positive and uh yeah that makes a nice job of heat. Shrinking that end i'll solder, the terminals onto the other end and then i'll use the park side. Okay, now the park side, which i've actually never used, i'm going to use it on the half heat setting. Let's try that oh yeah, that is going it's possibly a little bit.
Let's move that out, possibly a little bit slower than the oh, it's very hot! Actually, yeah! That's getting well hot! Just give it a bit more on that, because i think it took a bit of time to warm up, but that's when it's half heat and uh yeah. That's done a very excellent job for about a fifth of the price. So you can't complain. I might try using the high heat now and now using the parkside lidl uh heat gun on the high heat setting yeah that's on the high heat setting.

Oh that's really fast. Actually, yeah! That's that's really quick. I would say that this thing on its high heat setting is hotter and faster than the ryobi, and this thing on its low heat setting is actually a bit slower and less powerful than the ryobi. Now, if you want to keep your batteries uh in good condition, it probably is best not to pull so much current that this thing shows that it's virtually empty.

So i think i'd probably operate this on the low heat setting um. I still have the other end of this to do so. Let's just do that now, of course, this thing is already warm, so it'll be a bit quicker this time, oh yeah, it is quicker. So, yes, if you're doing lots of these one after the other, the low heat setting is absolutely fine.

If you're just doing a one-off and you're in a bit of a hurry, then i guess the high heat setting. I don't want to melt all the plastic there. Um might be better, but that's perfectly acceptable and for i don't know, a quarter, a fifth or even a sixth, if you include include the cost of the battery of the price of the ryobi. Well, it's a no-brainer, isn't it so there we are.

I made up my two of my um terminal cables, one eighteen inch, one seventeen inch just because i might need them um and using the ryobi 75 pounds, i think, plus about 75 for the battery so 150 pounds for that and this 15 pounds for the uh Heat gun and 25, i think for the 4 amp hour battery so 40 quid for that. So yes about a quarter of the price, and it's just as good. It has more nozzles and it has two heat settings so uh. You can make your own mind up about that.

Cheerio.

By Julian

Youtuber, shed dweller, solar charge controller aficionado

10 thoughts on “Cordless Heat Guns – Ryobi vs Parkside”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars 50 shades of the dominator says:

    You will find the Ryobi lasts longer, has a better circuit protection, better cells etc. However, the goal is only doing heatshrink, so I guess it's fine to use cheap stuff, even if you find some Chinese design for cheap it probably will still do the job, some people use simple lighters, lol.

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars MikeB says:

    Nice review. Heat guns are a throwover from 1950s – 70s decorators tools. Chemical paint strippers pretty much didn't exist and every professional painter had a blowlamp to remove old paint with brefore repainting. If you intensely heat up oil based paint it expands and bubbles up enabling it to be easily scraped off wooden door frames, window frames, etc. These heat guns are intended for the same purpose and the triangle part is a paint scraper. The shaped nozzles are intended to keep heat away from areas you don't want it – eg. glass. For oil based paints it is quick and easy, but produces tons of awful fumes and smoke and back then no one bothered about breathing in toxic stuff!

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Anvilshock says:

    How the f does "n times cheaper" even compute? And what, by the same formula, would n=1 times cheaper even be?? And especially so compared with Anglophones absolutely loving to say "n times more" when they mean "n times as much"??

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars James Holbrook says:

    Man that seems like a good deal we have harbor freight and they have a cheap heat gun but they are still like $30 I have been thinking about getting one of those adapters to use my Milwaukee batteries with their tools for stuff like that and they have a transfer pump for like $100 and a few other things I don't think I'd use that offer but would be useful to have at like 1/2 to 1/4 the price of Milwaukee tools

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars rimmersbryggeri says:

    THose heat guns are probably hot enough to melt the solder at any setting. Probably a better idea to get a crimping tool fo uninsulated criimps for lower resistande connections.

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars DIY Projects With Chuxxsss says:

    Only problem Julian, we don't get parkside in Australia. Both will destroy batteries quick than a drill or other tools due to the current draw. Anyway have a great day mate.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Oldbatwit says:

    Good luck getting your hands on one. Whenever anything both good and cheap appears in my local Aldi there is a race to go in and buy the lot. They then appear on Ebay with a suitable mark-up.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Nick F says:

    Gotta love a decent cheap tool. I'm about to start a new Hyper Tough (US Walmart brand) collection even though I already have amassed a multi-thousand dollar collection of Sears Craftsman tools I started as soon as I started earning a paycheack (last 20+ years). Hyper Tough just redesigned all their power and hand tools over the last year and they are looking pretty sharp. From primarily red with black accent color to primarily black with some nice angled red accent lines. Very rugged looking as well. I'm really impressed with what they keep slappin a Hyper Tough brandname on and it's not crap. PS, Is your background computer up to date for its security updates? Did it pass the Windows 11 check?

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Steven Ingram says:

    You know, in the last couple of videos I found myself wondering whatever became of the "supercomputer." Glad to see it in the background again. Did you ever work out a way to hear the EM noise it produces? (I know, I know… this comment has nothing to do with heat guns or shrink tubing. LOL)

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars ElmerFuddGun says:

    I'm not surprised at the cost difference. Even if there is a much lower cost option some people just buy their favourite brand. If they were side by side on the store shelf a lot of people would still spend more than they need to assuming their was a good reason to spend more.

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