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The 3 cordless tools I reach for every single day — and they run on the batteries you already own

If there's a DeWalt, Milwaukee or Makita pack sitting on your shelf, you already own everything these three need. No new system. No new charger. Just three add-ons I wish someone had told me about years ago.

That's the whole kit right there. I'll show you what's inside — in order.

Mike R.

Homeowner & weekend handyman · 6 min read

Title

Quick version of who's talking: I own my place, and on the side I do handyman work for people around town. Trim, fixtures, furniture, the odd "can you just take a look at this" job. I'm not sponsored by anybody and I don't get paid to like things — I do everything with my own two hands and a garage full of cordless gear.

 

Over the last couple years a few cheap add-ons crept into my kit and never left. Not the big expensive stuff — little things that run off the same batteries as my drill. These three earned a permanent spot. Here they are, worst to best.

ONE RULE FOR THIS WHOLE LIST

Every single one of these runs on the DeWalt, Milwaukee or Makita battery already on your shelf. Nothing new to buy into, no second charger, no special pack. If you've got the battery, you're 90% of the way there.

Title

03

NUMBER THREE

A USB power adapter that clips onto your battery

Phone topping up off the drill battery while I work. Once you do it you don't go back.

This one's almost dumb it's so simple. A little cap clicks onto your tool battery and turns it into a power bank — USB-A and USB-C. That's it. But think how often something on a job needs juice: phone's dying, the Bluetooth speaker quits mid-afternoon, earbuds, laser measure, whatever.

 

Your tool battery is the biggest power source in the truck and it's just sitting there. Clip this on and you can stop hauling power banks and a wall charger. I top my phone up off a DeWalt pack on the tailgate all the time now.

Where to get one: there are tons of these on Amazon or Temu. Just actually read the reviews so you don't grab a cheap one that dies in two weeks — that's the only catch.

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02

NUMBER TWO

A cordless glue gun (runs off your tool battery)

Trim came loose at a job last week. Two minutes, no outlet, sorted.

Looks like a regular glue gun but there's no cord — it mounts straight onto your battery and heats up fast, way faster than the plug-in kind. I didn't think I'd care about this one. Then it started bailing me out on jobs.

 

You're at a client's house, something's come loose — trim, a wobbly chair leg, a fixture that won't sit right — and you need a solid fix right now. No outlet, no running back to the truck. Battery's already on the drill, snap it over, done.

Where to get one: Amazon again — and again, read the reviews first. There's good ones and there's junk, the reviews sort it out fast.

Title

01

NUMBER ONE  — THE ONE I REACH THE MOST

A little cordless blower that runs on your battery

The other two are genuinely useful. But this is the one that earned the list — the tool I grab so often it basically lives on the bench with a battery in it.

Clearing the garage after a build. This is the one that lives with a battery in it.

Here's the thing nobody tells you about owning a place: it's a thousand tiny cleanups. Sawdust on the workbench. Grass clippings on the patio. Leaves and dirt in the garage. The car footwells. Drywall dust after you hang something. None of it is a big job — and that's exactly the problem.

 

Because the only thing I owned that moved air was my big gas blower, and dragging that monster out for a 2-minute job is so annoying you just… don't. The mess sits there.

FIRST, WHAT THIS IS NOT

This won't replace your big leaf blower in the fall, and it's not trying to. It's the little brother you actually grab — the one that lives on the shelf with a battery in it, ready for the daily two-minute stuff. Different job entirely. If you already own a big blower, you're not replacing it, you're filling the gap it was always too much for.

WHAT IT ACTUALLY DOES

Runs on the same battery as everything else. It's light, you run it one-handed, grab-and-go, nothing to plug in. And for the size of it, it punches way above its weight — first time you trigger it, it'll push your hand back a little. Touchless, so you're not dragging a rag over a finished surface. And it's a year-round thing, not just a leaves-in-October thing.

The VortexHaus one was the only one that actually moved air like it meant it and felt built to last. That's where I landed, and why. Not magic — it just didn't have the problems the cheap ones all had.

THE PART THAT SEALED IT

Go look at the reviews on the cheap ones. Most of them sit around 1.4–1.5 stars on Trustpilot — one I looked at (Seese) was sitting at a 1.4. That tells you everything you need to know before you spend a dime.

★☆☆☆☆

1.4

Typical cheap blower (Seese)

ON TRUSTPILOT

★★★★★

4.8

VortexHaus · 300+ reviews

ON TRUSTPILOT

"Uses the same battery as my drill — didn't have to buy a special battery or charger. There's a lot of cheap crap out there but this isn't one of them."

— verified owner review

Honestly? I reach for this one more than the other two combined.

ONE WARNING ON THIS ONE

This is the single one on the list where I have to stop you: do NOT buy this on Amazon or Temu. VortexHaus only sells the real one on their own site — vortexhaus.com. Anything with their name on it on a marketplace isn't the real thing.

 

A buddy of mine didn't listen. Grabbed a cheap green knock-off off Amazon to save a few bucks. The thing literally caught fire after a few uses. He got the real one afterward — paid twice, basically. Just get it from the official site the first time.

Last I checked it was on sale, and they let you try it for a few months with no risk — so there's really no reason not to go look.

Check it out on their official site →

Takes you to vortexhaus.com — the only place the real one lives.

Doesn't matter which camp you're in — DeWalt, Milwaukee or Makita, it fits.

Advertorial disclosure: This is an advertisement, not independent editorial. The author has a material connection to VortexHaus and this page may earn a commission on purchases. Star ratings and review quotes are presented as reported and were accurate as of the date shown; verify current figures on the retailer's and Trustpilot's own pages.

 

Tool brand names (DeWalt, Milwaukee, Makita) are trademarks of their respective owners and are referenced for battery-compatibility purposes only; no endorsement is implied.