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ToolGuyd > Power Tools > Cordless > Dewalt Model Numbers Explained

Dewalt Model Numbers Explained

Jun 3, 2024 Stuart 30 Comments

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Dewalt DCD798 Cordless Hammer Drill Hero

What do Dewalt cordless power tool model numbers mean?

A reader asked this question today, and it seems to be a common one. There’s no official guide, but we picked up on some of Dewalt’s model number patterns over the years.

I’m not sure how well the average tool user needs to be able to decipher Dewalt tool model numbers, but we’ll take a deep look at things nonetheless.

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Shown above is the Dewalt DCD798D1 cordless hammer drill kit.

In this post, we’ll talk about how the DCD means this is a cordless drill, the 798 implies it’s a hammer drill, and the D1 means it is kitted with a single 20V Max 2Ah battery.

Shortcut Links

Here are shortcut links if you want to skip around to different sections in your own order:

Dewalt Cordless Tool Categories Explained
What do the Numbers Mean?
How to Identify the Batteries in Dewalt Cordless Tool Kits

Dewalt Cordless Drills
Dewalt Cordless Impact Drivers
Other Dewalt Cordless Tools
Power Tool Combo Kits
Home Depot Dewalt Cordless Bundles
Avoid Assumptions
Reconditioned Tools

Tool Categories Explained – What do the Letters Mean?

The first part of the model number describes the product category. As you can probably guess, DC stands for Dewalt Cordless [tool type].

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Following are all of the Dewalt cordless power tool model number prefixes I could remember or find, and there might be others.

DCB – Battery (12V Max or 20V Max), charger, or USB adapter
DCBP – PowerStack battery
DCD – Drill
DCE – Equipment
DCF – Fastening tool (e.g. impact driver, wrench, or ratchet)
DCG – Grinder
DCH – Rotary hammer or breaker hammer
DCM – Material removal tool (e.g. band file, polisher)
DCK – Combo kit
DCL – Lighting
DCN – Nailer
DCR – Jobsite radio or speaker
DCS – Saw or oscillating multi-tool
DCV – Vacuum
DCW – Woodworking tools (sanders, routers, and similar)

Some of the product categories are quite broad. DCS, for example includes many different types of saws, and also oscillating multi-tools. DCF includes impact drivers, impact wrenches, ratchets, and riveting tools – at the least.

The DCE category is a broad catch-all for things like trade specialty tools, jobsite blowers, fans, drywall sanders, adhesive applicators, pipe threaders, and other such tools that don’t warrant their own category.

Cordless Outdoor Power Tools

Dewalt has many very specific model number prefixes for their outdoor tools.

DCBL – Blower
DCC – Chainsaw
DCED – Edger
DCHT – Hedge trimmer
DCMW – Mower
DCPR – Pruner
DCPS – Pole saw
DCSN – Snow blower
DCST – String trimmer

As with the other prefixes, there could be more – please let me know if I missed any!

Non-Cordless Tool Prefixes

Dewalt’s other types of tools also tend to have logical prefixes.

They changed their corded (AC powered) tool numbering scheme over the years. For example, Dewalt corded table saws went from being DW## to DWE###, and miter saws went from DW### to DWS###.

Hand tools and accessories start with DWHT. Work benches, tool boxes, organizers, tool bags, and other such products start with DWST.

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What do the Numbers Mean?

Next, model numbers denote placement within a product category, although the meaning is not always straightforward.

The tricky part is that the numbers can jump around a bit.

Things get confusing when comparing across different product families. As you’ll see, there’s no hard rule to go by. The numbers aren’t arbitrary, but they also aren’t consistently patterned.

In other words, you can’t guess, at least not with high confidence.

For example, without research or existing familiarity with Dewalt’s cordless line, you’re not going to be able to tell that the DCD794D1 Atomic series drill kit was preceded by the DCD708C2 Atomic series drill kit.

But as you compare the features, performance specs, and price, the model number will help inform you about how the kits come with different batteries.

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How to Identify the Batteries in Dewalt Cordless Tool Kits

Dewalt DCD800P1 20V Max XR Cordless Drill Kit

The letter denotes the battery size, and the following number (#) tells you how many the kit comes with.

For the Dewalt 20V Max line:

C# – 1.3Ah or 1.5Ah battery
D# – 2Ah battery
E# – compact PowerStack battery
H# – 5Ah PowerStack battery
L# – 3Ah battery (compact or older style)
M# – 4Ah battery
P# – 5Ah battery
Q# – 4Ah compact battery
R# – 6Ah battery
T# – 6Ah FlexVolt battery
U# – 10Ah battery
W# – 8Ah battery
X# – 9Ah Flexvolt battery
Y# – 12Ah FlexVolt battery
Z# – 15Ah FlexVolt battery

For Dewalt 12V Max:

F# – 2Ah battery
G# – 3Ah battery

Thus, the DCD800D2 cordless drill kit comes with 2x 2Ah batteries, the DCD800P1 drill kit comes with 1x 5Ah battery, and the DCD800D1E1 comes with 1x 2Ah battery and 1x compact PowerStack battery.

What About Bare Tools?

That’s easy – the tool-only version adds a “B” after the model number.

For example, the DCS574B is the bare-tool of the DCS574 circular saw. And, to reinforce what the kit suffix means, the DCS574W1 is the kit with 1x 8Ah battery.

As far as I have seen, Dewalt cordless power tools are sold in bare-tool format, kit format, or as part of larger bundles or combo kits.

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Dewalt Cordless Drill Model Numbers Explained

Dewalt 20V Max PowerStack Battery DCBP520 used with Cordless Drill

Dewalt has numerous cordless drills in their 20V Max lineup, and navigating all of the different models can be a chore.

DCD7XX – compact drills
DCD8XX – newest generation of compact cordless drills
DCD9XX – premium heavy-duty 3-speed cordless drills

Dewalt’s DCD800 is the latest 20V Max XR-series compact brushless drill, and the DCD999 is their top-tier 3-speed hammer drill.

XR stands for extreme or extended runtime. Dewalt 20V Max XR tools are typically more premium and better featured than their tools without this designation.

Usually, the higher the number that follows the category prefix, the later the generation tool.

With some exceptions, DCDXX0 to DCDXX4 model numbers are for cordless drill/drivers, and DCDXX5 to DCDXX9 are for cordless hammer drills.

Thus, DCD800 is the XR drill/driver, and DCD805 is the similar hammer drill.

For Dewalt’s current compact drills:

DCD793 – latest brushless drill
DCD794 – latest Atomic drill
DCD798 – latest brushless hammer drill
DCD799 – latest Atomic hammer drill

The DCD794 and DCD799 are exclusive to Home Depot, while the DCD793 and DCD798 are exclusive to Lowe’s. Both are also available at other retailers.

DCD792 and DCD797 are the Tool Connect Bluetooth and app-connectable versions of the DCD791 and DCD796 drill and hammer drill.

DCD800 – latest XR brushless drill
DCD805 – latest XR brushless hammer drill

The DCD800 was preceded by the DCD791, which was preceded by the DCD790. The DCD805 was preceded by the DCD796 and DCD795.

The DCD794 Atomic series drill was preceded by the DCD708.

The DCD794 drill came after the DCD795 and DCD796 hammer drills.

With the previous XR (more premium) cordless drill being the DCD791, and the new Atomic being the DCD794, one cannot assume that higher model numbers are “better”.

The DCD794 is not the successor to the DCD793, and neither are successors to the DCD791. It also isn’t the predecessor to the DCD795.

If we look at the DCF99X series heavy duty drills, we need to dig deeper, as they’re all current models.

DCD991 – Drill/Driver
DCD996 – Hammer Drill
DCD997 – Hammer Drill with Tool Connect
DCD998 – Hammer Drill with Power Detect
DCD999 – Hammer Drill with FlexVolt Advantage

All of the hammer drills are similar. The DCD997 has wireless app connectivity, the DCD998 delivers a performance boost when powered with higher capacity batteries, and the DCF999 delivers a performance boost when powered with a FlexVolt battery.

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Dewalt Cordless Impact Driver Model Numbers Explained

Dewalt DCF845 Cordless Impact Driver Hero

Here’s a list of Dewalt’s current 20V Max impact drivers:

DCF787 – single speed
DCF809 – Atomic single speed
DCF840 – single speed
DCF845 – XR
DCF850 – Atomic
DCF860 – XR (coming soon)
DCF887 – XR

The DCF787, DCF809, and DCF840 are often sold as part of promo-priced kits for $99. The DCF787 and DCF840 are available at Lowe’s and other retailers, and the DCF809 is sold at Home Depot and other retailers.

The numbers don’t tell you much.

The DCF809 came after the DCF887. The former is a single speed impact, and the latter a multi-speed impact.

The DCF887 has been Dewalt’s flagship XR impact driver, although now there are 3 different premium multi-speed impacts.

The DCF850 is a compact multi-speed Atomic series impact. The DCF845 is a multi-speed impact, while the DCF840 is single-speed. The DCF860 is coming out soon.

The DCF860 is seemingly replacing the DCF887.

All this is to show that the numbers don’t always follow a logical progression, and that users shouldn’t make assumptions based on the numbers. For example, the DCF860 is expected to be an improvement over the DCF887.

Dewalt’s first flagship impact driver was the DCF885. Then came the DCF895 with a brushless motor, the DCF886 which bested the DCF885, and then the DCF887. (The DCF886 and DCF887 also have brushless motors.)

The DCF885, DCF886, and DCF887 were subsequent generations in the same family.

The DCF888 was a Tool Connect impact driver, the DCF889 was an older model impact wrench, and the DCF890 is a brushless impact wrench. This is why the numbers jump around a bit – Dewalt ran out of runway.

I believe that we’ll see logical progression moving forward; I expect that the DCF840 might eventually be replaced with the DCF841, the DCF845 by the DCF846, the DCF850 by the DCF851, and so forth, unless they jump around again.

Is the DCF860 better than the DCF850? Are both better than the DCF840 and DCF845? Answering questions like these require context; you can’t simply look at the model number.

There’s no easy way to simply know how any two models relate just by looking at the model numbers. Hopefully the cheat sheet provided above helps.

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What About Other Types of Tools?

There are similar considerations across Dewalt’s cordless power tool lines.

When talking about Dewalt’s oscillating multi-tools, DCS353 is the 12V Max version, the DCS354 is the single speed (with variable speed trigger) 20V Max Atomic model, and the DCS356 is the 20V Max XR model. The DCS354 and DCS356 both replaced the DCS355 XR tool.

Can you tell the differences between Dewalt DCS570, DCS571, DCS573, and DCS574 cordless circular saws, just by the model numbers? No. As with the cordless drills and impact drivers, the context is what’s important.

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Dewalt Cordless Power Tool Combo Kit Model Numbers Explained

Dewalt 20V Max 7-Tool Cordless Power Tool Combo Kit with ToughSystem Tool Box DCKTS781D2M1

The first 3 letters are for the tool category, and in the case of a kit, the last 2 tell you the battery size and count.

Thus, DCK489D2 is a combo kit with 2x 2Ah batteries. DCK694P2 is a combo kit with 2x 5Ah batteries. DCK254E2 is a combo kit with 2x compact PowerStack batteries.

For combo kits, the first in the number sequence tells you how many tools are included.

DCK489D2 – 4-tool combo
DCK694P2 – 6-tool combo
DCK254E2 – 2-tool combo

What about DCK1020D2? That’s a 10-tool combo kit with 2x 2Ah batteries.

DCKTS681D1P1?

DCK tells us it’s a combo kit. TS tells us it comes with a ToughSystem tool box. The first digit tells us it’s a 6-tool combo kit. The letter-number suffix tells us it comes with 1x 2Ah battery, and 1x 5Ah battery.

What about DCK2050M2? Is that a 20-tool combo kit? No, it’s a 2-tool combo kit, with XR hammer drill and the DCF850 impact driver. It’s another non-linear exception in Dewalt’s ordering scheme.

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Home Depot Dewalt Cordless Power Tool Bundle Model Numbers Explained

Dewalt 20V Brushless Barrel Grip Jig Saw with Battery 2-Pack Bundle

Home Depot tends to combine Dewalt model numbers together when offering bundles.

You might see, for example, a model number of DCS335BWCB205-2 for the jig saw and 2x battery bundle shown here.

This seems to cause a lot of confusion, but luckily it’s easy to decipher.

DCS335BWCB205-2 can be split into 2 parts: DCS335B and WCB205-2.

Once you know what Dewalt cordless model numbers look like, you’ll know where to split the longer model numbers Home Depot gives to many bundles.

The first part is DCS335B, the cordless barrel-grip jig saw, in tool-only format.

For the second part, we have WCB205-2. I take that to be W for with, and then I add a D to get [D]CB205-2. DCB205-2 is the 2-pack of 5Ah battery (DCB205).

As an aside, DCB205-2CK will be a battery 2-pack starter kit. CK seems to stand for “Charger Kit.” Or maybe charger with kit bag.

So, as seen in the image, that kit comes with the DCS335B jig saw and DCB205-2 battery 2-pack.

Sometimes the W is not there, and sometimes there’s a D.

DCS334BDCB246CK is the DCS334B jig saw plus the DCB246CK starter kit with a 4Ah battery, 6Ah battery, charger, and kit bag.

DCS565BWDCB240 is the DCS565B cordless circular saw with a DCB240 compact 4Ah battery.

As far as I have seen, the mashing together of multiple model numbers is for Home Depot kit bundles where you get individually-packaged items. There could be exceptions to this.

Often, “free with purchase” promos will be available in two formats, one where everything is purchased under one model number, and another where the “free” gift is a separate line item.

When that happens, the only difference is in how the purchase – and returns – are processed.

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Avoid Assumptions

Dewalt DCK225D2 and DCK2051D2 and DCK2050M2 Cordless Power Tool Combo Kits

Shown here are Dewalt Dewalt DCK225D2 (top), DCK2051D2 (bottom left), and DCK2050M2 (bottom right) cordless power tool combo kits.

All you can decipher from the model numbers is that they’re 2-tool kits with 2x 2Ah or 2x 4Ah batteries.

The DCK225D2 kit has Dewalt’s entry-priced Atomic series drill and impact driver, a charger, and 2x 2Ah batteries.

The DCK2051D2 kit gives you a different charger, the same batteries, the XR (premium) compact drill/driver, and a more premium Atomic series multi-speed impact driver.

The DCK2050M2 kit is similar, but gives you the XR (premium) compact hammer drill/driver, the same premium Atomic series multi-speed impact driver, and 2x 4Ah batteries.

You can’t tell any of this from just the model numbers.

If you missed that the DCK2051D2 kit has a drill, and the DCK2050M2 a hammer drill, the model numbers should at least suggest that there’s a difference other than the battery inclusion.

There’s where knowing Dewalt’s numbering scheme – at least as well as possible – comes in handy. Except when it doesn’t.

With familiarity or after some research, you might recognize that the kits on the bottom come with a more premium XR series drill, and you might also recognize the DCF850 impact driver.

Question: What’s the difference between Dewalt’s DCS356D1 and DCS356C1 oscillating multi-tool kits?

If you said that the D1 kit comes with 1x 2Ah battery, and the C1 kit comes with 1x 1.5Ah battery, that’s right!

But that’s not the only difference.

Dewalt DCS356C1 and DCS356D1 Cordless Oscillating Multi-Tool Kits

Here are the two kits, with the DCS356C1 on the left, and DCS356D1 on the right.

The difference isn’t just about the bundled battery – the D1 kit comes with more accessories, including a cutting depth guide that can be pricey to piece together with replacement parts.

Dewalt DCS354D1 Oscillating Multi-Tool Kit

Here’s the DCS354D1, a promo kit featuring the Dewalt 20V Max Atomic series oscillating multi-tool.

The difference between Atomic DCS354D1 and XR DCS356D1 kits also goes beyond one having a variable speed trigger with single speed range, and the other having a variable speed trigger with 3 speed ranges.

Sometimes the nuances are obvious, but that won’t always be the case.

Dewalt’s model numbers can provide details and fill in blanks, but they rarely tell the whole story.

This post won’t make everyone an expert at understanding Dewalt model numbers, but that wasn’t its goal. The goal was to reduce the number of unknowns. Hopefully this post helped demystify things for you.

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Reconditioned Dewalt Tools

An R at the end means a Dewalt tool has been reconditioned or refurbished.

For example, DWS779R would be a reconditioned DWS779 miter saw, and DCD777C2R would be a reconditioned DCD777 cordless drill kitted with a charger and 2x 1.3Ah or 1.5Ah batteries.

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Related posts:

Dewalt Cordless Miter Saw on StandReader Question: Will Dewalt Update Their Cordless Miter Saws in 2021? Dewalt 20V Max vs FlexVolt Battery Comparison 2021Dewalt Cordless Mower Question: Why 20V Max and Not FlexVolt? Milwaukee M18 Forge XC 6Ah BatteryMilwaukee Pipeline 2023 – Readers’ Questions Answered

Sections: Cordless, Reader Question, Tool Buying Guides Tags: Dewalt 20V MaxMore from: Dewalt

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30 Comments

  1. Ted

    Jun 3, 2024

    Thanks! Very informative.

    Reply
  2. Big Richard

    Jun 3, 2024

    Adding a few battery codes that were missed:

    Q# – 4Ah compact/slim
    R# – 6Ah XR
    WW# – 8Ah PowerPack (tabless)
    Z# – 15Ah FlexVolt

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Jun 3, 2024

      Thanks! Added to the post except for the PowerPack since it hasn’t been officially announced yet.

      I found one chainsaw kit that comes with the 15Ah battery, but I don’t think I’ve seen any kits with a 4Ah compact battery or 6Ah 20V Max battery.

      Reply
      • Big Richard

        Jun 3, 2024

        I don’t think I’ve seen a press release on The PowerPack yet, but it’s definitely official. Not sure why they haven’t had one yet.

        There are only a few 15Ah kits, the DCCS677 chainsaw and the DCH911 and DCH966 demo hammers are the ones I recall for certain.

        The only slim 4Ah kit I can think of is the DCW210 ROS, but there may have been others.

        And the 6Ah came with both the DCG413 and DCG413F grinders, the DCH263 and DCH293 rotohammers, as well as the the DCL079 light.

        Reply
        • Stuart

          Jun 3, 2024

          Not in the USA.

          When the top searches for the name or model number brings up Reddit posts as the top results, with no listings at Dewalt.com or authorized retailers known to publicize preorder listings as early as possible, then it hasn’t been officially announced yet.

          Dealers sometimes leak info, as do sales reps. But it’s not official until information can be sourced via legitimate channels.

          If I were Dewalt, I’d wait until late-June, when Milwaukee Pipeline news is out.

          Dewalt and Milwaukee have in the past tried to one-up each other on media event days. I’d bet that’s happening here.

          Reply
          • Big Richard

            Jun 3, 2024

            I feel ya. They’ve been tight lipped on a lot of the new goodies. But here it is on their official ServiceNet website: https://www.toolservicenet.com/en/c//p/PDCB2108

            And those top reddit results look pretty legit, that redditor seems to know their stuff 😉

          • BigBaller

            Jun 10, 2024

            Can you do a makita model # explained one as well? This dewalt one is great and makes up all of the confusion I had with some of dewalts model #’s. A makita one would be super helpful as well. TIA.

          • Stuart

            Jun 10, 2024

            I’ll see what I can do. There aren’t as many clues in Makita’s model numbers, and a lot more redundancy; I’m not sure Makita’s numbering system can be simplified or made easier to understand.

  3. Nathan

    Jun 3, 2024

    Interesting. Ive noticed the dcd dcf things but never tried to decipher much else.

    Reply
  4. Jim

    Jun 3, 2024

    Wow!
    Thanks for all the effort that it took assemble that post Stuart.

    Reply
  5. MM

    Jun 3, 2024

    Thanks for sharing this. I had figured out a lot of them just by looking at part numbers, i.e. it’s pretty easy to see that dcD is a Drill, dcN is a Nailer, dcG is a Grinder, the -B suffix indicates a bare tool, etc. But some of them had me confused, like W for “woodworking” or E for “equipment”.
    In fact while I’ve been searching for deals on the cordless trim router for the last few days I’d been wondering why the part number is DCW600 and not DCR for “router”.

    Reply
  6. Zack

    Jun 3, 2024

    Something maybe to add — I learned over on r/dewalt the other day that tools with a DX prefix, such as the new Snow Shovel (DXSVXA2016-002) and Sweeper (DXSVXA2017-002) are 3rd party licensed tools

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Jun 3, 2024

      I’ll consider it, but I feel that discussion over in-house vs licensed products would open a different can of worms.

      The mobile accessories start with DXMA, vacuums start with DXV, trowels start with DXTT, and shelving start with DXST.

      But safety glasses start with DPG, and those are made and managed by a different company.

      Has it been confirmed that the 20V Max cordless sweeper and shovel are 3rd party products? Until now, only very select products, such as their auto battery booster, were 3rd party designs.

      Maybe the X stands for “external.”

      Reply
      • AJ

        Mar 28, 2025

        We were told something similar by management at the hardware store I work for, which led me here. Sounded fishy. I don’t know why you’d put production into in the part number. That might be encoded in the serial number, but the part number has to identify the product regardless of manufacturer. Also didn’t make sense after a cursory glance at our inventory. DX seems to be vacuums and sump pumps.

        Reply
  7. Jason

    Jun 3, 2024

    This is good content. I applaud Dewalt for actually having model numbers that make sense vs. Milwaukee

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Jun 3, 2024

      Milwaukee model numbers are… yeah…

      But, their cordless lines have less redundancy.

      Between compact and 3-speed models, Dewalt has at least 12 current 20V Max cordless drills and hammer drills. Milwaukee has 6. https://14cyiuhvcgv.com/best-milwaukee-cordless-drills-2023/%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E

      Dewalt has 6 impact drivers (20V Max) with 1 on the way and 1 more rumored model. Milwaukee has 4 M18 models, including the Surge.

      That’s the benefit of Milwaukee giving everything memorable names, such as FUEL, Compact Brushless, and SURGE.

      Reply
      • Jason

        Jun 3, 2024

        Agreed, there was some consistency (ct at the end of model numbers for compact batteries) but then other areas where it’s ignored like the 2691-22

        Brushed, brushless, Fuel, and oil impulse makes sense for a reasonable range impacts. Atomic IMO was more of a marketing ploy for Dewalt to go after Makita sub compact (maybe it was the other way around?)

        Speaking of Makita they may be the worst offender, they’ve gotta have 10+ maybe 15 1/4” impacts

        Reply
        • Stuart

          Jun 3, 2024

          “CT” is appended to the model number for kits where there are compact or higher capacity battery kit options.

          The 2691-22 is Milwaukee’s brushed tool combo kit and will never be kitted with pricier batteries. There’s no need for a CT version as it seems the 2691-22 will be the only and only SKU for those tools.

          That last digit tells you the battery count, whether 0, 1, 2, or more than that.

          CT is for when there’s *also* a compact battery kit, P is for promo kits, mainly the 1-battery compact brushless drill and impact driver kits, and F is for the Forge battery version of a kit.

          There’s logic to the number ordering as well, with respect to cordless tool iterations.

          Makita’s selection is larger than it needs to me. I listed out all of their active impact driver model numbers a year or two ago, and at least half of them were redundant.

          Their impact numbering seems to be sequential at least, making it at least easy to tell which models are newer.

          I still haven’t forgotten how I had to look at part diagrams to figure out the differences between two circular saws. It turned out that the standalone model came with an electric brake, and the one included in combo kits lacked that feature.

          Reply
  8. ToolGuyDan

    Jun 3, 2024

    Oh, man, what a great post! I bet this gets a ton of search engine hits, too; original content with all those model numbers in close proximity will make any “difference between X vs. Y vs. Z”-type query tend to find this. Thank you for the (very) deep dive; I thought I knew a lot, but I certainly had no idea about e.g. the DCS356C1/DCS356D1 shenanigans.

    Reply
  9. Jared

    Jun 3, 2024

    I bet this took a ton of work to put together such a systematic and exhaustive explanation. Nice job Stuart!

    I’m familiar with several of the model number naming conventions just from shopping for tools, yet it was obvious to me there was a lot more to know. Plus, some of it just didn’t seem to make sense…

    It’s kind of nice to learn there are parts that won’t make sense even if I try.

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Jun 3, 2024

      Thanks!

      I was a bit worried about whether the guide was too long or detailed. The prefixes and kit suffix parts are easy and straightforward, and just took a little time to fill in. It’s the numbers that cause the most confusion and are the most complex to explain.

      Reply
  10. Robert

    Jun 3, 2024

    The best part was
    “they ran out of runway.”

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Jun 3, 2024

      I couldn’t think of better phrasing.

      Reply
  11. Derek

    Jun 3, 2024

    Don’t forget, an R at the end of the product model number is reconditioned/refurbished.

    DCS356D1R would be the reconditioned/refurbished multi-tool kit

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Jun 3, 2024

      Good point – thanks!

      Reply
  12. Barilla

    Jun 4, 2024

    Great job 🙂
    You missed one thing though – “NT” at the end means the tool is bundled with a TSTAK case but no batteries or charger 🙂

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Jun 4, 2024

      Thanks!

      I don’t think I’ve seen any tool plus Tstak bundles in the USA, tool-only or otherwise.

      Reply
  13. loup68

    Jun 10, 2024

    Stuart, any chance that you could help us out on deciphering the Dewalt battery codes? Lou.

    Reply
  14. Dennis

    Nov 15, 2024

    While I am late to the party… Thank you for doing this.

    I am tired on my mess of 18v & 20v tools. With the exception of my DCD950, I’m planning on switching out my Porter Cable 1800 kit, B&D string trimmer and hedge trimmer for DeWalt 20v solutions. I built a list of DeWalt replacements and spend a bunch of time deciphering what the model numbers mean. Your work blows away what I did by a wide margin.

    Again, Thanks!!

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Nov 15, 2024

      Glad to help!!

      Reply

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