I want to start making twisted 26g and have a drill for around the house.
The "
for around the house" should be the only factor in buying up from a Black and Decker or Harbor Freight drill if you only intend to use the drill for twisted wire coil. The Clapton is another matter, I wont say because of battery life it's more of an RPM, the Harbor Freight drill is 900rpm some of the cheaper Black and Decker drills are only around 500rpm and the Clapton is easier at higher RPM's once you get use to it.
I did buy the Harbor Freight drill and I do make Claptons using it, heck it was $16 but I have Dewalt for working around the house and my chuck on my Dewalt doesn't close all the way down to grab the small wires where the Harbor Freight does. The down side of the Harbor Freight drill is the Forward/Reverse switch isn't the easiest to move back and forth and I would put it on par with the Ryobi drills switch, the trigger is pretty smooth and easy to control rpm.
Now if I was going to step up because of the "for around the house" I would go with the Porter Cable 20v drill. I bought a set of these tools for my son and when I first handled them I was thinking there is no way these are going to take a beating and last,
I was wrong. I work construction and use company owned tools all day long and own Dewalts myself but the Porter Cable has held up to everything I have thrown at them with ease. The Porter Cable are lighter than the Dewalts also, batteries have very good life with even the 1.5ah batteries it comes with (it comes with two of these batteries) or you can buy the optional 4ah battery. The drill is 0-1600RPM. The batteries recharge fast with the charger it comes with.
My two cents and I have used Ryobi, Dewalt, Black and Decker, Porter Cable, Hilti (POS, I hate this SOB with a blinding white hot passion), milwaukee, Bosch, Craftsman, Ridgid, Mikita and the list goes on.