Jiggsaw has a great cordless drill that is easy to use and produces plenty of power.
Black and Decker make several drills that can be used both with and without a cord.
Almost every city in north America has a specialised battery store. I would look for that in or near your home.
To supply the power to the drill.
No- different materials, different functions. Wet cell batteries are USUALLY storage batteries- they are recharged. Dry cell batteries are USUALLY supply batteries- a chemical reaction produces electrical power. When chemical are used up, the battery stops producing power, and cannot be recharged. The battery in most cars is a wet cell, batteries in most flashlights is a dry cell.
Depending on the system the excess can either be stored in batteries or depending on the country sold back into the "grid" if the producer is "on the grid"
Mainly that one is a drill, and the other, a screwdriver.
SOME Power Drills are made that can do both but not all power drills will do this - you need to read the instructions for the drill.
A compressed air drill is commonly referred to as an "air drill" or "pneumatic drill." It is a type of power tool that uses compressed air to power its drilling operation.
The only difference between a battery drill and a regular drill is the type of power source. A battery drill is one that does not require a power cord, but can only last a finite amount of time.
It's double A batteries.
anything that electrical that says ''takes batteries'' on it