Worx More Power Tools
Worx more power tools cover the extra site and workshop kit that keeps jobs moving, from inflating and cooling to spraying, blowing and polishing.
These are the bits you end up needing once the main cutting and drilling is done. Worx specialist tools suit clean-up, finishing, setup and maintenance jobs where standard power tools are no help. If you're already on the Worx battery platform, adding these worx additional tools makes sense for quicker site support, van stock and tidy handovers. You can also break the range down by job with Worx Blowers & Vacuums, Worx Fans, Worx Inflators & Pumps, Worx Paint Sprayers and Worx Polishers. Have a proper look and pick the kit that saves time on the jobs the main range does not cover.
What Are Worx More Power Tools Used For?
- Clearing up after cutting, sanding and general fitting work is easier with blowers and vacs that shift loose dust, leaves and site muck before handover or before loading back into the van.
- Inflating tyres, air beds, pipe bungs, paddling pools or site equipment saves dragging out a mains compressor when you only need quick pressure on a service call or around the yard.
- Cooling down stuffy work areas, cabins and loft spaces with portable fans makes long summer shifts more bearable when there is no fixed ventilation and the air is just sitting there.
- Spraying fences, sheds, doors and other large surfaces helps get coatings on quicker and more evenly than brushing everything by hand, especially on repeat maintenance jobs.
- Polishing painted panels, vehicles and finished surfaces is handy for detail work, valeting and final clean-up where a rough wipe-down will not cut it.
Choosing the Right Worx More Power Tools
Match the tool to the support job you actually do most, not the one you might do once a year.
1. Start With the Job Type
If your main problem is dust, leaves or workshop mess, go straight to blowers or vacs. If you are topping up tyres, inflatables or small pressurised kit, an inflator is the better buy. For coatings and finish work, a sprayer or polisher will earn its keep quicker than another general tool.
2. Battery Platform Matters
If you already run Worx cordless kit, stick with compatible body only tools where it makes sense. That saves money and keeps charging simple. If this is your first step into worx specialist tools, check whether the kit comes with batteries and charger before you hit buy.
3. Think About Where It Will Be Used
For van work, service calls and quick punch-list jobs, compact cordless tools make more sense than anything bulky or mains led. If it is mostly yard, workshop or property work, you can afford to choose a larger unit with more output or longer runtime.
4. Do Not Overbuy on Output
A small inflator is fine for topping up tyres and site gear, but it is not there to replace a full compressor. Same with fans and blowers. Buy enough tool for the regular task, otherwise you will either waste money or end up with something too slow for the job.
Who Uses These Worx Additional Tools?
- Maintenance teams keep these on hand for the odd jobs that slow everything down, like blowing out plant rooms, inflating tyres or cooling down hot work areas during summer callouts.
- Decorators and property maintenance crews reach for Worx paint sprayers when they need to cover sheds, fencing and exterior timber faster than a brush will allow.
- Mobile fitters and van-based trades like these tools because they sort the support jobs around the main task, from tyre top-ups to clearing sawdust before signing a job off.
- Facilities teams, cleaners and handover crews use the more tools range for tidying, drying, moving air and getting finished areas looking presentable without hauling in bulkier kit.
The Basics: Understanding Worx More Power Tools
This part of the range is about support jobs rather than drilling, cutting or fixing. The simple way to sort it is by what problem on site or at the yard you are trying to solve.
1. Air Moving Tools
Fans, blowers and vacuums all deal with air, but for different outcomes. Fans keep air moving in hot or stale areas, blowers shift loose debris fast, and vacs collect the mess instead of just pushing it somewhere else.
2. Pressure and Inflation Tools
Inflators and pumps are there for quick pressure jobs without dragging out bigger equipment. They are useful when you need mobility, speed and enough control for tyres, inflatables and light site support work.
3. Finishing Tools
Sprayers and polishers are about finish quality and saving labour. A sprayer covers large areas faster and more evenly, while a polisher helps bring finished surfaces up properly when a cloth and elbow grease are not enough.
Accessories That Keep Worx Extra Tools Working
The right add-ons stop these tools becoming one-job wonders and save you getting caught short halfway through.
1. Spare Batteries
A spare battery is the obvious one if you are already on Worx cordless kit. You do not want your fan, inflator or blower dying when you are halfway through a callout or trying to finish a handover clean.
2. Chargers
Keeping a charger in the van or workshop saves the usual headache of robbing one from another kit box. It also means these extra tools are actually ready when you need them, not flat from last week.
3. Spray Attachments and Pots
For paint sprayers, extra pots and the right attachments make clean-outs quicker and help when you are switching between coatings without contaminating the finish.
4. Nozzles and Hoses
Inflators and pumps are only useful if the fitting matches the job. Keeping the right nozzles and hoses nearby saves bodging connections or finding out on site that the tool will not fit the valve you need.
Choose the Right Worx More Power Tools for the Job
Use this quick guide to sort the type you actually need.
| Your Job | Tool Type | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| Clearing dust, leaves and light site debris | Blower or Vacuum | Portable cordless use, decent airflow, easy emptying and quick clean-up around vans, patios and work areas. |
| Topping up tyres and inflatables on the move | Inflator or Pump | Compact size, readable pressure control, useful hose length and fittings that cover common valves. |
| Moving air in hot lofts, cabins or work zones | Fan | Stable base, cordless runtime, adjustable direction and enough output to shift stale air where you are working. |
| Covering fences, sheds and large painted surfaces | Paint Sprayer | Even spray pattern, manageable clean-down and a setup that suits the coating you are actually using. |
| Bringing up finished panels and painted surfaces | Polisher | Controlled speed, comfortable grip and pads suited to finish work rather than rough cutting back. |
Common Buying and Usage Mistakes
- Buying for the odd one-off job instead of the regular task usually leaves you with kit that sits in the van. Be honest about what slows you down most often and buy for that first.
- Assuming every tool comes with battery and charger catches plenty of buyers out. Check whether it is body only, otherwise the bargain turns into a tool you cannot use on arrival.
- Expecting small cordless inflators and fans to replace workshop gear leads to frustration. They are brilliant for mobile support work, but not a straight swap for full-size mains or compressor kit.
- Using the wrong attachments or nozzles wastes time and can spoil the result. Keep the correct fittings with the tool so you are not bodging tyres, spray patterns or hose connections on site.
- Skipping the clean-down on sprayers, polishers and vacs shortens tool life fast. A few minutes cleaning after use stops blockages, poor finish quality and worn parts later on.
Blowers vs Inflators vs Paint Sprayers
Blowers
Best when the problem is loose debris, sawdust, leaves or a quick tidy-up around the work area. They are fast and handy, but they move mess rather than collecting it, so they are not the answer where dust control matters.
Inflators
Best for mobile pressure jobs like tyres, inflatables and light site kit. They are compact and easy to keep in the van, but they are not made for running air tools or larger workshop air demands.
Paint Sprayers
Best when you need quick, even coverage over larger surfaces like fencing, sheds and doors. They save time over brushing, but they need the right prep and proper cleaning afterwards or they become more grief than help.
Fans
Best for making work areas more bearable and moving stale air in lofts, cabins and enclosed spaces. They improve comfort and airflow, but they are support kit rather than a substitute for proper extraction or ventilation systems.
Maintenance and Care
Clean After Each Use
Blowers, vacs, sprayers and polishers all work better when the dust, paint or residue is cleared off before it hardens or clogs. Leave it dirty and performance drops off quickly.
Look After Batteries Properly
Do not leave batteries flat in a cold van for weeks. Charge them sensibly, keep the contacts clean and store them dry if you want reliable runtime when the tool is needed in a hurry.
Check Hoses, Nozzles and Fittings
Inflators, pumps and sprayers rely on small parts doing their job properly. Split hoses, blocked nozzles or worn connectors make the tool slow, messy or useless, so inspect them before the next job.
Store It So It Does Not Get Knocked About
These support tools often get thrown in the van as an afterthought. Keep them boxed or tucked away properly so guards, switches and fittings are not smashed by heavier kit.
Replace Worn Consumables Before They Ruin the Job
Pads, filters and spray parts are cheaper than redoing poor finish work or fighting with weak airflow. If the tool is no longer doing its job cleanly, change the wear parts before blaming the machine.
Why Shop for Worx More Power Tools at ITS?
Whether you need fans, inflators, blowers, polishers or other Worx specialist tools, we stock the full worx more tools range in one place. It is all held in our own warehouse, ready for fast next day delivery, so you can get the right support kit on site without hanging about.
Worx More Power Tools FAQs
What other power tools does Worx make beyond the main ranges?
Worx makes a decent spread of extra kit beyond the usual drills and saws, including blowers, vacuums, fans, inflators, pumps, paint sprayers and polishers. It is the sort of gear that handles clean-up, airflow, inflation and finishing jobs that standard power tools do not touch.
Are Worx specialist tools compatible with the main battery system?
Many of them are, and that is one of the main reasons to buy into the range. That said, always check the individual product listing before ordering, because body only and kit options vary and compatibility is too important to assume.
What additional tools are available in the Worx range?
The additional tools side of the Worx range covers support and finishing kit rather than core cutting and fixing tools. Think air movers, inflation tools, surface prep and cleaning gear, plus sprayers and polishers for maintenance and handover jobs.
Does Worx make fans and inflators as well as power tools?
Yes, it does. That is exactly where this part of the range comes into its own, especially for van stock, warm site conditions, tyre top-ups and quick support jobs where dragging out bigger equipment would be a waste of time.
Are these Worx additional tools proper site kit or more for home and light work?
They are best looked at as practical support tools for real working use, especially mobile jobs, maintenance work and clean-up. They are handy, portable and useful, but you still need to match them to the workload instead of expecting a small cordless tool to replace bigger dedicated plant.
Is body only worth buying with Worx specialty power tools?
Yes, if you already own compatible Worx batteries and chargers. It is the sensible way to add more tools range coverage without paying twice for power you have already got. If you are starting from scratch, a kit can be the better shout.