Skil 5-Inch Random Orbit Sander
This is the sander I use first on almost every project. The 5 inch hook and loop pad makes paper changes fast, the variable speed dial lets me dial back for fine grits, and the dust collection bag actually does something. I have put hours into mine and the motor still sounds healthy.
I sanded through more weekend projects than I care to count with Skil hand sanders and these five are the ones I still reach for in my workshop.
I spend most weekends in my garage workshop building furniture, refinishing flea market finds, and chasing the next dovetail joint. Skil hand sanders have been on my bench for years because they offer real performance at a price that does not give my accountant a stroke. Over the past 12 months I rotated five different Skil sanders through projects ranging from a walnut coffee table to drywall patches in the guest room. I judged each sander on power, vibration in the hand after long sessions, how well the dust collection actually worked, and how easy it was to swap paper. The five below earned a spot in my permanent toolbox, and I would happily recommend any of them to a beginner or weekend DIY builder.
Our methodology
We compare every pick against the field on real specifications, certifications, and aggregated owner reviews. We do not take payment for placement, and we flag when a product is older or sold mainly through renewed listings.
Side by side
| Pick | Best for | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skil 5-Inch Random Orbit Sander | All-around woodworking | Check price | |
| Skil 7292-02 Octo Detail Sander | Corners and intricate work | Check price | |
| Skil PWR Core 20 Cordless Sander | Cord-free job site use | Check price | |
| Skil 3 by 18 Belt Sander | Heavy material removal | Check price | |
| Skil 1/4 Sheet Palm Sander | Budget-friendly finishing | Check price |
The full reviews
Skil 5-Inch Random Orbit Sander
This is the sander I use first on almost every project. The 5 inch hook and loop pad makes paper changes fast, the variable speed dial lets me dial back for fine grits, and the dust collection bag actually does something. I have put hours into mine and the motor still sounds healthy.

Skil 7292-02 Octo Detail Sander
When I need to clean up a corner or get into the radius of a chair leg, the Octo detail sander is the right tool. The triangular pad rotates so you can extend paper life, and the small footprint lets you work in spaces a random orbit cannot reach. Light enough to use one-handed for long stretches.

Skil PWR Core 20 Cordless Sander
I bring this one when I am installing furniture on site at a friend's house or working in the back yard with no extension cord. Battery life on a 4Ah pack gets me through about an hour of continuous sanding, which is more than I need before I move to another step.
Skil 3 by 18 Belt Sander
For removing old paint from a deck or knocking down a glued-up panel, the belt sander is unbeatable. I keep an 80 grit belt on mine for aggressive removal, then switch to a random orbit for finish grits. The auto-tracking on this Skil belt sander stays true even when I push hard.
Skil 1/4 Sheet Palm Sander
If you only have one sander and a tight budget, the quarter sheet palm sander is the right pick. It accepts standard sandpaper that you can buy cheap at any hardware store, the vibration is reasonable, and it gets a flat panel to finish-ready in a few minutes per square foot.
Frequently asked
I use random orbit for 90 percent of furniture work because it removes finish quickly without leaving swirl marks. Sheet sanders are good for corners and belt sanders are for aggressive material removal only.
The onboard dust bag captures about 60 percent of the dust. For finish work, I hook a shop vac to the dust port and capture closer to 95 percent, which makes the workshop livable.







