Tools

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Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,000
13,484
126
www.anyf.ca
A REAL hammer drill. Not the standard hand drill that has a hammer drill switch, but an actual hammer drill, that looks like an assault weapon and uses locking bits. (in my case SDS bits)



This particular one has a regular rotary function, hammer function and hammer drill function. It packs much more power than a typical regular drill that has hammer drill function.

With my dewalt "hammer drill" it would take about 10 minutes to make a single hole in concrete, with lots of bit slipping and having to constantly readjust. With this drill? about maybe 10 seconds. It really goes through brick and concrete like it was butter. For the few jobs I had to use it for it was worth every penny. I put in 2 5" holes on the side of the house to put in some vents for my server room, it took less time to make those 2 holes than it took to make 1 4" hole a year before for the bathroom fan.

Any time I need to make a hole in concrete or brick I don't cringe at it anymore, I actually look forward to using this drill.

Speaking of making holes in concrete, a typical scenario is to put in a tapcon. I don't care what tools you have tapcons can be a pain in the ass, sometimes they go in right, sometimes they go in loose, sometimes they break half way through... I hate them.

Forget tapcons, make a hole, stick a couple pieces of rebar wire, take a framing nail and ensure it can't be put in by hand, and nail it in with a hammer. It aint going to move. Of course if you need to be able to remove it in the future, such as a hose faucet I'd stick with the tapcons...

On similar note, these are also nice for bolting down bigger things like server racks:

 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
A REAL hammer drill. Not the standard hand drill that has a hammer drill switch, but an actual hammer drill, that looks like an assault weapon and uses locking bits. (in my case SDS bits)



This particular one has a regular rotary function, hammer function and hammer drill function. It packs much more power than a typical regular drill that has hammer drill function.

With my dewalt "hammer drill" it would take about 10 minutes to make a single hole in concrete, with lots of bit slipping and having to constantly readjust. With this drill? about maybe 10 seconds. It really goes through brick and concrete like it was butter. For the few jobs I had to use it for it was worth every penny. I put in 2 5" holes on the side of the house to put in some vents for my server room, it took less time to make those 2 holes than it took to make 1 4" hole a year before for the bathroom fan.

Any time I need to make a hole in concrete or brick I don't cringe at it anymore, I actually look forward to using this drill.

Speaking of making holes in concrete, a typical scenario is to put in a tapcon. I don't care what tools you have tapcons can be a pain in the ass, sometimes they go in right, sometimes they go in loose, sometimes they break half way through... I hate them.

Forget tapcons, make a hole, stick a couple pieces of rebar wire, take a framing nail and ensure it can't be put in by hand, and nail it in with a hammer. It aint going to move. Of course if you need to be able to remove it in the future, such as a hose faucet I'd stick with the tapcons...

On similar note, these are also nice for bolting down bigger things like server racks:


i think you use the wrong tools for the job...
 

Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
21,882
6,250
136
You're confusing a hammer drill with a roto hammer, two different tools. Hammer drill is for drilling small holes into hard material, a roto hammer is for drilling large holes into concrete. I have 3 or 4 different roto hammers, and a surprising assortment of bits. The longest is a 3/4" bit that's 5' long. We sometimes have to drill through a subfloor and short pony wall to reach the stem wall, then have to drill 15" into that. It's a pain in the ass. I have another bit that's just for driving ground rods, that thing is a life saver.
 

MongGrel

Lifer
Dec 3, 2013
38,466
3,067
121
One of the biggest advantages of being a Tool and Diemaker I guess is if I don't own something, the shop has something I can borrow, or one of the other guys owns one
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
One of the biggest advantages of being a Tool and Diemaker I guess is if I don't own something, the shop has something I can borrow, or one of the other guys owns one

Which reminds me...taps and dies are epic to have.
 

MongGrel

Lifer
Dec 3, 2013
38,466
3,067
121
So is having access to several 5 axis HAAS VMC's and Lathes and MasterCam, but those are normally reserved for work oriented things.

 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,000
13,484
126
www.anyf.ca
You're confusing a hammer drill with a roto hammer, two different tools. Hammer drill is for drilling small holes into hard material, a roto hammer is for drilling large holes into concrete. I have 3 or 4 different roto hammers, and a surprising assortment of bits. The longest is a 3/4" bit that's 5' long. We sometimes have to drill through a subfloor and short pony wall to reach the stem wall, then have to drill 15" into that. It's a pain in the ass. I have another bit that's just for driving ground rods, that thing is a life saver.

That's just minor technicalities.... whatever you want to call it that Bosh tool is a life saver when I need to make a hole in concrete in a short amount of time.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
That's just minor technicalities.... whatever you want to call it that Bosh tool is a life saver when I need to make a hole in concrete in a short amount of time.

a chisel and hammer can do it faster than trying to bore 4-5" holes in concrete with a cheap tool.
 

Humpy

Diamond Member
Mar 3, 2011
4,464
596
126
That's just minor technicalities.... whatever you want to call it that Bosh tool is a life saver when I need to make a hole in concrete in a short amount of time.

The one you have is the perfect compromise between sizes, good choice. It has a good range where it will easily drill up to the 3/4" or so, probably the biggest you will ever need, and it is light enough to use in tight spaces. In a pinch, with an easy touch, it will make small holes in brick and tile.

The vast majority of people will never need to cut a 5" hole in concrete and it would be absurd for most to own a tool capable of that. I don't know why it was mentioned. Even most general contractors doing commercial work sub that out to sawing and coring companies.
 

imagoon

Diamond Member
Feb 19, 2003
5,199
0
0
Not sure if this counts but:

7500 watt heater for the garage. Mostly because it makes all of my tools much more useful for an extra 4-5 months of the year when my fingers don't freeze to them.

Any recommendations on the digital calipers mentioned above?
 

stormkroe

Golden Member
May 28, 2011
1,550
97
91
You're confusing a hammer drill with a roto hammer, two different tools. Hammer drill is for drilling small holes into hard material, a roto hammer is for drilling large holes into concrete. I have 3 or 4 different roto hammers, and a surprising assortment of bits. The longest is a 3/4" bit that's 5' long. We sometimes have to drill through a subfloor and short pony wall to reach the stem wall, then have to drill 15" into that. It's a pain in the ass. I have another bit that's just for driving ground rods, that thing is a life saver.
I got this puppy a while back

It's been awesome for setting parking pedistals and getting conduit through block and concrete. I have a 1-3/4" bit for it and it drives right through.
Have you ever had the cup of your ground rod driving it vibrate up off the rod? Almost kills me every time as I try to keep from falling to my death with a 20 lb drill suddenly unsupported.
 

Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
21,882
6,250
136
I got this puppy a while back

It's been awesome for setting parking pedistals and getting conduit through block and concrete. I have a 1-3/4" bit for it and it drives right through.
Have you ever had the cup of your ground rod driving it vibrate up off the rod? Almost kills me every time as I try to keep from falling to my death with a 20 lb drill suddenly unsupported.

That looks like the same model I have.
The DeWalt roto hammers are awesome, it took 6 or 7 years to beat my first one to death, the second one just died a couple weeks back. Looks like it needs a bearing and a new armature. The thing was completely packed with dirt when we pulled it appart.
I'm trying to decide if I want to rebuild the old one or get a new one. A rebuild would be cheaper, but a new one will be shiny. Shiny counts.
 

MongGrel

Lifer
Dec 3, 2013
38,466
3,067
121
Not sure if this counts but:

7500 watt heater for the garage. Mostly because it makes all of my tools much more useful for an extra 4-5 months of the year when my fingers don't freeze to them.

Any recommendations on the digital calipers mentioned above?

Not sure which digital calipers were mentioned, I didn't see any.

Insize are as good as anything these days for those for the price, I'd have to say.

http://insize-usa.com/

Not as durable as Starret or Mitotoyu or Brown and Sharpe, but for being accurate and low priced they are good.

I wasn't honestly surprised the first time I used a set, they are very good.

http://insize-usa.com/digital-caliper-0-150mm-0-6in-range-0-01mm-0-0005in-reading-968.html

Not sure what I'd really want a panavise for at home personally, I'd rather have a standard bench vise personally.

Depends what your doing I guess.
 
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alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
Depends what your doing I guess.

Pretty much this. Just like some have no use for a table saw, but use their Radial arm all the time.

I am selling my table saw, as I used it only one time and don't forsee a need I can't do without my sliding miter and circular saw with a jig.
 

edro

Lifer
Apr 5, 2002
24,326
68
91
I have the iGaging digital calipers. They are the best of the low end models. I love them for the price.
 

MongGrel

Lifer
Dec 3, 2013
38,466
3,067
121
There a couple sets of those laying around the shop.

You don't general trust calipers for closer than .001 to begin with.

I'd still say the Insize for low end, but to each his own.
 

Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
21,882
6,250
136
With all the laws and idiots hurting themselves they might not.

There is major Table Saw changes coming too.

Some table saws already have the instant stop meat sensor, though it doesn't seem to be offered on portable units.
Radial arm saws never seemed to be all that accurate to me, though it could be that I've just never used a good one.
I use a Bosh portable because portable is what it's all about for me. It's good enough for paint grade work, not something you'd use for building cabinets.
 
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