I don't get why these kind of tools (rotary hammers) exist.
It's "bosch blue" so supposedly "professional" but then it's described as "entry level" tool with only 650W and 2 Joule of energy?
Professional entry level tools?
Additionally it's like 150 bucks (for me, locally) while for 190 bucks you can get a Metabo UHEV 2660-2 with 800W and 2.8 Joule which also has a swappable chuck so it can fully replace a heavy duty corded drill for drilling wood and metal and also mixing paint or concrete.
Me personally I got the 2860-2 for 220 bucks which is like the 2660-2 just bigger motor with 1100W and 3,2J.
Excellent home gamer tool for occasional use, covers a ton of use cases and does all of them well. Not that it wouldn't last in a professional environment, I could see an electrician using one of those, most of the slits you cut with a slit saw anyways and then the hammer is for drilling outlets and finishing off corners.
The green one is 550W 1.7J, the blue one gets you the better warranty, better casing and a bit more power for €120 instead of €90, while the metabo is €210. Fine for the handyman that works in euro soft brick houses (like me, I’m not OP btw) where putting up a wall lamp or picture frame requires a hammer drill, but never a strong one
You can say a lot about Bosch tools but their classes are pretty okay imo
nobody needs more than 500W on a pistol grip drill, thats enough for 16mm holes in stainless. Rotary hammer is a meme feature they add for up sell value
cant drill anything remotely hard while adding a ton of weight and chuck run out. >requires a hammer drill >ytong home
for that workload realistically you could make do with a piece of rebar and a two pound hammer. Probably faster too
>I don't get why these kind of tools (rotary hammers) exist.
In ironworking, we use these to drill through concrete and cinderblock for our anchor bolts
i bought pretty sure this exact model solely for drilling in masonry. first sds, 7? years in. pretty happy with it.
mine came with sds and jacobs chuck in the box. quickchange
nobody needs more than 500W on a pistol grip drill, thats enough for 16mm holes in stainless. Rotary hammer is a meme feature they add for up sell value
cant drill anything remotely hard while adding a ton of weight and chuck run out. >requires a hammer drill >ytong home
for that workload realistically you could make do with a piece of rebar and a two pound hammer. Probably faster too
>Rotary hammer is a meme feature they add for up sell value
retard post
OP here. can you have a listen and say if this is a normal sound? there seems to be a buzz when the trigger is quarterly pressed. the drill does not rotate at this level or pressure but there's a buzz.
if you want to listen
https://vocaroo.com/1nLhK6LLtZ36
I'd rather hype you on that Hilti backpack crane that's meant to level out heavy tools the way a camera gimbal does.
na'ah. i want a blue popsicle.
so you can use them while running?
What about the Hilti exoskeleton?
I don't get why these kind of tools (rotary hammers) exist.
It's "bosch blue" so supposedly "professional" but then it's described as "entry level" tool with only 650W and 2 Joule of energy?
Professional entry level tools?
Additionally it's like 150 bucks (for me, locally) while for 190 bucks you can get a Metabo UHEV 2660-2 with 800W and 2.8 Joule which also has a swappable chuck so it can fully replace a heavy duty corded drill for drilling wood and metal and also mixing paint or concrete.
Me personally I got the 2860-2 for 220 bucks which is like the 2660-2 just bigger motor with 1100W and 3,2J.
Excellent home gamer tool for occasional use, covers a ton of use cases and does all of them well. Not that it wouldn't last in a professional environment, I could see an electrician using one of those, most of the slits you cut with a slit saw anyways and then the hammer is for drilling outlets and finishing off corners.
> what is an entry level professional tool
The green one is 550W 1.7J, the blue one gets you the better warranty, better casing and a bit more power for €120 instead of €90, while the metabo is €210. Fine for the handyman that works in euro soft brick houses (like me, I’m not OP btw) where putting up a wall lamp or picture frame requires a hammer drill, but never a strong one
You can say a lot about Bosch tools but their classes are pretty okay imo
nobody needs more than 500W on a pistol grip drill, thats enough for 16mm holes in stainless. Rotary hammer is a meme feature they add for up sell value
cant drill anything remotely hard while adding a ton of weight and chuck run out.
>requires a hammer drill
>ytong home
for that workload realistically you could make do with a piece of rebar and a two pound hammer. Probably faster too
>I don't get why these kind of tools (rotary hammers) exist.
In ironworking, we use these to drill through concrete and cinderblock for our anchor bolts
Are you me from 18 years ago? If so things turn out pretty good man.
i bought pretty sure this exact model solely for drilling in masonry. first sds, 7? years in. pretty happy with it.
mine came with sds and jacobs chuck in the box. quickchange
>Rotary hammer is a meme feature they add for up sell value
retard post
>limpwrist
its great, you can get away with 1 less mexican on your crew so it takes twice as long to be stolen
OP here. can you have a listen and say if this is a normal sound? there seems to be a buzz when the trigger is quarterly pressed. the drill does not rotate at this level or pressure but there's a buzz.
if you want to listen
https://vocaroo.com/1nLhK6LLtZ36
you'll hear a buzz before the drill starts.
Lol
The truth is building shit and knowing how to work with your hands is for the poor.
If I did better in my masters program and got all As instead of Cs I’d be doing more than cutting metal for rich fucks who pretend to be super heroes
idfk. ebay 11224vsr $65
save your money