SDS is definitely the way to go. I have the smaller Bosch model 11224 VSR and have used it a lot. It is great for drilling holes in concrete for anchoring equipment. It has enough power that drilling a 5/8" hole for 1/2" anchors takes no time at all.
On that red Milwaukee chuck, make sure you tighten it up using all three chuck key guide holes to tighten it up in a uniform manner. It works much better when you do.
You have real experience and have conveyed what matters so thats useful. A small tip is to pre-arrange all the drills upfront rather than boxing-unboxing so that the video is crisp and short and for better focus on the main content. Overall thumbs-up for the content
Very useful video. You said you wished normal drills had SDS chucks - can’t you just use one of these for all your drilling? All the SDS drills I’ve looked at had the ability to turn off the hammering.
Thanks, Hi, yes you can turn off the hammering and use it like a normal drill, but you would then be using normal drill bits not SDS. From what I can find SDS bits are only for masonry/concrete.
4:09 do you not know how to lock your chuck? Once you’ve ratcheted the chuck on the bit as tight as you can turn it slightly in the loosening direction. You will hear one click and the chuck is locked. The chuck will not loosen, your bit will not slip. All modern corded and cordless drill operate like this. I’ve seen guys with decades of experience not know this, and I recently learned that myself. But let me tell you it’s life changing.
Wrong! What you are suggesting has been proven false. The bits are not secured more by clicking once to the opposite direction. There was a recent video out where the chick manufacturers have proved this wrong.
“I need to drill a lot of holes in concrete…”
… I’m so sorry my friend
On your “I wish all drills had this type of bit” point
That is one of the many reasons why I fucking love impact drivers
SDS is definitely the way to go. I have the smaller Bosch model 11224 VSR and have used it a lot. It is great for drilling holes in concrete for anchoring equipment. It has enough power that drilling a 5/8" hole for 1/2" anchors takes no time at all.
Yep 110% SDS is awesome!
On that red Milwaukee chuck, make sure you tighten it up using all three chuck key guide holes to tighten it up in a uniform manner. It works much better when you do.
Good comparison, thanks
Thanks for watching!
You have real experience and have conveyed what matters so thats useful.
A small tip is to pre-arrange all the drills upfront rather than boxing-unboxing so that the video is crisp and short and for better focus on the main content. Overall thumbs-up for the content
Thanks! Yeah I’m definitely new to this....lol hopefully I get better.
thanks. most informative
No problem, Thanks For Watching!
Very useful video.
You said you wished normal drills had SDS chucks - can’t you just use one of these for all your drilling? All the SDS drills I’ve looked at had the ability to turn off the hammering.
Thanks,
Hi, yes you can turn off the hammering and use it like a normal drill, but you would then be using normal drill bits not SDS. From what I can find SDS bits are only for masonry/concrete.
No practical video with all 3 drills?
you dont have to grase those?
Yeah SDS needs to be greased.
@@Tools-Tested I see thank you, I thought all would have the open disc on top.
Not one, but TWO fifteen second, un-skippable pre-roll ads? Wtf
Not the CZcamsrs fault buddy
4:09 do you not know how to lock your chuck? Once you’ve ratcheted the chuck on the bit as tight as you can turn it slightly in the loosening direction. You will hear one click and the chuck is locked. The chuck will not loosen, your bit will not slip. All modern corded and cordless drill operate like this. I’ve seen guys with decades of experience not know this, and I recently learned that myself. But let me tell you it’s life changing.
Yeah sadly l recently learned this… I probably should make a video about it.
@@Tools-Tested it’s like they expect to read the instructions or something lol
@@clone1137 Lol I tend to read them more often the older I get.
Wrong! What you are suggesting has been proven false. The bits are not secured more by clicking once to the opposite direction. There was a recent video out where the chick manufacturers have proved this wrong.
@@Tools-Tested You've been doing it correctly all along. What clone 1137 has suggested is totally incorrect.