I'm more of a D-handle guy as it saves me a bunch of $$ and weight but from a performance perspective I was expecting a bigger gap from this Fuel and the D-handle Brushless non-Fuel you tested in the last episode.
I would have expected as much also, but if you look at the specs there isn’t a much gap in impact force and bpm. Maybe the fuel has better run time? I wouldn’t expect huge difference in sds drills in this class. Sds max will probably have bigger gaps.
It probably wants you to have the chuck in the vertical position. Probably easier to do with a bit in it.
Amazing review! Thank you!
I have this, and that's a common issue on this tool. Annoying but i don't really use chipping mode on this. For chipping use a D handle.
1st! I have that. It’s a beast
How does the knob settings work.
I'm more of a D-handle guy as it saves me a bunch of $$ and weight but from a performance perspective I was expecting a bigger gap from this Fuel and the D-handle Brushless non-Fuel you tested in the last episode.
I would have expected as much also, but if you look at the specs there isn’t a much gap in impact force and bpm. Maybe the fuel has better run time?
I wouldn’t expect huge difference in sds drills in this class. Sds max will probably have bigger gaps.
I've just bought one and mine does the same
What’s better Flex or Milwaukee rotary
Milwaukee
How come this says 1 inch. What actual shank size do you need for it?
It's called a SDS plus bit. It's widely used in the industry along with sds max bits
1 inch means you can only put up to a 1 inch solid concrete bit on it. But you can put larger "core" bits on it and go larger