It's not meant to just turn it off with just the air hammer. It's designed for rusted and stuck bolts. You have to put pressure on the wrench at the same time you are hammering on it with the air hammer. It'll rattle the rust and corrosion loose.
@@starastronomerwhere was the rusted bolt. It’s only for breaking rust nothing else. It doesn’t assist in unthreading. Try it on a salt rusted suspension bolt that you would break the head off otherwise
It seems it's more usefull for rusty bolts you're worried about breaking I've used an airhammer and box wrench at the same time and worked great without breaking a single bolt I don't see this wouldn't do the same
I think the air hammer shocks work for breaking up adhesion of rust and salts from corrosion and electrolysis. I love my air hammer for upsetting anything corroded together. There may be no benefit to using a pneumatic bolt breaker on clean parts. I think if people purchase one as a substitute for an impact wrench, they may be under the wrong impression of what the tool is intended for. Perhaps it may be the fault of over aggressive marketing claims. I like your videos keep them up!
In the video it didn’t seem as though you were trying to turn wrench while hammering. They are only designed to hammer the bolt while you use the wrench to turn it.
My air hammer is impossible to control with one hand the way you do in this video. If you’re able to easily control the hammer with one hand, I have to wonder how hard the hammer is actually hitting.
@@starastronomer I'm sure it is. My point is that the hammer blows aren't landing as hard as they should be because the hammer isn't being held VERY firmly against the object being struck.
It's not meant to just turn it off with just the air hammer. It's designed for rusted and stuck bolts. You have to put pressure on the wrench at the same time you are hammering on it with the air hammer. It'll rattle the rust and corrosion loose.
Did you watch the entire video @dominicreynolds8238? That's exactly what I did and stated it also.
@@starastronomerwhere was the rusted bolt. It’s only for breaking rust nothing else. It doesn’t assist in unthreading. Try it on a salt rusted suspension bolt that you would break the head off otherwise
It seems it's more usefull for rusty bolts you're worried about breaking I've used an airhammer and box wrench at the same time and worked great without breaking a single bolt I don't see this wouldn't do the same
I think the air hammer shocks work for breaking up adhesion of rust and salts from corrosion and electrolysis. I love my air hammer for upsetting anything corroded together. There may be no benefit to using a pneumatic bolt breaker on clean parts. I think if people purchase one as a substitute for an impact wrench, they may be under the wrong impression of what the tool is intended for. Perhaps it may be the fault of over aggressive marketing claims. I like your videos keep them up!
Thank you so much! Glad you like my videos 📹
is it not for rusted fasteners?
In the video it didn’t seem as though you were trying to turn wrench while hammering. They are only designed to hammer the bolt while you use the wrench to turn it.
Yes, I was as stated in the video.
My air hammer is impossible to control with one hand the way you do in this video. If you’re able to easily control the hammer with one hand, I have to wonder how hard the hammer is actually hitting.
As stated in the video this is a Snap-On hammer. It is a long stroke and very powerful.
@@starastronomer I'm sure it is. My point is that the hammer blows aren't landing as hard as they should be because the hammer isn't being held VERY firmly against the object being struck.
Its meant to break rust not perfect normal bolts. Of course and impact gun in this situation will work better
that doesnt make sense if you can break the bolt just by hand but not using the shake and break pluse your hand....