The companies I know that have a husqvarna demolition robot are really happy with them. Because what they said you can do the work from a 4 ton excavator with a 2 ton demolition robot at the size of 2 ton excavator without emissions. But I don't think this was made made for the American market where everything is big, but for the European market where almost everything is small and they have to work in confined spaces!! Note: I live in the Netherlands.
Yeah this looks like an useful tool for specific applications to me. It's going to be less universal than an similiar priced excavator, but it has its uses. Also good point that US market is different. For good example of that check out HIAB (truck-mounted crane) product line in europe and USA. Completely different products, and even completely different kind of product categories.
I work with both demolition and concrete cutting/core drilling as well as grinding concrete floors, and we have several of those robots in different sizes. They are just amazing, works good for bashing floors and walls with the hammer, or using the concrete crusher, but also works well when riping up old carpets and wood floors or loading out material with a bucket. But I must say those guys demoing them were completely useless, at least in showing what those machines really can do.
MrDarkwave666 could you potentially send me a video of you/your crew using one in whatever setting or job you normally use them for. Curious, not saying what you’ve said can’t be done. Tks
@@ericpurcell9984 I got a few jobs where brokk machines where used, they look similar in size and they are really good machines you have a lot of power on your attachement, it's for really specific works like demo inside buildings. We used it to remove stone flooring in a church and we really where happy with it.
There are cities like New York City where you’re not allowed to use heavy equipment for demolition over 2 stories. So they hand demo a sky scraper & use Demolition robots like this or a Brokk Robot to demolish the roof deck throw everything down the elevator shaft or lift full 20 yard dumpsters of concrete off of the skyscraper roof with a crane down to the street and then they drop the robot & skid steers down one floor with a crane cut up all the steel and move down a floor. Northstar Demolition sometimes gets up to $3 million a floor to hand demo it and do it that way in the city. They and others have done many 75 story buildings that way. There is a need for this type of unit, just not in your type of operation.
minimxnut This is exactly it. They wouldn’t be making these robots, spending insane amounts of money on R and D if there wasn’t a market for them. I don’t see why that’s so hard for some people to understand.
Landworks I agree 100%. People that don’t know anything about the Demolition business shouldn’t comment. We are a licensed AsBesto’s Abatement and demolition contractor in New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania and have been in business for 34 years.
Stan. I rented a walk-behind wacker last summer that had a compaction indicator. It was my first time compacting. I guess for about 5 seconds it was useful in teaching me what compacted ground feels like. Nice thing was that you could visually tell which areas were more compacted that others. I guess its only useful for a weekend warrior who's never handled a walk-behind.
Absolutely bullshit that Husky is first. Here in New Zealand In the mid 1990s Swedala Dynapac had compaction meters on their Deutz engined compactors. Not long after we have the German Weber Mt which has them .... ua-cam.com/video/84HC-U7082Q/v-deo.html
I have not seen the husqvarna machines in play but have done projects with a similar machine called a Brokk. They are worth every penny. The Brokk 150 has the most powerful breaker I have even seen on a machine and with zero operator fatigue. We put it on a roof to demolish concrete sawtooth frames over a high end data center where the high priority was to make sure the roof was water tight every night. One man broke all the concrete while the rest of the crew hauled it away. I’ve put one in an old elevator shaft and run them in buildings. They are a niche machine but they shine in specialty demolition. The concrete nibbler was perfect to remove an old concrete structure where excessive noise and vibration was problematic so the ability to break with out the hammering of a typical breaker was more imply than speed. The problem is when you have a guy who has never seen a construction site trying to rep construction equipment. Poor kid had no clue what he was doing or talking about!
@Tony Humbert yes I get that but he should have been a little more specific he never said that in general he just automatically assumed people would know. And I found it pretty funny that he said Husqvarna doesn't make two stroke engines anymore and then boom the next clip is a 2-stroke engine lol
he said “we dont make a two stroke” specifically talking about jumping jacks. and its a honda motor aswell he said. you are reading too far into that statement
If Husqvarna don't let you film at any of their booths again I would be pissed they all know by now that you are a very honest person when it comes to honest reviews and that's what the industry loves about you man you don't hold back had to come back and watch this one one more time LOL always good stuff👍👍👍👊👊✊✊
Great video. About the robot, sure I agree it is very expensive. But I think there are many applications where it can do better than excavators. Also, Husqvarna canbe pretty expensive but you also get quality. Hell, I have a very old and very used chainsaw from them that I love. It justt keeps on going and cutting trees like it was brand new. And it keeps starting SO easy, it's starting better than most other brands I have tried and it starts just as easy no matter if it is cold or hot outside. But yeah, I can agree that the demonstration of the robot didn't exactly make it look its best. But I think you'll be fine and not be banned.
I have personally used the Husqvarna HYDRAULIC version of the Ring saw, and let me tell you it takes you longer to go rent the saw and return it then it does to cut an egress window there is no other tool that I will use to cut egress windows from this point forward.
I am a big fan of Husky tools. That double bladed chasing saw is the duck's ....s. I was impressed with that ring saw too for the depth of cut available, but I have never used a ring saw to compare . Peck, peck, pecker robot would come into its own inside a building with high hazzrads, say radiation, chemical fumes, etc. That hands-off Whacker-Packer would be easy on the arms too and probably wouldn't run away like the ones we have at work. Keep up these excelent videos. ( Your wife seemed to be enjoying the demonstration day too. She should be making more appearances so we don't have to listen to you so much......)
165000 dollars for that excavator! 5 men with large sledgehammers are 10 times faster, they say time is money so avoid that machine you guys in the concrete world if you want a paycheck. Nice idea but bad margins they won’t sell it is my opinion
After watching this and thinking about it for a while I have made my opinion. The representatives are not familiar with equipment. Probably a last-minute standin. Electric with remote control, should be good for interior and types of hazardous work. Where you can't get an excavator in due to exhaust, size, or risk to operator.
That excavator is definitely a specialty tool for commercial and industrial applications when clients have specific requests or certain limitations on the job. I also agree i don’t think that operator had much experience to really tear apart the block quickly. but ive never had the opportunity to run one or see one run.
I run a dxr300 it is a beast of a machine. And yes when the rep mentioned the frequency of the beats per minute destroys concrete he is not lying. The crusher jaw is kinda lame and is alittle slow paced but rarely used. It will drag isn’t self around a job due to the weight but it is kept low as they can so it can be taken up freight elevators. We have taken the arm off and pushed the unit in 2 pieces though hospitals for demo work. It is great an has it uses.
I have seen these kind of machines in several restauration jobs here in Sweden. They are so small that they can be used inside old forts and castles to clear up old rooms or pathways that are hazardous.
that's my whole beef I would like to see the tool in real world application. that's what I try to do with my videos. you get something on a job and it like. realy I paid this for that. . I love husqvarna stuff . but there is some things that they need to pay attention to. it's good to keep big companies on there feet literally.. husqvarna you got to hand it to them they realy like to make the best thats out there. that's where we come into play. lol. good job. I love anything husqvarna.
That little remote excavator demo bot thing is probably geared more towards European markets where human labor is more expensive and safety standards are even higher than in the US so any time companies have a shot at minimizing human involvement and exposure and risk, it makes more sense to them to do than for US companies.
I really like this typs of machines for indoor use. You don't have the exhaust fumes and all it's nice and small so you can get into corners. It's a specialized machine and should be advertised as such. 160k is a bit much but for the right job it's propably worth it. Maybe you look at companies like Wacker-Neuson who specialize in this type of equipment.
Stan I would love to see a comparison of the asv with a kubota. The dealer around me sells those two. From what I hear a lot kubota is the top of the chain. Would love to see these two side by side
Yeah I actually run the DXR at work and yes it is a monster and this guy is just being extremely slow. And yes the hydro hose and grease lines are in a awful spot! But you can get this thing through man doors and up stairs. Great piece of equipment for tight spaces or where you don’t need fumes. We busted a 14’x8’x7’ wall with Ibeams in about 9 hours.
I used it on a very intricate demo job, sent to us as a demo promotion thankfully!!! If I kept on rental it would have cost about 10 k a week! Bottom line is you need to be a video game freak to run the controls or have at least 3 day’s of practice with an instructor. We had a hammer attachment on ours up on the third floor of a heavily bricked commercial building with neighboring residential properties extremely close to us, and if the boom was to the side and you changed the control format and accidentally touched the outrigger controls it would want to tip over!! Scary!! I sent it back and continued by hand I have a video that I can try to send along with this reply
The Cut and break is a great tool for installing basement windows. But installing basement windows sucks, because you have to put up with the noise, the smell of the exhaust, all the water or the dust. That Ring saw, I didn’t know they sold in the US. But I have to say the concrete chainsaw have to be my favorite, never used it but the concept is so cool
We demolished the upper 6 floors of a tower building with two of these machines. We put them up with a crane and they slowly chew up the floors from top to down as long as high reach demolition machines could reach up. They are wonderful pieces of equipment.
Hey Stan, Can you do a video on Shorewalls? Water is going up most places, especially here in Ontario Canada. Lots of potential repair work this summer. Cant find a good video anywhere! Thanks
The ring saw is good but my experience is the gas will spin the drive wheel. The drive wheel is the week point you can't force it. Husqvarna bought out Partner. I prefer the PP65 HF demo, ring,chain, Core drill.
I had all Dewalt about 5 or 6 years ago and used a buddy's Milwaukee tools and the very next day went and bought all Milwaukee tools and gave away my Dewalt tools that didn't sell fast.
I would have expected more from the RC Demovator a good operator can make a difference but that was painfully slow. I watched a Brokk on a job and the operator let me run it. The Brokk was much faster and felt like I was running a much more powerful machine. And yes make a video on the DeWalt tools
Love this guys house... as far as the demo robots - find another machine that will fit inside a freight elevator.. big advantage for cities. The price is the price I’m sure - simply cause they dont many and it would be hard to to replace what they might be able to do for some situations. The operator is probably also going slow from inexperience and also trying to make his barrier last as long as possible.
Well he sent in his milwaukee radio 3 times got it back quick. I sent in a tool 3 times . The first time waited 3 months second time same tool 5 months and the 3rd time waited 6 months and called them never got it and they said I should have gotten it . I asked what address did they send it to ? They said to New York. Hell they had my address and I live inLA . So finally got a new one 3 weeks after I had called them .i love the milwaukee tools but there coustmer service needs a lot of work oh did I say they need a lot a lot of work wew a lot of work .
@@conmanumber1 Haha... I had all Stihl and Husqvarna chainsaws and a salesman convinced me to buy a Dolmar that was about 25% cheaper so I gave it a shot and sold all my other saws and replaced them all with Dolmar's. Haven't been happier since switching but really prefer the even numbered saws like the 7300 instead of the newer 7310 ext... And the little 5105 just blows my mind for the amount of power in such a small package.
@@clydeacor1911 i was hard up with no cash. I saw this Makita - Dolmar German built DCS 9010 which did 20 hrs on national equivilent to ebay and bidding ends at 2.00 a.m. it ended without any bid and i got it at $700.00 N.Zd which was a bargain. Prior to that time i also out of desperation charged up on my trade acct a Ea7900 the next saw down so i ended with the top 2 biggest Makita - Dolmars. The 9010 is a well built solid workhorse, the 7900 is a very smooth runner which sings. The dealer aint run a fancy shop like Stihl and Husky which has to pay for franchise fees, signage, uniforms and also have to buy fill material like lawnmowers etc. The Makita shop is also allowed to sell other brands like Echo, Shindaiwa, Oleo Mac, Zenoah which are all great no nonsense brands. Tip: When buying at online Auctions always buy with bid ending at rush hour around 5.00 to 6.00 p.m and early morning 2.00 a.m to 4.00 a.m as those times people would be at a rush and forgetting about it or sound asleep. Following is a firewood job Aug 2019 which took a week to break up 49 cubic metres. m.ua-cam.com/video/ONhxwpE4HDI/v-deo.html
@@conmanumber1 ya I love all of my Dolmar's. The 7300 and 7900 are the same saw but the 7900 has a bigger bore and piston. Dolmar also made a 120cc. Beast of a chainsaw with a huge bar for taking down the massive trees.
@@clydeacor1911 On my 7900 i emailed the national head honcho of Makita who is a Englishman for a heavy duty air filter kit as i was not happy with the standard. He sent it at no charge after i said i have Makita tools too. I love my pre 1990's Mcullochs too. The Pro Mac 850 etc are very good pulling saws too except for the horrible air filters. Macs are highly collectible and sort after.
I have seen tons of videos this year on that concrete chainsaw, have people not seen them before or ever wondered how late guy can't cut 3' slabs lol I use to work putting in special footings/foundations for giant cnc machines and other heavy factory machines. Since alot of the times we were putting a new machine In the existing factory we would have to cut the floor and man sometimes the slab would be over 4' thick to support the weight. I absolutely hated running thosnle chainsaws they were extremely heavy and was always worried about having it kick back on s guy.
Complete waste of money! I guess it could be used to remotely load virus victims into the portable crematoriums? I have used similar equipment in a parking structure with a boring & demo hammer attachment to drill new footings in a existing low ceiling areas! They just used it in a bad example! The concrete chain saw is a great idea and this appears to have a longer bar than the older ones that would not go deep enough for my use. They do make some powerful good tools! The person running the compactor on a job site is "usually" the lowest paid and compaction is the most important starting point of the project, so anything that help you pass your scheduled compaction tests keep you on schedule? Just my experience in low bid construction! Cheaper Faster Better?
$165K nose picker - I dunno about that. I can see a use or two for the ring saw, but I'd be a little concerned about how hardy that drive mechanism is loaded with silica dust every day.
I work with the electric versions of those saws, lovely to use and lighter than the gas version. No problem with build up in the saws. When using the ring saw we usually start the cut with a regular saw and use the ring saw to cut deeper.
@@MrDarkwave666 I recently went to a cordless cutoff saw for cutting rebar for inside slabs, lighter duty. Really like it, a time saver unless you're cutting bigger bundles of sticks. How does the ring saw do when demoing slabs with higher concentrations of rebar in them?
The husqvarna is a knock off of the brokk. I run them all the time, yes they are super expensive. But you can put it into a confined space without putting your operator in harm's way. The hammer is a much better attachment. There is alot of double sticking with the bucket cause of the 4th cylinder.
Saw the video of Chernobyl demolition... They used robots but they also screwed up because of the radiation. But men could only work for 45 seconds in that radiated area.
Hmm, after seeing that machine work, that's still up for debate, I can say the paint on my walls has fully dried. And there is still, plenty of jersey wall to demolish? What gives?
Nintendo made a game interface glove back around 1990 or so. It sucked, but I could see the same idea being used to speed up that excavator. Intended for confined spaces? I'm thinking how many man hours to justify 165k - 200k.
That demolition robot is in the wrong application it is for interior demos where you have occupancy and you charge an absolute premium to do it that way this is a copy of a brokk demolition robot probably actually made by them and then rebranded by Husqvarna. How do I know? We do interior concrete demo
The pricing on those minis is asanine. There is no possible justification for that Maxine to cost that much. Other than remote control and electric power it is in all aspects less capable than a deere 17G. And that unit goes for $36,500 tops brand new
The companies I know that have a husqvarna demolition robot are really happy with them. Because what they said you can do the work from a 4 ton excavator with a 2 ton demolition robot at the size of 2 ton excavator without emissions. But I don't think this was made made for the American market where everything is big, but for the European market where almost everything is small and they have to work in confined spaces!!
Note: I live in the Netherlands.
Yeah this looks like an useful tool for specific applications to me. It's going to be less universal than an similiar priced excavator, but it has its uses. Also good point that US market is different. For good example of that check out HIAB (truck-mounted crane) product line in europe and USA. Completely different products, and even completely different kind of product categories.
I work with both demolition and concrete cutting/core drilling as well as grinding concrete floors, and we have several of those robots in different sizes. They are just amazing, works good for bashing floors and walls with the hammer, or using the concrete crusher, but also works well when riping up old carpets and wood floors or loading out material with a bucket. But I must say those guys demoing them were completely useless, at least in showing what those machines really can do.
MrDarkwave666 could you potentially send me a video of you/your crew using one in whatever setting or job you normally use them for. Curious, not saying what you’ve said can’t be done. Tks
@@ericpurcell9984 I got a few jobs where brokk machines where used, they look similar in size and they are really good machines you have a lot of power on your attachement, it's for really specific works like demo inside buildings. We used it to remove stone flooring in a church and we really where happy with it.
It definitely seems more useful in a European use, 3 phase power is much more common there.
That's the worst demonstration I've ever seen.
And the price is obscene.
There are cities like New York City where you’re not allowed to use heavy equipment for demolition over 2 stories.
So they hand demo a sky scraper & use Demolition robots like this or a Brokk Robot to demolish the roof deck throw everything down the elevator shaft or lift full 20 yard dumpsters of concrete off of the skyscraper roof with a crane down to the street and then they drop the robot & skid steers down one floor with a crane cut up all the steel and move down a floor.
Northstar Demolition sometimes gets up to $3 million a floor to hand demo it and do it that way in the city. They and others have done many 75 story buildings that way.
There is a need for this type of unit, just not in your type of operation.
minimxnut This is exactly it. They wouldn’t be making these robots, spending insane amounts of money on R and D if there wasn’t a market for them. I don’t see why that’s so hard for some people to understand.
Landworks I agree 100%. People that don’t know anything about the Demolition business shouldn’t comment. We are a licensed AsBesto’s Abatement and demolition contractor in New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania and have been in business for 34 years.
Ya man always be straight never say something that's not true for a dollar! I give you props for being a true man! God Bless
These machines work great. I saw one used inside of a 9 story building for demo and excavating elevator pits. The tool is only as good as the user!
I was at the world of concrete this year too (as a mason). Overall is was a good show!
I saw the 300 on a job...and it was VERY quick and powerful. Cut Ten inch thick pedestrian bridge like butter
Stan. I rented a walk-behind wacker last summer that had a compaction indicator. It was my first time compacting.
I guess for about 5 seconds it was useful in teaching me what compacted ground feels like.
Nice thing was that you could visually tell which areas were more compacted that others.
I guess its only useful for a weekend warrior who's never handled a walk-behind.
Absolutely bullshit that Husky is first. Here in New Zealand In the mid 1990s Swedala Dynapac had compaction meters on their Deutz engined compactors. Not long after we have the German Weber Mt which has them ....
ua-cam.com/video/84HC-U7082Q/v-deo.html
I like seeing all the videos you create it gives a lot of knowledge on the equipment it’s coming out to help us contractors
Thanks for watching John!
I have not seen the husqvarna machines in play but have done projects with a similar machine called a Brokk. They are worth every penny. The Brokk 150 has the most powerful breaker I have even seen on a machine and with zero operator fatigue. We put it on a roof to demolish concrete sawtooth frames over a high end data center where the high priority was to make sure the roof was water tight every night. One man broke all the concrete while the rest of the crew hauled it away. I’ve put one in an old elevator shaft and run them in buildings. They are a niche machine but they shine in specialty demolition. The concrete nibbler was perfect to remove an old concrete structure where excessive noise and vibration was problematic so the ability to break with out the hammering of a typical breaker was more imply than speed. The problem is when you have a guy who has never seen a construction site trying to rep construction equipment. Poor kid had no clue what he was doing or talking about!
"Husqvarna doesn't make a 2-stroke engine anymore" video cuts to next tool with a two stroke engine! Lmao
@Tony Humbert yes I get that but he should have been a little more specific he never said that in general he just automatically assumed people would know. And I found it pretty funny that he said Husqvarna doesn't make two stroke engines anymore and then boom the next clip is a 2-stroke engine lol
he said “we dont make a two stroke” specifically talking about jumping jacks. and its a honda motor aswell he said.
you are reading too far into that statement
Dewalt. Stan, whatever video's you put up, I will watch. Love em all.
Thanks so much, I really appreciate all the support !
If Husqvarna don't let you film at any of their booths again I would be pissed they all know by now that you are a very honest person when it comes to honest reviews and that's what the industry loves about you man you don't hold back had to come back and watch this one one more time LOL always good stuff👍👍👍👊👊✊✊
Great video.
About the robot, sure I agree it is very expensive. But I think there are many applications where it can do better than excavators.
Also, Husqvarna canbe pretty expensive but you also get quality.
Hell, I have a very old and very used chainsaw from them that I love. It justt keeps on going and cutting trees like it was brand new.
And it keeps starting SO easy, it's starting better than most other brands I have tried and it starts just as easy no matter if it is cold or hot outside.
But yeah, I can agree that the demonstration of the robot didn't exactly make it look its best.
But I think you'll be fine and not be banned.
I have personally used the Husqvarna HYDRAULIC version of the Ring saw, and let me tell you it takes you longer to go rent the saw and return it then it does to cut an egress window there is no other tool that I will use to cut egress windows from this point forward.
I am a big fan of Husky tools. That double bladed chasing saw is the duck's ....s. I was impressed with that ring saw too for the depth of cut available, but I have never used a ring saw to compare . Peck, peck, pecker robot would come into its own inside a building with high hazzrads, say radiation, chemical fumes, etc. That hands-off Whacker-Packer would be easy on the arms too and probably wouldn't run away like the ones we have at work. Keep up these excelent videos. ( Your wife seemed to be enjoying the demonstration day too. She should be making more appearances so we don't have to listen to you so much......)
I agree- but my wife doesn't want to be in my videos. so your stuck with me.
DEWALT!!
Thanks for the vids Stan, ya do great work. God bless, take care.
👍👍
Take care too, thank you for watching !
I can see some good future use of the robots if this pandemic plays out any longer, do construction work from your home PC.....
I dig the wall chainsaw...and that channel cutter I could find a use for laying conduit in a deck...btw, nice hat. Yes please, do Dewalt.
Dewalt/ Milwaukee Tools please side by side
165000 dollars for that excavator! 5 men with large sledgehammers are 10 times faster, they say time is money so avoid that machine you guys in the concrete world if you want a paycheck. Nice idea but bad margins they won’t sell it is my opinion
Can't argue with the consensus on the "excavator", but the only chainsaws I'll buy are Husqvarna.
Great video Stan. I would like to see the Dewalt video. Hope the only Corona you get is the beverage type. Stay safe my friend.
Stay safe too, thank you Mike !
After watching this and thinking about it for a while I have made my opinion.
The representatives are not familiar with equipment. Probably a last-minute standin.
Electric with remote control, should be good for interior and types of hazardous work. Where you can't get an excavator in due to exhaust, size, or risk to operator.
Let’s see the DeWalt.
DeWalt is junk
Tiger Batman agreed
That excavator is definitely a specialty tool for commercial and industrial applications when clients have specific requests or certain limitations on the job.
I also agree i don’t think that operator had much experience to really tear apart the block quickly.
but ive never had the opportunity to run one or see one run.
I run a dxr300 it is a beast of a machine. And yes when the rep mentioned the frequency of the beats per minute destroys concrete he is not lying. The crusher jaw is kinda lame and is alittle slow paced but rarely used. It will drag isn’t self around a job due to the weight but it is kept low as they can so it can be taken up freight elevators. We have taken the arm off and pushed the unit in 2 pieces though hospitals for demo work. It is great an has it uses.
DEWALT .... Makita new stuff would be great too ... love the vids .... KUTGW
Nice interview overlay. Pretty sure the guy you interviewed at world of concrete was the same guy running it at con expo. Solid content as always sir!
Thanks a lot !
I have seen these kind of machines in several restauration jobs here in Sweden. They are so small that they can be used inside old forts and castles to clear up old rooms or pathways that are hazardous.
YES Dewalt !!!!!!!!! I'm using It and I want to know about all the disadvantages.
that's my whole beef I would like to see the tool in real world application. that's what I try to do with my videos.
you get something on a job and it like. realy I paid this for that. . I love husqvarna stuff . but there is some things that they need to pay attention to. it's good to keep big companies on there feet literally.. husqvarna you got to hand it to them they realy like to make the best thats out there. that's where we come into play. lol. good job. I love anything husqvarna.
That little remote excavator demo bot thing is probably geared more towards European markets where human labor is more expensive and safety standards are even higher than in the US so any time companies have a shot at minimizing human involvement and exposure and risk, it makes more sense to them to do than for US companies.
The price is outrageously expensive there is no way I would pay that much
Dewalt / Milwaukee tools demo please. What's the latest in dust control?
I really like this typs of machines for indoor use. You don't have the exhaust fumes and all it's nice and small so you can get into corners. It's a specialized machine and should be advertised as such. 160k is a bit much but for the right job it's propably worth it. Maybe you look at companies like Wacker-Neuson who specialize in this type of equipment.
Cool video
Thanks Larry !
Glad your still with us Stan!... Don't get corona!
Thanks Andrew!
Stan I would love to see a comparison of the asv with a kubota. The dealer around me sells those two. From what I hear a lot kubota is the top of the chain. Would love to see these two side by side
Thanks for watching !
Very sweet video
Thank you !
Yeah I actually run the DXR at work and yes it is a monster and this guy is just being extremely slow. And yes the hydro hose and grease lines are in a awful spot! But you can get this thing through man doors and up stairs. Great piece of equipment for tight spaces or where you don’t need fumes. We busted a 14’x8’x7’ wall with Ibeams in about 9 hours.
I own a Husqvarna k770 cut off saw and it is a great saw
Thank you Stan
I think he was trying to save the barrier for the whole week. lmao
I used it on a very intricate demo job, sent to us as a demo promotion thankfully!!! If I kept on rental it would have cost about 10 k a week! Bottom line is you need to be a video game freak to run the controls or have at least 3 day’s of practice with an instructor. We had a hammer attachment on ours up on the third floor of a heavily bricked commercial building with neighboring residential properties extremely close to us, and if the boom was to the side and you changed the control format and accidentally touched the outrigger controls it would want to tip over!! Scary!! I sent it back and continued by hand I have a video that I can try to send along with this reply
DEWALT! WE NEED THE VIDEO! 😎
Thanks for watching !
@@Dirtmonkey Your welcome. Thank you for always providing great videos!
If possible longer videos would be very nice but I know they more time to make.
The Cut and break is a great tool for installing basement windows. But installing basement windows sucks, because you have to put up with the noise, the smell of the exhaust, all the water or the dust.
That Ring saw, I didn’t know they sold in the US. But I have to say the concrete chainsaw have to be my favorite, never used it but the concept is so cool
We demolished the upper 6 floors of a tower building with two of these machines. We put them up with a crane and they slowly chew up the floors from top to down as long as high reach demolition machines could reach up. They are wonderful pieces of equipment.
Hey Stan,
Can you do a video on Shorewalls?
Water is going up most places, especially here in Ontario Canada. Lots of potential repair work this summer. Cant find a good video anywhere!
Thanks
Appreciate the suggestion Zachary, thank you !
dewalt please . keep up the great work . be safe . god bless
Thank you George, you too !
That’s really interesting. Yes please dewalt
Thanks Max !
They make nice stuff.
Is husvqarna just trying to patent anything and everything and then improve with time? Or is the applications different in the 🇺🇸 then 🇪🇺 (Europe)
I like seeing the new equipment
Glad to hear it, thanks for viewing Isaac !
Husqvarna makes good equipment but apparently needs someone who knows how to work
I find the orange Home Depot buckets ironic, considering Husqvarna is a Lowe's brand...
Dewalt please I enjoy all your content it is very informative
Much appreciated, thanks Pete !
The ring saw is good but my experience is the gas will spin the drive wheel. The drive wheel is the week point you can't force it. Husqvarna bought out Partner. I prefer the PP65 HF demo, ring,chain, Core drill.
Some of there equipment pretty cool can see use in remote or hard to get places
Yes I would like to see that one also
Dewalt, would be cool man. I'm pretty invested in them. It was before I knew how good milwaukee was doin in their cordless😜
I had all Dewalt about 5 or 6 years ago and used a buddy's Milwaukee tools and the very next day went and bought all Milwaukee tools and gave away my Dewalt tools that didn't sell fast.
Milwaukee is the best period
@@bigrod359 Milwaukee is garbage DeWalt beats it in almost every tool they make and hold up way longer
I would have expected more from the RC Demovator a good operator can make a difference but that was painfully slow. I watched a Brokk on a job and the operator let me run it. The Brokk was much faster and felt like I was running a much more powerful machine. And yes make a video on the DeWalt tools
Love this guys house... as far as the demo robots - find another machine that will fit inside a freight elevator.. big advantage for cities. The price is the price I’m sure - simply cause they dont many and it would be hard to to replace what they might be able to do for some situations. The operator is probably also going slow from inexperience and also trying to make his barrier last as long as possible.
He’s tryna call it a robot to make it sound more cool and like it’s worth it
I would market it for hazardous situation give it better communication method and it would be great for remote work
The bird pecking at concrete is correct.
Well he sent in his milwaukee radio 3 times got it back quick. I sent in a tool 3 times . The first time waited 3 months second time same tool 5 months and the 3rd time waited 6 months and called them never got it and they said I should have gotten it . I asked what address did they send it to ? They said to New York. Hell they had my address and I live inLA . So finally got a new one 3 weeks after I had called them .i love the milwaukee tools but there coustmer service needs a lot of work oh did I say they need a lot a lot of work wew a lot of work .
Most my compactors at work have the compaction sensors it's nothing new
They make good chainsaws and that's it
Makita - Dolmar thank u.
@@conmanumber1 Haha... I had all Stihl and Husqvarna chainsaws and a salesman convinced me to buy a Dolmar that was about 25% cheaper so I gave it a shot and sold all my other saws and replaced them all with Dolmar's. Haven't been happier since switching but really prefer the even numbered saws like the 7300 instead of the newer 7310 ext... And the little 5105 just blows my mind for the amount of power in such a small package.
@@clydeacor1911 i was hard up with no cash. I saw this Makita - Dolmar German built DCS 9010 which did 20 hrs on national equivilent to ebay and bidding ends at 2.00 a.m. it ended without any bid and i got it at $700.00 N.Zd which was a bargain.
Prior to that time i also out of desperation charged up on my trade acct a Ea7900 the next saw down so i ended with the top 2 biggest Makita - Dolmars. The 9010 is a well built solid workhorse, the 7900 is a very smooth runner which sings. The dealer aint run a fancy shop like Stihl and Husky which has to pay for franchise fees, signage, uniforms and also have to buy fill material like lawnmowers etc. The Makita shop is also allowed to sell other brands like Echo, Shindaiwa, Oleo Mac, Zenoah which are all great no nonsense brands.
Tip: When buying at online Auctions always buy with bid ending at rush hour around 5.00 to 6.00 p.m and early morning 2.00 a.m to 4.00 a.m as those times people would be at a rush and forgetting about it or sound asleep.
Following is a firewood job Aug 2019 which took a week to break up 49 cubic metres.
m.ua-cam.com/video/ONhxwpE4HDI/v-deo.html
@@conmanumber1 ya I love all of my Dolmar's. The 7300 and 7900 are the same saw but the 7900 has a bigger bore and piston. Dolmar also made a 120cc. Beast of a chainsaw with a huge bar for taking down the massive trees.
@@clydeacor1911 On my 7900 i emailed the national head honcho of Makita who is a Englishman for a heavy duty air filter kit as i was not happy with the standard. He sent it at no charge after i said i have Makita tools too.
I love my pre 1990's Mcullochs too. The Pro Mac 850 etc are very good pulling saws too except for the horrible air filters. Macs are highly collectible and sort after.
I have seen tons of videos this year on that concrete chainsaw, have people not seen them before or ever wondered how late guy can't cut 3' slabs lol I use to work putting in special footings/foundations for giant cnc machines and other heavy factory machines. Since alot of the times we were putting a new machine In the existing factory we would have to cut the floor and man sometimes the slab would be over 4' thick to support the weight. I absolutely hated running thosnle chainsaws they were extremely heavy and was always worried about having it kick back on s guy.
Dewalt stuff please, if you have any footage of the dewalt 20v roofing nailer it would be nice
Same machine as the brokk. Alot of uk demolition companies use these machines as they are so much more efficient with a good operator
yes i would love that and that mini excavator must have been a joke
Dewalt video, please.
#Quarantined
Who is gonna get 480 3-Phase instead of disel
Complete waste of money! I guess it could be used to remotely load virus victims into the portable crematoriums? I have used similar equipment in a parking structure with a boring & demo hammer attachment to drill new footings in a existing low ceiling areas! They just used it in a bad example! The concrete chain saw is a great idea and this appears to have a longer bar than the older ones that would not go deep enough for my use. They do make some powerful good tools! The person running the compactor on a job site is "usually" the lowest paid and compaction is the most important starting point of the project, so anything that help you pass your scheduled compaction tests keep you on schedule? Just my experience in low bid construction! Cheaper Faster Better?
$165K nose picker - I dunno about that. I can see a use or two for the ring saw, but I'd be a little concerned about how hardy that drive mechanism is loaded with silica dust every day.
I work with the electric versions of those saws, lovely to use and lighter than the gas version. No problem with build up in the saws. When using the ring saw we usually start the cut with a regular saw and use the ring saw to cut deeper.
@@MrDarkwave666 I recently went to a cordless cutoff saw for cutting rebar for inside slabs, lighter duty. Really like it, a time saver unless you're cutting bigger bundles of sticks. How does the ring saw do when demoing slabs with higher concentrations of rebar in them?
Could buy many compressors and 65 - 95 LB jack hammers, and through in a Skid steer with a hoe ram for far less money.
The husqvarna is a knock off of the brokk. I run them all the time, yes they are super expensive. But you can put it into a confined space without putting your operator in harm's way. The hammer is a much better attachment. There is alot of double sticking with the bucket cause of the 4th cylinder.
THE VIDEO OF THE GUY BREAKING CONCRETE WAS NOT USING THE CONCRETE BUSTER, IT WAS THE GRAPPLE, I THINK THEY WERE JUST SHOWING THE POWER IT HAD.
Do the Dewalt video.
I look at what the rental companies are using, they want tools that do not fail as often, so they use proven tools.
Saw the video of Chernobyl demolition... They used robots but they also screwed up because of the radiation. But men could only work for 45 seconds in that radiated area.
DeWalt... And Stihl ASAP
Would love to see the dewalt video.
Got it, thank you !
I'd love to see one with the
I'd like to see the Dewalt video.
Got it, thank you !
And you need three phase.... when will that be available no residential and most commercal applications
Hmm, after seeing that machine work, that's still up for debate, I can say the paint on my walls has fully dried. And there is still, plenty of jersey wall to demolish? What gives?
Dewalt please!
$200k LOL
Nintendo made a game interface glove back around 1990 or so. It sucked, but I could see the same idea being used to speed up that excavator. Intended for confined spaces? I'm thinking how many man hours to justify 165k - 200k.
Ours paid for itself within the first year
They seem like they're trying to innovate, but they got the wrong idea.... I like the idea of stuff hilti does like automating stuff. (Holesaw cutter)
That demolition robot is in the wrong application it is for interior demos where you have occupancy and you charge an absolute premium to do it that way this is a copy of a brokk demolition robot probably actually made by them and then rebranded by Husqvarna. How do I know? We do interior concrete demo
Yes on Dewalt
If that was Kubota instead of Husqvarna it would been 20x better than those RC's, and cheaper
Can’t believe you watch a cat being attacked by a Coyote. What a sick person.
You totally missed the point of that video.
🎃. Can’t beat this 🤓
Glad you liked it, thank you!
The pricing on those minis is asanine. There is no possible justification for that Maxine to cost that much. Other than remote control and electric power it is in all aspects less capable than a deere 17G. And that unit goes for $36,500 tops brand new