Ya they're just garbage bits Tyler, don't worry about it, half these ppl don't know the difference between a drill and impact except that they get both in a pack on fathers day
Try them with a drill also use its hammer function for appropriate applications ie the cinder block I'm betting it would be quicker as for the tips on them they would work great in a cnc I doubt there is any drill or impact that could reach the speeds actually needed for really tough metal
I doubt they'd say anything. Their whole thing is to sell expensive so they can replace free for anyone who makes a warranty claim. They're banking on people not bothering to make the claim or getting tired of having to do it again and again.
I used to be a CNC mill operator, and the second you said they claim these bits will never go dull or whatever, the first thing i thought was "oh, these are gonna be dogshit bits" lol
The closest thing I've seen to "never going dull" is carbide drill bits running in aluminum. But even then they eventually give out. You can tell they're marketing these bits to numbskulls
The reason they never skip around in those videos is because they usually pre-drill holes that are just a size smaller than the drill bit they are demonstrating this allows them to make it appear as if they are quickly pushing it through but there is still some resistance so it's not clearly just a hole
Any time Tyler gets out power tools, I can't help but watch... like passing a major automobile accident, on the interstate - you just can't look away, no matter how mortifying it is.
I don’t know anything about tools. I don’t own any tools and probably never will BUT I come and watch every single one of Tyler’s video and love them. Only Tyler can have me laugh and be fully engaged in a video about tool bits.
@@pearbearhd4737 agreed, you don't really need particularly high quality tools either if they're just occasional use, picking up a cheap tool box set from harbor freight or home depot etc is a good investment i won't lie, most of the tools in tool kits like that (cheap sets) are pretty shit, but pretty shit is better than nothing and better than spending money for a tool with quality you don't need
if you need a better tool you buy it, occasionally yeah it might be more expensive because you end up with 2 tools, but usually you just end up with keeping the original cheap tool because you either dont really need a good one, or it's good enough
As a construction moron I can say a few things. Those materials require different tips to properly drill a hole. You have metal, masonry, glass, and tile. (Sometimes glass and tile you can get away with interchanging) All different types of bits. Also these are just a piece of junk.
@@FuzzyWCTX they are tungsten carbide bits. Similar shape to masonry bits but not specific to just masonry. I have some and I paid nearly as much as that whole set just for 2... They will go through anything I've used them for like butter
The best tile bits ive used are the kits sold at lowes depot with carbide/diamond grit brazed to the top of a cylinder, like a holesaw. Goes right through tiles no prob tho.
Here’s something interesting I know about a major company named Diablo they make a bit set that can go through everything only difference between these and the Diablo ones is the Diablo ones actually work and that’s been tested by my coworkers putting it through solid steel
After looking at the bad dog tools video of him drilling into tile, I'm pretty sure their demonstration tile was basically plaster with a glossy layer on top. He went through that thing like butter which no drill bit could ever do.
I got a pack of 7 dollar bits because i had nothing at the time, and lost 5 of them inside of 2x4's(literally just snapped off inside the wood mid drill). This was after they drilled about 30 holes or so. got the pack of dewalts, yeah nothing broken after a year and half of use lol. Some products are just trash. You'll spend hours thinking what am i doing wrong? And then you realize "oh, yeah, i bought trash".
Brake rotors are usually made from cast iron. Cast iron is quite soft and even self lubricating due to carbon nodules. And yes, actually harder than mild steel. That diamond cut off wheel worked fine, but it's not really any better than the ones you can get for $20 at your local Home Depot. And porcelain tile is quite hard. You generally need diamond drill bits (I usually use the Chinese core bits - cheap but they only last maybe a half dozen holes at best) for that and you have to keep them cool. The carbide tips on those drill bits didn't stand a chance.
@@norfolkngood8960 it works fine. you just have to start without the hammer mode for a bit and after you have a good pilot dimple, switch the hammer mode on and go slowly.
@@norfolkngood8960 you can hammer tile no prob I've drilled thousands of holes in tile installing shower doors over the years and the only had a few break and every time they were not back buttered/adhered properly.
Yes, those are masonry bits. I also bought two of those drill bits to drill three 5 centimeter holes in concrete. Everything went well for the first 2 centimeters, but then the drill bit turned bright red and the tip simply melted off. I didn't even try to use the second drill bit after seeing how weak the first one was. After that, I went to a hardware store and bought a Bosch brand drill bit, and in 5 seconds the holes were done, and there was no sign of wear on the drill bit. The Bosch drill bit cost the same as the two bad ones combined.
In the commercials they use props made of soft metals like aluminum. Using aluminum allows them to keep the look of cutting into steel, but show the speed of cutting the aluminum. The carbide tips on these will separate and shatter if used too long in hardened steel due to heat fracturing. Put really simple, these are just real cheap concrete bits made out of soft steel. Buy cheap, find ways to make the product look like something beyond our time and sell high, the biggest moneymaker in the industry. Great vid as always Tyler, keep it up and stay out of trouble.
That is likely the most detailed response I have read, and I agree that is likely the case here. The part that actually bothers me is that if they replace each set 5 times, they are probably still making money. Sad that people would rather do customers dirty than just make a quality product.
Honestly I love that Tyler is using the tools the way a person who isn't an expert would use them. This is how the average person is going to use them. Would I love to see how they work with cutting fluid? Of course. But this was still educational. I'm glad he's wearing safety goggles. I hope he starts wearing a respirator.
I'm pretty sure they weren't advertised to need cutting fluid. He was replicating the commercials exactly as they showcased the product, as they said, you didn't need to worry about the bits overheating or whatever. Safety glasses probably isn't necessary for drilling or using a grinder that has a guard on it. Respirator could be needed depending on what you're cutting or drilling. Also a respirator might make it hard to hear what he's saying. For that, I think just taking it outside would be best.
@@point-five-oh6249 That man had glass dust going up into his face. glasses, and something, i mean annnyyyything over your face is better than straight inhaling glass
Apparently other of people have the same issue and customer service is horrible trying to get money back or replacements. Loads of videos on here and reviews on web
@@zackdaripr indont even remember commenting this but i guess after he drilled a hole and there was sawdust left i tried to blow it away (obv not possible cuz its a fucking screen)
Girlfriend and I regularly joke about that lol. Imagining they are like 65 year old retirees and the wife is just standing looking out the window like "Honey... The TylerTubes at it again..."
I've looked them up and the bits really seem to be a mixed bag. From what I have seen they're great when you get good ones , but they're terrible when you get bad ones which apparently happens a lot and they're still not exactly good for everything they claim. I've also heard many complaints about the warranty process, that you have to send in the broken bits on your own dime both ways, and that turnaround times are slow. From everything I've read / seen it seems like they kind of wrote a big check that's financially difficult to cash, they offered a lifetime warranty on a consumable product and they're stuck with it because they wouldn't sell without one. Who in the hell would give you a lifetime warranty on drill bits? That's like offering a lifetime warranty on hacksaw blades or tires, they're consumables and having a warranty on them is unheard of.
I'm so glad you did this video! I got scammed buying these awful bits at a fair. They had a guy demonstrating drilling through multiple thick metal items right in front of me. Bits they were using weren't the bits they sold me cause mine turned blue and dull first try. They are the worst! They even said you can bend them and drill at angles.
Lite trick next time wend you are at a fair… tell the guy you will by it but ONLY if it the bits/whatever product is the one he is CURRENTLY using… He will then gon on bla bla bla how he can’t… but continue telling him i will only buy it if its that one! Eventually he will sell you that product that he is using… thenn and only then you know you bought a good product… That how i made myself a actual non-stick frying pan 🤣
@@jadedjackel655 Not sure if they gave him different drill bits or not (don't know those) but the tin does show all those materials on it so I assume it's intended to be used on all those materials.
@@Cubanboi311 I had a set of tires from walmart and they lasted 3 weeks So I went for a refund and they showed me the fine print where it says if you Drive on paved road or clay road or off road or gravel or sandy roads or in bad weather it voids the warranty, Also highway speed or in town because stop and go will void the warranty. A Good set will last me a year on average back when I drove a lot but then again Good Year we 3 x the price,
16:45 "They're supposed to be good at everything but what I'm finding is that they're not really good at anything." The jack of all trades is a master at none.
No animals were harmed in the making of this video. That was a $19,000 animatronic insect with "lifelike features". Tyler really stepping up his production with those.
Tyler if you somehow find this comment, Pro tip: next time you cut/drill glass spray water wherever you’re drilling and it won’t shatter. The water keeps the glass from heating up and creating friction so it doesn’t break. It’ll be an easier way to demonstrate it and it’ll be safer as well. The last thing you want to do is inhale a lethal dose of glass dust. Cheers mate
Seeing the way Tyler used that grinder made me fear for my safety and I don't think we are even in the same state. I'm really surprised there wasn't a lot of blood in this video.
lol you're such a soyboy xD. There's nothing wrong with how he used it, it's how it's normally used. It's just that the diamond disc is designed for ceramic, stone, brick and tiles. It isn't meant to cut metal, but this is mostly fault of the shady company who advertised it in such a way and it's overpriced af too. Either way even if a total idiot uses an angle grinder at worst you can get a good burn, because these discs are dull, they don't have teeth. It won't cut into flesh unless you really intend to.
Usually I scoff at would-be safety experts because it is always "oh noes, he didn't use teh gloves/respirator/glasses" but yeah this was pretty fucked. Like he clamps down the bar but not the heavy brake thing? Really?
There is a lot of inferior metals being used to make sharp edges because they stay shiny but dull after one use. They usually come with a sharpener as a bonus
It’s actually not worth it, I read the reviews and they say customers service is terrible. According to reviews the person who does customers service is one of the owners of the company, and she is beyond rude.
@@LoneStarCowboy1 That makes for more interesting content. If it were me, and I was making money doing it, I would make a series of sending damaged bits back to the rude person. If they want to back their garbage with a lifetime warranty, I would use it as content for life. Until the audience wanted me to move on at least.
They work fairly well on the cast iron brake rotor. They're not as dense as that angle iron. But even the angle iron wasn't throwing curls when he was drilling it. It's like those bits aren't cutting, they're chipping.
If you look at the tips, they're clearly masonry bits. Masonry bits are essentially hammers that a hammer drill will rotate in between blows. They rapidly chip rather than cutting, because cutting stone is hard and chipping it is less difficult.
It all depends on the cutting medium used. Tool steel, carbide, or Diamond. Plus cooling to keep the coating on the cutting wheel from getting hot and adhesive letting go.
I think he said his garage is a mess and showed it in a different video. Plus in most videos he just tosses stuff everywhere either accidental or on purpose
@@doll9340 If you watch this early a videos you've a lot more sloppy or spilling stuff. Everywhere throwing stuff on the floor if you look around the garage now he organized it. He built a workbench shelves for his tools and stuff
Your correct. Brake rotors and drums are made from soft metal. In fact, sometimes you get a hot spot on the rotor that hardens. If it goes to deep to turn it, you have to replace the rotor.
I'd like to see you testing the support claims. Will they actually replace them? The grinding disc seems consistent with diamond discs. The grit gets "finer" during first use and more or less stays that way after that. Disc brakes are usually cast iron, so in a way softer than mild steel.
There *are* uhhh, I can't remember what they're called, but I've got a few of them, where they're hard pieces of metal used to put a dimple into the material so your drill bit doesn't walk Also, fairly certain Tyler needed to put some cutting fluid on the drill bit
Another comment said they make aluminum props to use at demonstrations, and even then the videos I can find they don't even drill more than a1/4" into it
For future reference, you really don't want to be exposed to that dust, especially the concrete dust. Even short exposure really not good. Am very glad to have seen the drill bits tested though
Yea. Still dealing with the after effects of quickcrete powder hitting me in the face without a respirator. I've since been diagnosed with asthma. Ugh.
@@ShockingPikachudamn I’m a construction manager and I didn’t even know concrete has that much silica in it. I wonder how much that effects things, I’d have to imagine the rest of the bulk in concrete isn’t much healthier to inhale lol
Interesting. I've cut that kind of stuff and more, for years and I'm even a smoker. Yet, I've got no problems with my lungs. I've had x-rays, mri's, CT scan with contrast and even breathing tests. Everything normal. Can silica dust hurt you? I believe so. Just not right away like, if it was only one time breathing the dust. Maybe I'm just lucky or it's my super power.
Id recommend getting microscope camera to show wear of drill bits just like Project Farm uses, its hard to see the tip damage, but overall very cool test!
Those bits drilled metal like how a masonry bit would have. In my own shop ive tested and confirmed a masonry bit will drill harder metal, (drilled through a tillage disc) but they will walk even when used in a drill press as well as need a lot of down force. Your experience with the floor tile is spot on. As per your experience floor tiles are ridiculously hard and take forever to drill through no matter if you use a glass, tile, or a masonry bits. Wall tiles on the other hand will drill like butter comparatively.
Porcelain is hard and very difficult to drill, ideally you need a hollow circular diamond cutter and keep it cooled with water whilst drilling. A lot of tiles are made of material more like clay and any masonry drill bit will go through it easy. I use the Bosch multi construction drill bits and they will only go through soft porcelain and are spent after only a few holes. For high grade porcelain you really need specialist bits in order to go through it.
Porcelain is the hard tile. Is the soft stuff called travertine or something? I can't remember. I used to install showers and we loved drilling the clay like tile a lot more than porcelain.
Glad I wasn’t just doing something wrong. I had to drill into my shower tile and it was so slow even with a Milwaukee circular diamond bit. All the videos I watched showed people drilling into tile super quickly
@@shaneh7519 fyi the best bits ive found attach to the angle grinder, but you need the special tool to get the hole started and in centre, even then, in high grade porcelain it can take minutes+ to drill each hole! The horrible thing is, you don't know what they are made of until you try drilling it! I got caught out on a job I'd priced to fit an entire bathroom, the customer chose high grade porcelain tiles, I had to fit the shower riser bar and shower screen, which was probably only around ten holes, but I did not have the proper bits and struggled for a whole day trying to drill the holes, whilst ruining all my other drill bits!
I worked as a machinist making Toyota brake rotors for 8 years, our automated drills would cut 10,000 holes before we changed the bits on a schedule and they wear generally still sharp after that.
Oh yeah, just a note when you’re cutting into steel you have to make an indention in it a pilot indention and you can buy the pens in a set and you don’t have to spin arm, a leg ahead and part of your shoulder lol to get some company sell them they come in all different sizes usually SAE sizes there’s like three or four of them you can even buy two of them so your drill bit don’t walk all over the place messing up the metal also to note when you’re drilling into metal in construction industry the client don’t like to see scratches all over their metal, so FYI to all the amateurs out there watching this video
I do shower installations, we use 3/16 Relton masonry bits, and I specifically use a hammer drill, if the tile is soft I wont use the hammer function, but as soon as I'm against hard floor tile I use the hammer function, but I will typically be through the hardest tile in 15-20 seconds mostly, also if you are drilling hard tile remember to have a cup of water or some kind of liquid to cool the bit down, because hard tile will tear a bit apart in a couple holes.
These bits look like absolute shit. I would have to hold it to be 100% sure about the material but I would bet money I could snap one with a pair of pliers and little effort. The first red flag is NONE of the bits are even shaped to bore into anything but masonry. Theres a reason they sell different bits for different material.
Usually when I drill tile I put a putty barrier and fill it with water to keep heat down. I drill metal all day at work and I use oil as lubricant and my drill bits last a long time. Use drill bits with cobalt in them they are the best in my opinion it drills through everything
Iron and steal destroy diamond cutting tools as the iron steal carbon from the diamonds if it gets too hot, works for a while though but wear out faster than if cutting other stuff. Also cut tile and cinder blocks with a lot of water to avoid the dust.
If you go to any hardware store and buy cheapest sds concrete drill bit and use it with impact drill you can drill at least 1000 holes in cinder block before the get remotely dull. And by the looks of tips on these bit they look like they are made for concrete.
That is a Diamond blade. i always see them used for cutting concrete and bricks but never for cutting metal (Regular Cut off wheels are cheaper and much faster for metal) Also there is indeed actual diamond grit on the end of the teeth which makes them super expensive. But that one costs as much as the Hilti Diamond blades of that same size that is insane.
There's a lot of cheap good grade diamond blades out there that work fine and last long, on Amazon and stores like Harbour Freight. It's brand names that think their stuff is superior, price gouging the crap out of people, when the cheap stuff is the same or if not better quality. I keep blades of all sizes and for many different tools in my arsenal, found it way cheaper than continually buying and changing out oxide cut-off wheels.
Used to do machinists work. #1 Use a center punch on metal products to keep drill bit from walking. #2 Use spinndle oil to aid in cooling of a drill bit. #3 Alway go slow and steady even with a hand drill when cutting a hole in metal. #4 The drill bits that you are using are designed for masonary work, meaning to be used @ a moderate to fast rpm speed with water applied. Just buy some masionary dewalt drlll bits for the money.
Back when I first got a set they were pretty good and were the only thing that was working for hardened steel. And that was after a long few days hanging around at the Mother Earth news fair trying to drill anything possible in more convoluted ways. I have noticed they generally need a LOT of pressure to make use of the carbide and glass is best done fast, light, and wet. But that was like 2015 so I don’t know how a new set is
the only tool i have ever gotten was a all purpose tile saw/grinder wheel from bad dog tools and gotta say that it actually works really well so far, tho to be fair i only got it cause it was 26 dollars or something close to that
Little warning from someone who has cut concrete and cinder blocks at work many times. Wear an N95 rated dust mask. look up silicosis and you'll understand why wearing a mask when cutting anything with silicon dust being produced you should be wearing some sort of respiratory protection. The amount that Tyler cut today could give him some long term negative effects years later. It can take years for any symptoms of silicosis to manifest after exposure to silicon dust. Be safe out there, and make sure you know what safety guidelines OSHA recommends for any given application.
I have a non name brand 65 piece drill index that I got on sale for 10 bucks 5 years ago that have been well used - they would run circles around those overpriced garbage bits
Heat dulls them out quicker, I would usually buy cheap harbor freight drill bits and use them for steel, have the steel in a clamp and a bottle of water with a hole punched into the lid and drip it on as im using it. Gets more use out of it.
Idk what's more entertaining you drilling an it getting better at the cost of the drill bit or watching the drill bit fail an your skills getting better
Just to add even though its ages old now, when drilling metal with good bits or bad bits (regardless of what they show in the demos) Feeds and speeds are what you gotta keep in mind. Hot is the opposite of sharp, You gotta have the just right amount of pressure with just the right amount of speed. You often need to slow down to drill a metal hole fast. Not pressing hard enough also makes the drill bit rub instead of cut which will heat it up a toooon
I have one of the 4.5 inch cutting wheels and love it just cuz I know when I pull my grinder out the cut off wheel isn’t going to be broken. It does cut slower than a cut off wheel. But it’s thicker and stronger kinda like cutting with a thin grinding wheel. But you can also grind with it. So it makes it nice when working on the side of the road away from the shop.
You need to have some sort of "standard", either set by you or other verifiable tests. EDIT: The grippy feeling you're getting often comes from how you're holding the power tool. Sometimes its user fatigue setting in.
You proved these are the worst drill bits ever. Lifetime warranty..even if they replace them, you just have a new junk bit. This company should be sued out of existence.
I’m a metalworker and it’s hard to beat HSS. I have some annular cutters that have drilled a few hundred holes and they are still sharp as can be. These look like they completely suck. I learned how to hand sharpen twist drill bits from my old foreman in a machine shop and It saves so much time and money
Before drilling you have to use a center punch to make a little whole on the steel so the drill wont walk around and you get a perfect whole at the right place.
For drilling metal It creates a lot of metal on metal friction which creates a ton of heat. Heat anneals the metal meaning it softens it. Can be lessened by oil. The walking around is just gyroscopic force.
I’ve used cheap dollar store drill bits being a pinch for quick drill bits for a job, and I gotta say I’d rather spend another 10 bucks on 10 bits (that work 100x better) than buy these 😂
Wear a mask next time you cut stones, silica dust will destroy your lungs, I'm not a geologist, but I used to work in a slate mine and their geologist told me lots of different stones contain silica. It's harmless until you breathe it in, the small particles are sharp and will actually scar your lungs. These particles are smaller than the common cold cell, so a respirator designed for silica would be ideal
I don’t normally comment on videos, but I feel like I should on this one. I had a set of their drillbits in my cart. I was about to purchase and then I saw your video pop up. and I figured it out watch it and you completely changed my mind I would rather buy a decent $20 set of bits and replace that every year and by proper proper material so thank you for what you do
guys, i used an impact because thats what they use in their demos, they also claim you have to use an impact because drills "dont spin fast enough"
Ya they're just garbage bits Tyler, don't worry about it, half these ppl don't know the difference between a drill and impact except that they get both in a pack on fathers day
Try them with a drill also use its hammer function for appropriate applications ie the cinder block I'm betting it would be quicker as for the tips on them they would work great in a cnc I doubt there is any drill or impact that could reach the speeds actually needed for really tough metal
Tyler... Did you have the drill in reverse??¿¿
Are you sure they used an impact driver and not a hammer drill?
I bet those bits smelled like stale raman noodles and despair straight out the package.
Tyler needs to start trying to send stuff he breaks in to a warranty claim. I’d love to see how the manufacturers respond
Great idea 😊
Yeah, and offer them a link to his video to show the product being used.
I doubt they'd say anything. Their whole thing is to sell expensive so they can replace free for anyone who makes a warranty claim. They're banking on people not bothering to make the claim or getting tired of having to do it again and again.
@@michaelsteinbach Yeah, most people will give up before the company actually loses money. Sad.
@@michaelsteinbach lol if you're gunna buy somethin with a lifetime warranty you're not just gunna give up on it lol. It's literally a free 200$
I used to be a CNC mill operator, and the second you said they claim these bits will never go dull or whatever, the first thing i thought was "oh, these are gonna be dogshit bits" lol
I paused the video on his close up shot of the bits, they look like powdered metal cast bits 😅
They never GO dull because they already are!
Anyone who understands how metal works would know that a product that "never goes dull" is total bullshit
The closest thing I've seen to "never going dull" is carbide drill bits running in aluminum. But even then they eventually give out. You can tell they're marketing these bits to numbskulls
Even as someone who only has a vague amount of experience with tools. I knew it was bullshit. Friction always wears stuff out, basic physics.
The reason they never skip around in those videos is because they usually pre-drill holes that are just a size smaller than the drill bit they are demonstrating this allows them to make it appear as if they are quickly pushing it through but there is still some resistance so it's not clearly just a hole
Any time Tyler gets out power tools, I can't help but watch... like passing a major automobile accident, on the interstate - you just can't look away, no matter how mortifying it is.
It would be great to see some clamps when he's cutting using a grinder rather than chasing the object around or holding it with his delicate fingers.
mortifying means extremely embarrassing.
are you british
Or like NASCAR and we're waiting for him to quote unquote _crash_ something.
@@teslainvestah5003 Ok. It also has two other meanings, one of which applies in a colloquial manner. ;)
I don’t know anything about tools. I don’t own any tools and probably never will BUT I come and watch every single one of Tyler’s video and love them.
Only Tyler can have me laugh and be fully engaged in a video about tool bits.
Get some basic tools you never know when you might need them
@@pearbearhd4737
agreed, you don't really need particularly high quality tools either if they're just occasional use, picking up a cheap tool box set from harbor freight or home depot etc is a good investment
i won't lie, most of the tools in tool kits like that (cheap sets) are pretty shit, but pretty shit is better than nothing and better than spending money for a tool with quality you don't need
if you need a better tool you buy it, occasionally yeah it might be more expensive because you end up with 2 tools, but usually you just end up with keeping the original cheap tool because you either dont really need a good one, or it's good enough
As a construction moron I can say a few things. Those materials require different tips to properly drill a hole. You have metal, masonry, glass, and tile. (Sometimes glass and tile you can get away with interchanging) All different types of bits.
Also these are just a piece of junk.
Those are masonry bits.
@@FuzzyWCTX they are tungsten carbide bits. Similar shape to masonry bits but not specific to just masonry. I have some and I paid nearly as much as that whole set just for 2... They will go through anything I've used them for like butter
@@gazs7237 You're either a machinist or a clown for paying that.
The best tile bits ive used are the kits sold at lowes depot with carbide/diamond grit brazed to the top of a cylinder, like a holesaw.
Goes right through tiles no prob tho.
Here’s something interesting I know about a major company named Diablo they make a bit set that can go through everything only difference between these and the Diablo ones is the Diablo ones actually work and that’s been tested by my coworkers putting it through solid steel
After looking at the bad dog tools video of him drilling into tile, I'm pretty sure their demonstration tile was basically plaster with a glossy layer on top. He went through that thing like butter which no drill bit could ever do.
Cheap subway tile is actually super soft. Basically anything that even claims that it might cut brick or tile goes through in a second or two.
You should've compared the bad drill bits to some normal wood, masonry, and metal drill bits
They'll just work though. These bits here are worse than scrap
@Shocking Pikachu its comparison content
I got a pack of 7 dollar bits because i had nothing at the time, and lost 5 of them inside of 2x4's(literally just snapped off inside the wood mid drill). This was after they drilled about 30 holes or so. got the pack of dewalts, yeah nothing broken after a year and half of use lol. Some products are just trash.
You'll spend hours thinking what am i doing wrong? And then you realize "oh, yeah, i bought trash".
17:44 "Excuse me, sir! I'm trying to sleep, could you plea-aaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhh!"
Brake rotors are usually made from cast iron. Cast iron is quite soft and even self lubricating due to carbon nodules. And yes, actually harder than mild steel. That diamond cut off wheel worked fine, but it's not really any better than the ones you can get for $20 at your local Home Depot. And porcelain tile is quite hard. You generally need diamond drill bits (I usually use the Chinese core bits - cheap but they only last maybe a half dozen holes at best) for that and you have to keep them cool. The carbide tips on those drill bits didn't stand a chance.
nah, just use a masonry drill bit with hammer drill. I do it all the time and goes through it like butter
@@TriforceOfCourage97 you're not supposed to use hammer action on tiles as you can smash them. Kudos if it works for you tho
@@norfolkngood8960 works every time (for me), you just have to be easy.
@@norfolkngood8960 it works fine. you just have to start without the hammer mode for a bit and after you have a good pilot dimple, switch the hammer mode on and go slowly.
@@norfolkngood8960 you can hammer tile no prob I've drilled thousands of holes in tile installing shower doors over the years and the only had a few break and every time they were not back buttered/adhered properly.
Yes, those are masonry bits.
I also bought two of those drill bits to drill three 5 centimeter holes in concrete. Everything went well for the first 2 centimeters, but then the drill bit turned bright red and the tip simply melted off. I didn't even try to use the second drill bit after seeing how weak the first one was. After that, I went to a hardware store and bought a Bosch brand drill bit, and in 5 seconds the holes were done, and there was no sign of wear on the drill bit.
The Bosch drill bit cost the same as the two bad ones combined.
In the commercials they use props made of soft metals like aluminum. Using aluminum allows them to keep the look of cutting into steel, but show the speed of cutting the aluminum.
The carbide tips on these will separate and shatter if used too long in hardened steel due to heat fracturing.
Put really simple, these are just real cheap concrete bits made out of soft steel.
Buy cheap, find ways to make the product look like something beyond our time and sell high, the biggest moneymaker in the industry.
Great vid as always Tyler, keep it up and stay out of trouble.
That is likely the most detailed response I have read, and I agree that is likely the case here.
The part that actually bothers me is that if they replace each set 5 times, they are probably still making money. Sad that people would rather do customers dirty than just make a quality product.
@@noahblevins9569 They could delivery 10 sets to someone and still make money
Honestly I love that Tyler is using the tools the way a person who isn't an expert would use them. This is how the average person is going to use them. Would I love to see how they work with cutting fluid? Of course. But this was still educational. I'm glad he's wearing safety goggles. I hope he starts wearing a respirator.
I'm pretty sure they weren't advertised to need cutting fluid. He was replicating the commercials exactly as they showcased the product, as they said, you didn't need to worry about the bits overheating or whatever. Safety glasses probably isn't necessary for drilling or using a grinder that has a guard on it. Respirator could be needed depending on what you're cutting or drilling. Also a respirator might make it hard to hear what he's saying. For that, I think just taking it outside would be best.
@@point-five-oh6249 That man had glass dust going up into his face. glasses, and something, i mean annnyyyything over your face is better than straight inhaling glass
Now you should try to get the bits warrantied and let us know what type of fiasco it turns into
There’s a reason he has a shirt that says, “I void warranties”.
Apparently other of people have the same issue and customer service is horrible trying to get money back or replacements. Loads of videos on here and reviews on web
i was high enough to try blowing the dust away after you finally got through that cinder block and there was dust there hahahaha
What?
@@zackdaripr indont even remember commenting this but i guess after he drilled a hole and there was sawdust left i tried to blow it away (obv not possible cuz its a fucking screen)
You suppose his neighbors are always just like, “oh… Tyler’s at it again…” 🤣
I was thinking the same thing
🤣🤣👍
I would say the neighboring houses are now abandoned. For the safety of the former neighbors.
Girlfriend and I regularly joke about that lol. Imagining they are like 65 year old retirees and the wife is just standing looking out the window like "Honey... The TylerTubes at it again..."
ua-cam.com/video/04qPdGNA_KM/v-deo.htmlsi=9GdmtpiC2vsGO7vp
I've looked them up and the bits really seem to be a mixed bag.
From what I have seen they're great when you get good ones , but they're terrible when you get bad ones which apparently happens a lot and they're still not exactly good for everything they claim.
I've also heard many complaints about the warranty process, that you have to send in the broken bits on your own dime both ways, and that turnaround times are slow.
From everything I've read / seen it seems like they kind of wrote a big check that's financially difficult to cash, they offered a lifetime warranty on a consumable product and they're stuck with it because they wouldn't sell without one.
Who in the hell would give you a lifetime warranty on drill bits?
That's like offering a lifetime warranty on hacksaw blades or tires, they're consumables and having a warranty on them is unheard of.
I sent one in (tip had fractured) on a warranty claim. They sent back one that was similarly chipped, but it had been sharpened.
I'm so glad you did this video! I got scammed buying these awful bits at a fair. They had a guy demonstrating drilling through multiple thick metal items right in front of me.
Bits they were using weren't the bits they sold me cause mine turned blue and dull first try. They are the worst! They even said you can bend them and drill at angles.
Yeah man you should never bend a drill bit and use it. I watched a guy lose an eye using a bent masonry bit. Whoever told you that should be shot.
How could you even bend it and how would that work? Wouldn't it be more like a stiff weed wacker wire?
That sucks. Some guy at work was trying to get me to buy some. He just ordered some himself. I’m gonna show him this video.
Lite trick next time wend you are at a fair… tell the guy you will by it but ONLY if it the bits/whatever product is the one he is CURRENTLY using…
He will then gon on bla bla bla how he can’t… but continue telling him i will only buy it if its that one!
Eventually he will sell you that product that he is using… thenn and only then you know you bought a good product…
That how i made myself a actual non-stick frying pan 🤣
Never trust a salesman. Especially at a fair.
The advertisements are misleading but I feel like a good rule of thumb when drilling through any metal is to use drilling oil
And a center punch.
I’m still dying over the fact that Tyler left the spaghetti noodles on the garage door behind him… 🤣💀
I can't help but look at that in every video he uploads
Those are from this time last year. I know because he replied to me about them lol.
Yup. The spaghetti is more durable than the drill bits. 😂
I'm so used to seeing the spaghetti I dont even notice it anymore
I just double checked and today is EXACTLY the first birthday/one year anniversary of the spaghetti on the wall of names
I am concerned about the longevity of Tyler’s lungs.
I would be curious to see the warranty process on those drill bits
Warranty? For misusing them?
@@jadedjackel655 How is it misusing them if Tyler's replicating what they do themselves in demonstrations/infomercials/commercials?
@@munkustrap2 because he's using masonry bits on metal. Misuse.
@@jadedjackel655 Not sure if they gave him different drill bits or not (don't know those) but the tin does show all those materials on it so I assume it's intended to be used on all those materials.
@@Cubanboi311
I had a set of tires from walmart and they lasted 3 weeks So I went for a refund and they showed me the fine print where it says if you Drive on paved road or clay road or off road or gravel or sandy roads or in bad weather it voids the warranty, Also highway speed or in town because stop and go will void the warranty.
A Good set will last me a year on average back when I drove a lot but then again Good Year we 3 x the price,
16:45 "They're supposed to be good at everything but what I'm finding is that they're not really good at anything."
The jack of all trades is a master at none.
Was the bug on the cinder block a paid actor?
I think he was supposed to make a cameo but got cancelled for stealing the spotlight.
stunt double!
No animals were harmed in the making of this video. That was a $19,000 animatronic insect with "lifelike features".
Tyler really stepping up his production with those.
Was his roommate
He wasn't properly compensated according to the Equality for Insect Actors Act, so I heard he went after Tyler for north of $10M...
Tyler if you somehow find this comment, Pro tip: next time you cut/drill glass spray water wherever you’re drilling and it won’t shatter. The water keeps the glass from heating up and creating friction so it doesn’t break. It’ll be an easier way to demonstrate it and it’ll be safer as well. The last thing you want to do is inhale a lethal dose of glass dust. Cheers mate
Seeing the way Tyler used that grinder made me fear for my safety and I don't think we are even in the same state. I'm really surprised there wasn't a lot of blood in this video.
lol you're such a soyboy xD. There's nothing wrong with how he used it, it's how it's normally used. It's just that the diamond disc is designed for ceramic, stone, brick and tiles. It isn't meant to cut metal, but this is mostly fault of the shady company who advertised it in such a way and it's overpriced af too. Either way even if a total idiot uses an angle grinder at worst you can get a good burn, because these discs are dull, they don't have teeth. It won't cut into flesh unless you really intend to.
I thought the same thing. If that thing bites, it's going right for him.
I absolutely agree. His total disregard for kick back makes me cringe...lol
I felt the same way. I almost couldn't watch. I hope someone shows him how to use an angle grinder after this.
Usually I scoff at would-be safety experts because it is always "oh noes, he didn't use teh gloves/respirator/glasses" but yeah this was pretty fucked.
Like he clamps down the bar but not the heavy brake thing? Really?
The real star of this "episode" is the Pill Bug(Rolly Polly) on the cinder block. XD
I hope you send them back for warranty and update the channel on what they do and say
17:38 That is one BRAVE bug! :P
17:45 R.I.P. Fred. you lived a good life!
There is a lot of inferior metals being used to make sharp edges because they stay shiny but dull after one use. They usually come with a sharpener as a bonus
I can only imagine what Tyler's neighbors think everytime he films.
Right tool for the right job and they cut well. Diamond for tile,glass,brick,concrete etc. Abrasive cutting disc for steel, etc.
you should reach out to them and see what they say about there bits and the life time warranty
It’s actually not worth it, I read the reviews and they say customers service is terrible. According to reviews the person who does customers service is one of the owners of the company, and she is beyond rude.
@@LoneStarCowboy1 that should be record for a video
@@LoneStarCowboy1 That makes for more interesting content.
If it were me, and I was making money doing it, I would make a series of sending damaged bits back to the rude person. If they want to back their garbage with a lifetime warranty, I would use it as content for life. Until the audience wanted me to move on at least.
Omg my mind is screaming... "Water! Mask! You're breathing that shit dude!"
They work fairly well on the cast iron brake rotor. They're not as dense as that angle iron. But even the angle iron wasn't throwing curls when he was drilling it. It's like those bits aren't cutting, they're chipping.
And I personally wouldn't use a non sharpened tungsten carbide bit on metal I prefer high speed steel
If you look at the tips, they're clearly masonry bits. Masonry bits are essentially hammers that a hammer drill will rotate in between blows. They rapidly chip rather than cutting, because cutting stone is hard and chipping it is less difficult.
@@dsgamecube the drill is the hammer, the bit is the chisel.
It all depends on the cutting medium used. Tool steel, carbide, or Diamond. Plus cooling to keep the coating on the cutting wheel from getting hot and adhesive letting go.
I've been watching Tyler for years hes actually been cleaner than ever. He doesn't keep stuff all over the place everything's organized
I think he said his garage is a mess and showed it in a different video. Plus in most videos he just tosses stuff everywhere either accidental or on purpose
@@doll9340 If you watch this early a videos you've a lot more sloppy or spilling stuff. Everywhere throwing stuff on the floor if you look around the garage now he organized it. He built a workbench shelves for his tools and stuff
🎉😂! Yo! You bad dawg! 😂😂😂
Vitrified tiles really require diamond bits to drill. Thry were probably drilling a wall tile rather than a floor tile
Tyler I looked up the bits and your drill is up to 2000 RPM. The bits say to use High Speed Drills 2500 RPM plus.
i love the little pill bug looking thing crawling over the concrete. Nice to have a co-host for a change.
Rolly Polly
"pill bug" 😂😂
When cutting with a cut off wheel, always cut with spark flying toward you if you can. That way if it binds it won’t come toward you and cut you.
That bug kill and flick at 17:43 was hilarious. 😂
I instantly laughed when that happened😂
Your correct. Brake rotors and drums are made from soft metal. In fact, sometimes you get a hot spot on the rotor that hardens. If it goes to deep to turn it, you have to replace the rotor.
I'd like to see you testing the support claims. Will they actually replace them?
The grinding disc seems consistent with diamond discs. The grit gets "finer" during first use and more or less stays that way after that. Disc brakes are usually cast iron, so in a way softer than mild steel.
Please use cutting oil and water when appropriate
That bug was just chillin and you killed it.
it wouldn't surprise me if the objects like the hammer were already partially drilled before they were shown being drilled into on camera
There *are* uhhh, I can't remember what they're called, but I've got a few of them, where they're hard pieces of metal used to put a dimple into the material so your drill bit doesn't walk
Also, fairly certain Tyler needed to put some cutting fluid on the drill bit
@@PsylomeAlpha a center punch?
Another comment said they make aluminum props to use at demonstrations, and even then the videos I can find they don't even drill more than a1/4" into it
I’ve noticed the diamond cutting wheels don’t fair with metal to well but masonry applications it shines very well
For future reference, you really don't want to be exposed to that dust, especially the concrete dust. Even short exposure really not good. Am very glad to have seen the drill bits tested though
Wdym? silica dust is fiiiine. It'll only give you a deadly lung disease 😂
@@ShockingPikachu that part is fine, the worst part is it doesn't even taste good
Yea. Still dealing with the after effects of quickcrete powder hitting me in the face without a respirator. I've since been diagnosed with asthma. Ugh.
@@ShockingPikachudamn I’m a construction manager and I didn’t even know concrete has that much silica in it. I wonder how much that effects things, I’d have to imagine the rest of the bulk in concrete isn’t much healthier to inhale lol
Interesting. I've cut that kind of stuff and more, for years and I'm even a smoker. Yet, I've got no problems with my lungs. I've had x-rays, mri's, CT scan with contrast and even breathing tests. Everything normal. Can silica dust hurt you? I believe so. Just not right away like, if it was only one time breathing the dust. Maybe I'm just lucky or it's my super power.
Id recommend getting microscope camera to show wear of drill bits just like Project Farm uses, its hard to see the tip damage, but overall very cool test!
If Tyler uses a photography camera that also makes videos, all he needs is a lens extender for micro imagery, zooming.
You know Tyler we'd still think you're cool even if you wore a mask while cutting masonry indoors 😂
And as always, I enjoyed the video! Peace
Those bits drilled metal like how a masonry bit would have. In my own shop ive tested and confirmed a masonry bit will drill harder metal, (drilled through a tillage disc) but they will walk even when used in a drill press as well as need a lot of down force. Your experience with the floor tile is spot on. As per your experience floor tiles are ridiculously hard and take forever to drill through no matter if you use a glass, tile, or a masonry bits. Wall tiles on the other hand will drill like butter comparatively.
I would not be surprised if they were made to be drilled because of the need for plumbing holes.
Gotta love when Tyler uploads!
Love your channel. You are my Saturday night entertainment 👍🏻
Porcelain is hard and very difficult to drill, ideally you need a hollow circular diamond cutter and keep it cooled with water whilst drilling. A lot of tiles are made of material more like clay and any masonry drill bit will go through it easy. I use the Bosch multi construction drill bits and they will only go through soft porcelain and are spent after only a few holes. For high grade porcelain you really need specialist bits in order to go through it.
Porcelain is the hard tile. Is the soft stuff called travertine or something? I can't remember. I used to install showers and we loved drilling the clay like tile a lot more than porcelain.
Glad I wasn’t just doing something wrong. I had to drill into my shower tile and it was so slow even with a Milwaukee circular diamond bit.
All the videos I watched showed people drilling into tile super quickly
@@Mr.NiceGuy80 some tiles are almost like terracotta, but yeah travertine rings a bell.
@@shaneh7519 fyi the best bits ive found attach to the angle grinder, but you need the special tool to get the hole started and in centre, even then, in high grade porcelain it can take minutes+ to drill each hole! The horrible thing is, you don't know what they are made of until you try drilling it! I got caught out on a job I'd priced to fit an entire bathroom, the customer chose high grade porcelain tiles, I had to fit the shower riser bar and shower screen, which was probably only around ten holes, but I did not have the proper bits and struggled for a whole day trying to drill the holes, whilst ruining all my other drill bits!
I worked as a machinist making Toyota brake rotors for 8 years, our automated drills would cut 10,000 holes before we changed the bits on a schedule and they wear generally still sharp after that.
You just saved a lot of people quite a bit of money. Walmart bits work better than these 😂 thanks for the video always enjoy them.
Oh yeah, just a note when you’re cutting into steel you have to make an indention in it a pilot indention and you can buy the pens in a set and you don’t have to spin arm, a leg ahead and part of your shoulder lol to get some company sell them they come in all different sizes usually SAE sizes there’s like three or four of them you can even buy two of them so your drill bit don’t walk all over the place messing up the metal also to note when you’re drilling into metal in construction industry the client don’t like to see scratches all over their metal, so FYI to all the amateurs out there watching this video
These guys are like the DKoldies of drill bits and make Snap-On look like a good value.
WHY DOES IT MATTER? IT IS ALL MADE IN CHINA ANYWAY?
¤#%# caps lock
I do shower installations, we use 3/16 Relton masonry bits, and I specifically use a hammer drill, if the tile is soft I wont use the hammer function, but as soon as I'm against hard floor tile I use the hammer function, but I will typically be through the hardest tile in 15-20 seconds mostly, also if you are drilling hard tile remember to have a cup of water or some kind of liquid to cool the bit down, because hard tile will tear a bit apart in a couple holes.
Loving this consistentcy and long videos tyler keep it yp
Respirator mask man. That silica dust is deadly.
We're they using a hammer drill for tile and concrete? Because it looks like a hammer drill bit
I agree, looks like drill bits for concrete and tiles
He's doing what the advertisements claimed.
@16:45 them things are the jack of all trades, master of none! 😂
I don't understand anything related to construction, but I believe in Tyler because of his confidence and eloquence
These bits look like absolute shit. I would have to hold it to be 100% sure about the material but I would bet money I could snap one with a pair of pliers and little effort. The first red flag is NONE of the bits are even shaped to bore into anything but masonry. Theres a reason they sell different bits for different material.
you trust a man who doesn't know what a sweet potato is?
Usually when I drill tile I put a putty barrier and fill it with water to keep heat down. I drill metal all day at work and I use oil as lubricant and my drill bits last a long time. Use drill bits with cobalt in them they are the best in my opinion it drills through everything
Cobalt mining is terrible though 😢
A lot of people spin the bits too fast as well it helps a ton if you slow it down to where you start seeing nice spirals coming off
@@southernracing2468 correct I try to get the longest ones I can
Thanks!
Chisel tip bits are meant to be used in a hammer drill.
Yes but they advertise with a impact
Iron and steal destroy diamond cutting tools as the iron steal carbon from the diamonds if it gets too hot, works for a while though but wear out faster than if cutting other stuff.
Also cut tile and cinder blocks with a lot of water to avoid the dust.
If you go to any hardware store and buy cheapest sds concrete drill bit and use it with impact drill you can drill at least 1000 holes in cinder block before the get remotely dull. And by the looks of tips on these bit they look like they are made for concrete.
Tyler was using an empty pickle jar to drill through! I knew he secretly loves pickles and can’t get enough of them!
That is a Diamond blade. i always see them used for cutting concrete and bricks but never for cutting metal (Regular Cut off wheels are cheaper and much faster for metal) Also there is indeed actual diamond grit on the end of the teeth which makes them super expensive. But that one costs as much as the Hilti Diamond blades of that same size that is insane.
There's a lot of cheap good grade diamond blades out there that work fine and last long, on Amazon and stores like Harbour Freight. It's brand names that think their stuff is superior, price gouging the crap out of people, when the cheap stuff is the same or if not better quality. I keep blades of all sizes and for many different tools in my arsenal, found it way cheaper than continually buying and changing out oxide cut-off wheels.
Used to do machinists work. #1 Use a center punch on metal products to keep drill bit from walking. #2 Use spinndle oil to aid in cooling of a drill bit. #3 Alway go slow and steady even with a hand drill when cutting a hole in metal. #4 The drill bits that you are using are designed for masonary work, meaning to be used @ a moderate to fast rpm speed with water applied. Just buy some masionary dewalt drlll bits for the money.
HE KILLED THE ROLLIE POLLIE 😭😭😭
These drill bits are about as durable as weapons in BoTW
Hey Tyler, for future metal drilling tests you might consider using some kind of oil to cool the material as you go, to reduce heat fractures
He is doing what they did in the commercial
The company advertises that you don’t need oil
Also, I tried oil. It doesn’t help
Back when I first got a set they were pretty good and were the only thing that was working for hardened steel. And that was after a long few days hanging around at the Mother Earth news fair trying to drill anything possible in more convoluted ways. I have noticed they generally need a LOT of pressure to make use of the carbide and glass is best done fast, light, and wet. But that was like 2015 so I don’t know how a new set is
the only tool i have ever gotten was a all purpose tile saw/grinder wheel from bad dog tools and gotta say that it actually works really well so far, tho to be fair i only got it cause it was 26 dollars or something close to that
Little warning from someone who has cut concrete and cinder blocks at work many times. Wear an N95 rated dust mask. look up silicosis and you'll understand why wearing a mask when cutting anything with silicon dust being produced you should be wearing some sort of respiratory protection. The amount that Tyler cut today could give him some long term negative effects years later. It can take years for any symptoms of silicosis to manifest after exposure to silicon dust. Be safe out there, and make sure you know what safety guidelines OSHA recommends for any given application.
I have a non name brand 65 piece drill index that I got on sale for 10 bucks 5 years ago that have been well used - they would run circles around those overpriced garbage bits
Heat dulls them out quicker, I would usually buy cheap harbor freight drill bits and use them for steel, have the steel in a clamp and a bottle of water with a hole punched into the lid and drip it on as im using it. Gets more use out of it.
You should test their warranty on those bits
Idk what's more entertaining you drilling an it getting better at the cost of the drill bit or watching the drill bit fail an your skills getting better
I wouldn’t put it past Tyler that he wasn’t running the drill backwards 😊
Just to add even though its ages old now, when drilling metal with good bits or bad bits (regardless of what they show in the demos) Feeds and speeds are what you gotta keep in mind. Hot is the opposite of sharp, You gotta have the just right amount of pressure with just the right amount of speed. You often need to slow down to drill a metal hole fast. Not pressing hard enough also makes the drill bit rub instead of cut which will heat it up a toooon
I have one of the 4.5 inch cutting wheels and love it just cuz I know when I pull my grinder out the cut off wheel isn’t going to be broken. It does cut slower than a cut off wheel. But it’s thicker and stronger kinda like cutting with a thin grinding wheel. But you can also grind with it. So it makes it nice when working on the side of the road away from the shop.
You need to have some sort of "standard", either set by you or other verifiable tests.
EDIT: The grippy feeling you're getting often comes from how you're holding the power tool. Sometimes its user fatigue setting in.
You proved these are the worst drill bits ever. Lifetime warranty..even if they replace them, you just have a new junk bit. This company should be sued out of existence.
You should definitely return them and make a video on the process lol
I’m a metalworker and it’s hard to beat HSS. I have some annular cutters that have drilled a few hundred holes and they are still sharp as can be. These look like they completely suck. I learned how to hand sharpen twist drill bits from my old foreman in a machine shop and It saves so much time and money
Before drilling you have to use a center punch to make a little whole on the steel so the drill wont walk around and you get a perfect whole at the right place.
Do you mean hole?
For drilling metal
It creates a lot of metal on metal friction which creates a ton of heat. Heat anneals the metal meaning it softens it.
Can be lessened by oil.
The walking around is just gyroscopic force.
I’ve used cheap dollar store drill bits being a pinch for quick drill bits for a job, and I gotta say I’d rather spend another 10 bucks on 10 bits (that work 100x better) than buy these 😂
If a company who manufactures drills tell you, you can go full speed in steel - keep on moving and search for a proper manufacturer.
wrote this so nobody can say first and actually be first
lol Tyler is so popular now, I can't even make it to the comments section in 3 minutes of upload lol
End of the video had me laughing. Your content is getting legendary
Wear a mask next time you cut stones, silica dust will destroy your lungs, I'm not a geologist, but I used to work in a slate mine and their geologist told me lots of different stones contain silica. It's harmless until you breathe it in, the small particles are sharp and will actually scar your lungs. These particles are smaller than the common cold cell, so a respirator designed for silica would be ideal
Nah he's fine bruh
I don’t normally comment on videos, but I feel like I should on this one. I had a set of their drillbits in my cart. I was about to purchase and then I saw your video pop up. and I figured it out watch it and you completely changed my mind I would rather buy a decent $20 set of bits and replace that every year and by proper proper material so thank you for what you do
Peep little homie on the cinder block watching his home be drilled into😂Tyler is what all UA-camrs should be, straight up real!