Love it. The design of those bushings for the head are stout! I would love to see you guys test crows foot wrenches. Nothing is more frustrating than trying to get a bolt loose and the jaws spreading or rounding the fastener.
🤔... ok, you've got my attention. I would like to see this as well. Perhaps your style and ways of a Project Farm test session. Maybe an America 🇺🇸 VS .... Frankly, who gives a 💩 who else video 🤷♂️ 👍👍😉
So, how hard do you think it would be to put a significantly more powerful motor on it? Might be fun to see just how far that massive superhammer can go when properly beans'd.
Just use the hydraulic motor of your choice with a reaction bar. Power is not difficult. PORTABILITY is difficult but they do make portable hydraulic power units for use with hydraulic wrenching systems.
I wish they had a Guy with a 3D printer to help them out. Finding a way to mount an off the shelf Mote-Orb in it might not be too difficult, the way Its designed with a full rear cap that bolts into the center aluminum housing should make it 100x easier than with almost any other electric tool. Gotta get a motor that can take full advantage of the Beans and see what that Mother can do!
@SneakyFishy Remember what TTTC did with the railway impact gun conversion? There are some interesting possibilities with this off-brand impact. I'm surprised it did as well as it did. Great build quality as well. I love my Herc Ultra and Earthquake XT, but man, those Milwaukee impacts are godly. One inch sledgehammers. Mine do fine for anything I need, so I'm fine with my Herc and Earth.. who knows, I'd love to get one of the Milwaukee's on sale. And yes I know those are overkill, even for automotive use😅
Soooo... we're modding that thing with more motor, right? Right??? Honestly a pretty surprisingly good looking design. Beefy, maybe even overbuilt, without being unnecessarily complicated. That's some nice work, designing something like this on an Alibaba budget LOL.
I wish they had a Guy with a 3D printer to help them out. Finding a way to mount an off the shelf Mote-Orb in it might not be too difficult, the way Its designed with a full rear cap that bolts into the center aluminum housing should make it 100x easier than with almost any other electric tool. Gotta get a motor that can take full advantage of the Beans and see what that Mother can do!
Wow the construction on this thing is actually unique and pretty sweet! They spent more money on one screw than some brands spend on all the screws in the tool, hahaha. Shame about the grease ingress, but otherwise pretty cool! Wonder what's holding it back most from making more power. Seems it could definitely fit a bigger motor.
If it is a grease that melts with heat it might be fine it would just liquify and run out of the motor. If it s a grease that bakes on then it is a problem.
@@loktom4068 I think you misunderstand my question from the angle of packaging and engineering versus cost. I wasn't saying there wouldn't be associated cost with an increase in power, I was inquiring about the biggest factor.
You need some serious industrial air lines to keep one fed 90PSI+ in the tool. We'd need to move to set up something larger all around, which we're not ruling out.
@torquetestchannel what state are you guys in? I have a brand new vanair viper that should give 70 cfm at 100 psi I wouldn’t mind loaning for a few months if you had some big boys you wanted to test.
@@TorqueTestChannelat the plants i work at we usually get one of those big diesel compressors and a manifold with 1" lines, it cant keep up with 2 of them for long, usually have to prep something else for a good 10 minutes while it catches up. id suggest the biggest tank you can afford or a badass compressor for your testing.
@@TorqueTestChannel have you ever considered looking into a high volume compressor being supplemented by a smaller high pressure one? I know it's not exactly inexpensive but it might be an option for the future. We use a high volume pump in our shop which pegs out at about 100PSI, and when we pull out the 3/4 and 1" air guns, he hook up a smaller compressor (probably similar to what you have for your set up) to bump the pressure up to 120-150 psi.
IDK about you, but having seen the teardown, I like the way they built that much more than I like the way most modern tools are built. Fewer points of failure because the electronics are simple, sturdy metal housing, scaled-up / fairly well-thought-out internal components for good performance... that right there's a winner.
@@jjoohhhnn Chinesium plastic is really stiff, cant really take any bending or impact. I wish the chinese used something like dewalt does, it bends like rubber Just that it gets ugly really fast
@@mihkus That is getting real old. China produces a lot of different types of plastic, including silicones that can be used to dampen impact when dropped.
Honestly, it looks like it'd be a good one to start modding, as it's already got the stout build and nice internals, just a motor might be all it takes to wake it up even more!
I'd love to see you test a TONE 3/4 impact. Made in Japan and takes metabo hpt batteries. 36 volt batteries, 1328 ft lbs max torque, 2900 RPM. TONE makes heavy duty construction tools for building and bridge construction, so this is probably a beast. We use their tools where I work. Model number CIW61100
To be fair, there is a good couple of mm worth of plastic surrounding the motor as seen at 6:45 Electric motors do gain quite a bit of torque with an increased diameter. And the metal construction shown here is surely going to give it the edge in terms of rigidity. My guess is that they went with a more off the shelf brusheless motor, instead of something more custom to fit their needs. With some slight design improvements it could likely get noticeably better. However, it is likely going to start getting held back by typical batteries at that point.
A lot of people are suggesting a motor swap. But maybe replacing the ESC with something like a VESC and giving it more current and/or voltage would give it an advantage because it maxed out the 5ah batteries.
Love the Videos, look forward to them every friday. Dreaming of the day when i see a Paoli F1 air gun being tested. Perhaps during COTA or Vegas? maybe get Haas or another team involved?
Single cams just put out a video 33mm vs 1 5/16. Yall need to watch it. She stated that the object is to get the socket to hammer on the fastener. Is that what is happening? Can we see this on high speed camera? So if you welded a nut or bolt to the anvil an impact would not work? What are the tolerances between nut and socket when you get to 33 mm ? Do the tolerances increase with size?
Pretty impressive! Just goes to show, they can make any quality and any power overseas, if they aren't constrained by a super low price, or its made for local market and has to be fairly decent.
@@BellicoseJatt604Cheapest but not best. Probably the only exception is power tools since they've been copying our designs for so long, they almost don't need to anymore. Yet, they still do.
I'm actually a believer that NOT everything from Ali is rubbish. Although he don't know how well this can hold up long term, if you've just get a job to do.....this is a low cost way to do it. As more of an electronics guy, I can tell you there's some SUPER bargains on stuff that works properly. The exaggerated claims and poorly written manuals just cloud the waters though.
That is some serious hitting power for such a cheap tool. I would love to see how the hammer and anvils wear down over years of regular use because cheaper price usually means softer steel.
Seeing that the 1/2" drive version is one of the most popular ones on AliExpress, any chance of giving that one a go given how cheap it is but still claiming high output?
Neat stuff. Seems their engineers aren't as good as the ones from the big companies (of course!) so they've gone and thrown extra weight and size at the problem. Hey, if it works....?
That motor was Perfectly chosen to suit the best battery you can use in it. Rubber vibe isolation from head to the grip. Adequate+ on wire AWG. Simple pixie wrangling design. All the above sound to me better than the big brands. Sound to me like the engis did exactly what was asked of them. Plus, the modular design > If demand is there, they can swap out the motor, for a more powerful one, when Makita bring out better power packs. I'd love to see a 6months long term test of this one.
@@Mis73rRand0m Pinching pennies is a part of the job for any industrial design engineer. Making something cheaper and easier to manufacture is high on the list of things you should concentrate on. Now the designer of the Alibaba tool made the tool using old tech and old designs, and there's nothing wrong with that, especially at the price. The materials used are solid, and though we didn't get a close look at the bearings there's a good chance they are at least decent. Other than that there's not much that can break easily. This is likely to be a pretty reliable tool, but only long term testing can prove that. And even then it's a heavy and clumsy tool that doesn't appeal to the professional mechanic. But for the home gamer it could be a of interest.
Hey, you could test Parkside brand, sold in Lidl. That brand is popular in Europe, and now when they paid Arnold S. for commercial, maybe it will be more popular in USA too. I would like to see the real numbers of their tools.
Great video! Keep making them! Would like to see the Uaoaii 1/2 compact impact wrench. Comes in at 5.11 inches. Wondering how much it can really do. Would you recommend a Uaoaii over a seesii impact wrench?
Video suggestion: comparing amazon's seesii to identical, but differently branded impacts. Are they all identical in looks and performance, or do they only share the shell? Might make for a boring video what with all of them being the same design and color, possibly performance as well, so don't take any orders from me.
We have that Milwaukee in the shop I work in. Its junks can't even loosen lugnuts torqued to 500 foot pounds. We got it new. It was used three times, and it sits unused now
My brother-in-law was seriously injured using one of these impact wrenches purchased off Amazon. His periodontist reccommended an expensive water-pik system to keep his gums and teeth healthy. My brother-in-law thought one of the 1/4" impact wrenches would be a budget friendly alternative. It didn't work out. Just a heads-up to all. Thanks.
I'm thinking, since you said it's impacts per minute were so low, that if you could wire it (maybe bypass the circuit board) to accept higher voltages, say 50% more or even double, then perhaps it really would hit above it's weight.
have you ever done test for battery adapters like ridget to dewalt, makita to dewalt, since i have rediget batteries and was looking at getting a dewalt and using my ridget batteries?
If you are looking for new ideas for products to test and compare, I'd like to see a comparison between portable power pack brands. Also, a test to see how accurate their watt ratings are.
can you test different penetrating oils and how effective they are? and also test mixing automatic transmission oil mixed 50/50 with acetone? the internet seems to think it's the best penetrating oil
Episode idea: Test every gun Harbor Freight makes, including their cheapo 1" deal that's supposed to make 1500 ft-lbs, all the way down to the cheapest ones they sell. Should be interesting to see the results, and would cost possibly less than some of the single cordless guns you've tested on the channel.
With that hammer, it might work if you add the chainsaw mod to it(If I recall correctly you said that when you had the chainsaw impact, that the engine had enough power but the hammer was too light)
Have y’all ever thought about adding another big air tank with big air compressor glad hand connectors so you could test the air hungry 3/4 and 1” guns?
I have this on my shop for agricultural machines. But after watching this video ı have very important question to ask. * Is there a way to increase its power?*
They sell this same exact thing under Makita brand overseas. I saw a review for this same thing from a Russian UA-camr (that reviews bootleg trash usually), and he was pleasantly surprised. Was in makita box and everything
Damn, Try hooking up a brushless speed controller from a RC car with 8S high output LiPo batteries like a hobbywing max5 or VESC and give it the maximum beans mechanically possible. this thing go flying
Charts still say the same, Makita 40v 3/4" still the king. But, Americans with ED problems still need more masculine names for their tools and China profits big on American insecurity and shortcomings, nearly half of the revenue from USA powertools go directly to Chinese brands like Milwaukee, flex and ryobi, and another 35% from Chinese parts used in "Mexico/USA" dewalts.
Hey guys, what about modifying or fabricating a torque multiplier that one can put on their 1/2-inch impact and potentially outputting 4-digit foot-pound torque numbers.
All 18V tool batteries go up to 21V when fully charged. Some manufacturers just like to put on a higher number. These batteries use lithium ion cells. The 18V batteries use 5 of these cells in series. When fully charged, each cell goes up to 4.2V. 4.2V times 5 for the series connection equals 21V. It is common practice to use the cells nominal voltage, not the fully charged voltage. Nominal voltage of these cells is 3.7V. 3.7V times 5 equals 18.5V. So manufacturers put 18V on their batteries. Some will say 20V, others 21V but most reputable manufacturers put 18V. It's all the same thing. However, the 588vf batteries use the cheapest cells available, not quality products. I know from experience. A real Makita 5Ah performs better than the 588vf.
I bought a 1/2" Uaoaii Brushless impact off Amazon, looks very similar to that thing, uses makita batteries as well. Advertised 400tq which I don't think it's close that at all but I got it on sale for $79, came with a 4ah battery and surprisingly works pretty well. Works great for what I need it for, light automotive work. I wouldn't use it in a professional auto shop but great for a weekend warrior.
"I'm not your real Dad." LOL Great stuff.
"I would have been your dad, but a dog beat me to it" - SgtMaj. Avery Johnson
I came for the tests and I stayed for the top tier presentation style.
That was hilarious at the end 😂😂
Love it. The design of those bushings for the head are stout!
I would love to see you guys test crows foot wrenches. Nothing is more frustrating than trying to get a bolt loose and the jaws spreading or rounding the fastener.
🤔... ok, you've got my attention. I would like to see this as well. Perhaps your style and ways of a Project Farm test session.
Maybe an America 🇺🇸 VS .... Frankly, who gives a 💩 who else video 🤷♂️ 👍👍😉
So, how hard do you think it would be to put a significantly more powerful motor on it?
Might be fun to see just how far that massive superhammer can go when properly beans'd.
Gas powered? Air powered? The possibilities are endless.. or something.
Just use the hydraulic motor of your choice with a reaction bar. Power is not difficult. PORTABILITY is difficult but they do make portable hydraulic power units for use with hydraulic wrenching systems.
I wish they had a Guy with a 3D printer to help them out. Finding a way to mount an off the shelf Mote-Orb in it might not be too difficult, the way Its designed with a full rear cap that bolts into the center aluminum housing should make it 100x easier than with almost any other electric tool. Gotta get a motor that can take full advantage of the Beans and see what that Mother can do!
@SneakyFishy Remember what TTTC did with the railway impact gun conversion? There are some interesting possibilities with this off-brand impact. I'm surprised it did as well as it did. Great build quality as well. I love my Herc Ultra and Earthquake XT, but man, those Milwaukee impacts are godly. One inch sledgehammers. Mine do fine for anything I need, so I'm fine with my Herc and Earth.. who knows, I'd love to get one of the Milwaukee's on sale. And yes I know those are overkill, even for automotive use😅
It would be very easy, current one has barely any copper in it so you would just have to rewind it with more copper %
For $215, you can live in OneVann, down by the river.
Soooo... we're modding that thing with more motor, right? Right???
Honestly a pretty surprisingly good looking design. Beefy, maybe even overbuilt, without being unnecessarily complicated. That's some nice work, designing something like this on an Alibaba budget LOL.
I wish they had a Guy with a 3D printer to help them out. Finding a way to mount an off the shelf Mote-Orb in it might not be too difficult, the way Its designed with a full rear cap that bolts into the center aluminum housing should make it 100x easier than with almost any other electric tool. Gotta get a motor that can take full advantage of the Beans and see what that Mother can do!
Everything is Alibaba Chinese bullshit... Milwaukee is just top shelf with a American sounding name
Wow the construction on this thing is actually unique and pretty sweet! They spent more money on one screw than some brands spend on all the screws in the tool, hahaha. Shame about the grease ingress, but otherwise pretty cool! Wonder what's holding it back most from making more power. Seems it could definitely fit a bigger motor.
If it is a grease that melts with heat it might be fine it would just liquify and run out of the motor. If it s a grease that bakes on then it is a problem.
Your willingness to offer them more money is the real reason for holding them back.
Go figure.
@@loktom4068 I think you misunderstand my question from the angle of packaging and engineering versus cost. I wasn't saying there wouldn't be associated cost with an increase in power, I was inquiring about the biggest factor.
@@loktom4068 Also, rereading your comment I'm not even really sure what you mean. I own DeWalt 20V and Milwaukee M12 tools. 😂
Still waiting on that 2967, but I understand you want a production model, not a test piece
Today I learned you aren't my real dad, and that hurts.
I would love to see the #1 hardest hitting 1in pneumatic / electric impact gun offered. Keep up the great work!
You need some serious industrial air lines to keep one fed 90PSI+ in the tool. We'd need to move to set up something larger all around, which we're not ruling out.
@torquetestchannel what state are you guys in? I have a brand new vanair viper that should give 70 cfm at 100 psi I wouldn’t mind loaning for a few months if you had some big boys you wanted to test.
Sir 24mm bolt remove
@@TorqueTestChannelat the plants i work at we usually get one of those big diesel compressors and a manifold with 1" lines, it cant keep up with 2 of them for long, usually have to prep something else for a good 10 minutes while it catches up.
id suggest the biggest tank you can afford or a badass compressor for your testing.
@@TorqueTestChannel have you ever considered looking into a high volume compressor being supplemented by a smaller high pressure one? I know it's not exactly inexpensive but it might be an option for the future. We use a high volume pump in our shop which pegs out at about 100PSI, and when we pull out the 3/4 and 1" air guns, he hook up a smaller compressor (probably similar to what you have for your set up) to bump the pressure up to 120-150 psi.
IDK about you, but having seen the teardown, I like the way they built that much more than I like the way most modern tools are built.
Fewer points of failure because the electronics are simple, sturdy metal housing, scaled-up / fairly well-thought-out internal components for good performance... that right there's a winner.
You just described why Makita is the indisputable best.
@@pflaffikNope, Onevann is the best by far.
Except for the point where the grease is spreading into the motor
can you test the onevan 1/2" 1800nm? thnx
can you PLEASE do more 3/4" aliexpress impact wrench videos?
Yes, please!
“I’m not your real dad” 😂 10:16
I was going to make a similar comment! I spit my coffee all over my computer!! HAHAHAHAHAHA
Wow, not bad. The build quality tells me this should probably last a long time too, as long as it isnt dropped, lol.
You could take off the housing and cover it in a couple coats of flex seal to give it a bit of shock absorbancy.
@@jjoohhhnn Chinesium plastic is really stiff, cant really take any bending or impact. I wish the chinese used something like dewalt does, it bends like rubber
Just that it gets ugly really fast
If you drop that beast, the concrete floor will shatter. 😂
@@mihkus That is getting real old. China produces a lot of different types of plastic, including silicones that can be used to dampen impact when dropped.
@@mihkusSo where's the Americansium tools at similar prices?
Name one please.
Honestly, it looks like it'd be a good one to start modding, as it's already got the stout build and nice internals, just a motor might be all it takes to wake it up even more!
I'd love to see you test a TONE 3/4 impact. Made in Japan and takes metabo hpt batteries. 36 volt batteries, 1328 ft lbs max torque, 2900 RPM. TONE makes heavy duty construction tools for building and bridge construction, so this is probably a beast. We use their tools where I work. Model number CIW61100
Tone is kinda Milwaukee in japan,..most pro builders using them
To be fair, there is a good couple of mm worth of plastic surrounding the motor as seen at 6:45
Electric motors do gain quite a bit of torque with an increased diameter. And the metal construction shown here is surely going to give it the edge in terms of rigidity.
My guess is that they went with a more off the shelf brusheless motor, instead of something more custom to fit their needs.
With some slight design improvements it could likely get noticeably better. However, it is likely going to start getting held back by typical batteries at that point.
A lot of people are suggesting a motor swap. But maybe replacing the ESC with something like a VESC and giving it more current and/or voltage would give it an advantage because it maxed out the 5ah batteries.
agreed
I really want to see you test tanzu 800nm impact wrench...im from malaysia and tanzu 800nm is the most famous chinese cordless impact wrench here
Great review 👍
Love the Videos, look forward to them every friday. Dreaming of the day when i see a Paoli F1 air gun being tested. Perhaps during COTA or Vegas? maybe get Haas or another team involved?
I’d love to see that massive hammer with a real hood motor behind it. Like a Frankenstein’ed one.
Please test more Onevan stuff, seems decent for the price!
I like the design more than the other known brands, and it seems that the quality isn't bad either. btw is it frankenstein time?
Interesting for the price. Really waiting for that Makita 1 inch 40V impact though after having the 40V 3/4 for over a year.
There's a French guy who tests lots of aliexpress stuff and I saw him test one of the smaller onevan models and it performed well.
Could you link to his youtube channel?
link please?
@@narseh123 ua-cam.com/video/m9C10RqNLyI/v-deo.htmlsi=Jmmpu7d6AI0cZ1hI
@@semidemiurge ua-cam.com/video/m9C10RqNLyI/v-deo.htmlsi=Jmmpu7d6AI0cZ1hI
@@semidemiurge ua-cam.com/video/m9C10RqNLyI/v-deo.htmlsi=qD6Dt3WK5Vdd2WG_
Single cams just put out a video 33mm vs 1 5/16. Yall need to watch it. She stated that the object is to get the socket to hammer on the fastener. Is that what is happening? Can we see this on high speed camera? So if you welded a nut or bolt to the anvil an impact would not work? What are the tolerances between nut and socket when you get to 33 mm ? Do the tolerances increase with size?
Seems very well made for the price 5:10
Any idea or speculation when Dewalt will release a 3/4" version of their DCF900 or the DCF961?
Word is next summer on a 3/4" DCF961 called DCF964
Pretty impressive! Just goes to show, they can make any quality and any power overseas, if they aren't constrained by a super low price, or its made for local market and has to be fairly decent.
Their local market is junk lmao have you seen their buildings?
Their buildings are literally earthquake proof. American buildings collapse from a strong breeze or a bit of snow lmao.@@entity6966
@@entity6966lol …he is talking about production and not infrastructure….if you want the cheapest or the best products they are all made in china
@@BellicoseJatt604Cheapest but not best. Probably the only exception is power tools since they've been copying our designs for so long, they almost don't need to anymore. Yet, they still do.
@@mediocreman2 i am not going to reply because i think less of you now after reading your power tool comment- Indian trader in China
I really enjoy your channel 👍
I'm actually a believer that NOT everything from Ali is rubbish. Although he don't know how well this can hold up long term, if you've just get a job to do.....this is a low cost way to do it. As more of an electronics guy, I can tell you there's some SUPER bargains on stuff that works properly. The exaggerated claims and poorly written manuals just cloud the waters though.
That is some serious hitting power for such a cheap tool. I would love to see how the hammer and anvils wear down over years of regular use because cheaper price usually means softer steel.
Seeing that the 1/2" drive version is one of the most popular ones on AliExpress, any chance of giving that one a go given how cheap it is but still claiming high output?
please interested in other ONEVAN products, angle impact wrench and copy of DTW700 Makita which is very cheap on alie, just 60€
Can’t wait to see you review the 2967
“I’m not your real dad” lol
😂 Gave me a good chuckle
Neat stuff. Seems their engineers aren't as good as the ones from the big companies (of course!) so they've gone and thrown extra weight and size at the problem. Hey, if it works....?
That motor was Perfectly chosen to suit the best battery you can use in it. Rubber vibe isolation from head to the grip. Adequate+ on wire AWG. Simple pixie wrangling design.
All the above sound to me better than the big brands. Sound to me like the engis did exactly what was asked of them. Plus, the modular design > If demand is there, they can swap out the motor, for a more powerful one, when Makita bring out better power packs.
I'd love to see a 6months long term test of this one.
Only thing they seem to not be good at is pinching pennies for the accounting department like big red has been doing.
Engineers? LOL! What you mean is they just stolen western IP, like all Asian companies do.
@@Mis73rRand0m Pinching pennies is a part of the job for any industrial design engineer. Making something cheaper and easier to manufacture is high on the list of things you should concentrate on. Now the designer of the Alibaba tool made the tool using old tech and old designs, and there's nothing wrong with that, especially at the price. The materials used are solid, and though we didn't get a close look at the bearings there's a good chance they are at least decent. Other than that there's not much that can break easily.
This is likely to be a pretty reliable tool, but only long term testing can prove that. And even then it's a heavy and clumsy tool that doesn't appeal to the professional mechanic. But for the home gamer it could be a of interest.
I was hoping you guys would test one of these!
Interested to see the conclusion of the circ saw tournament. Coming soon i hope.
"I'm not your real dad" wait... so does that mean.... Daddy??
Uh... I'll be right back. Need to pick up a pack of smokes
Nice, but would be nice to test for how long this tools may work ?
The model is 1 day old :P
Anything is one handed tool if you lift enough. 💪 🏋️♂️
I really like the beans pack
Hey, you could test Parkside brand, sold in Lidl. That brand is popular in Europe, and now when they paid Arnold S. for commercial, maybe it will be more popular in USA too. I would like to see the real numbers of their tools.
Please revisit the tool and over volt it or put a different motor in it.
Awesome video
I really like. What if you guys did an LS swap? Put a nice power hungry motor in it, and see it eat up some beans?
The 1” gun seems so silly for tire guys since they already have the air compressor and hoses running for Jacks and cheetahs, tire inflation
Ótimo vídeo, obrigado.
Any chance to dyno test Mid torque of the same brand? It seems like a makita DTW700 clone.
"I'm not your real dad" 🤣ima steal that one 🥲
Hi TTC, can you test hazet 9012tt air impact wrench. It's claiming 2200nm of nut busting torque. By the you're doing great stuff.
See the capri episode, same tool made in same TW factory.
Great video! Keep making them! Would like to see the Uaoaii 1/2 compact impact wrench. Comes in at 5.11 inches. Wondering how much it can really do. Would you recommend a Uaoaii over a seesii impact wrench?
Video suggestion: comparing amazon's seesii to identical, but differently branded impacts. Are they all identical in looks and performance, or do they only share the shell? Might make for a boring video what with all of them being the same design and color, possibly performance as well, so don't take any orders from me.
We have that Milwaukee in the shop I work in. Its junks can't even loosen lugnuts torqued to 500 foot pounds. We got it new. It was used three times, and it sits unused now
So our episode on it. It sucks in reverse
Can't wait for you guys to test the new milwaukee 1/2 impact wrench 😀
Even fake dads have some say. You’re not just a visitor in the house
I would love to see guys try vonroc machines. Can’t find any good tests been done on those before.
Do you have any tools that tighten bolts, like that one spinning around on the test machine?
Have you tested the seesii wh800 I would love to see how it compares and how it performs
Have you tested the Home Depot and Lowes air pneumatic? I couldn't find them in the list of videos. Thanks.
My brother-in-law was seriously injured using one of these impact wrenches purchased off Amazon. His periodontist reccommended an expensive water-pik system to keep his gums and teeth healthy. My brother-in-law thought one of the 1/4" impact wrenches would be a budget friendly alternative. It didn't work out. Just a heads-up to all. Thanks.
So what you're saying, is that you should buy this thing and Frankenstein a faster motor on it?
In my experience cheap tools is a waste of money so I’ll be using my Makita stuff they last years working day after day or Milwaukee
I'm thinking, since you said it's impacts per minute were so low, that if you could wire it (maybe bypass the circuit board) to accept higher voltages, say 50% more or even double, then perhaps it really would hit above it's weight.
Thanks man. Please check power tools from brand Vikky. Vikky drill and vikky impact wrench. Thanks
During the air tool tests you should have a pressure gauge at the tool inlet. So you know the true air pressure being supplied.
have you ever done test for battery adapters like ridget to dewalt, makita to dewalt, since i have rediget batteries and was looking at getting a dewalt and using my ridget batteries?
If you are looking for new ideas for products to test and compare, I'd like to see a comparison between portable power pack brands. Also, a test to see how accurate their watt ratings are.
can you test different penetrating oils and how effective they are? and also test mixing automatic transmission oil mixed 50/50 with acetone? the internet seems to think it's the best penetrating oil
Episode idea: Test every gun Harbor Freight makes, including their cheapo 1" deal that's supposed to make 1500 ft-lbs, all the way down to the cheapest ones they sell. Should be interesting to see the results, and would cost possibly less than some of the single cordless guns you've tested on the channel.
You should try our 4000ftlb Christie wrench it's cordless but users a reaction arm so not typically impact but rusted m27 bolts it snaps easy money
You all need plop a larger motor on that. It would be fun to see.
will you guys ever test the 1" harbor freight D handle inpact??????
Torque Test Channel have you ever used a manual impact wrench like the “swench” or those old school flywheel type impact wrenches?
With that hammer, it might work if you add the chainsaw mod to it(If I recall correctly you said that when you had the chainsaw impact, that the engine had enough power but the hammer was too light)
Dude check out the smaller onevan stuff.I ordered 1200Nm one with 2 batteries for like 50euro which is around 60$.
I have an 8 amp hour 40v XGT pack I would love to send to you guys!
Hey TTC- what Milwaukee tool is that you use for assembly/disassembly?
M12 impact driver Gen 4
@@TorqueTestChannel picture?
w0ow its shot up over 450 dollars on amazon, no chance ime getting that now.
Try amazon Japan, like $300
@@TorqueTestChannelstill more than xgt high torque in eu
Could you put it up against the Bosch Profactor 1/2" & 3/4" Impact Wrenches too?
won't ship to europe yet, but I'm keeping an eye on it
Have y’all ever thought about adding another big air tank with big air compressor glad hand connectors so you could test the air hungry 3/4 and 1” guns?
I have this on my shop for agricultural machines.
But after watching this video ı have very important question to ask.
* Is there a way to increase its power?*
They sell this same exact thing under Makita brand overseas. I saw a review for this same thing from a Russian UA-camr (that reviews bootleg trash usually), and he was pleasantly surprised. Was in makita box and everything
Damn, Try hooking up a brushless speed controller from a RC car with 8S high output LiPo batteries like a hobbywing max5 or VESC and give it the maximum beans mechanically possible. this thing go flying
Can you test out bosch sds drills?
Hopefully you can test Impack Dongcheng 3/4 DCBP 998
Charts still say the same, Makita 40v 3/4" still the king. But, Americans with ED problems still need more masculine names for their tools and China profits big on American insecurity and shortcomings, nearly half of the revenue from USA powertools go directly to Chinese brands like Milwaukee, flex and ryobi, and another 35% from Chinese parts used in "Mexico/USA" dewalts.
The only ranking Makita is on top in is 3/4". Let's not pretend any brand is #1 across the board
Impressive for the price but how reliable will it be.
Can you try the onevann 2800nm if its any good
Hey guys, what about modifying or fabricating a torque multiplier that one can put on their 1/2-inch impact and potentially outputting 4-digit foot-pound torque numbers.
Just wondering would it work better with the 21volt 588vf battery that it comes with normally, rather than the 18volt ones you are using
All 18V tool batteries go up to 21V when fully charged. Some manufacturers just like to put on a higher number.
These batteries use lithium ion cells. The 18V batteries use 5 of these cells in series. When fully charged, each cell goes up to 4.2V.
4.2V times 5 for the series connection equals 21V.
It is common practice to use the cells nominal voltage, not the fully charged voltage. Nominal voltage of these cells is 3.7V.
3.7V times 5 equals 18.5V. So manufacturers put 18V on their batteries.
Some will say 20V, others 21V but most reputable manufacturers put 18V. It's all the same thing.
However, the 588vf batteries use the cheapest cells available, not quality products. I know from experience. A real Makita 5Ah performs better than the 588vf.
More cordless sds rotary hammers please 🙏
I want a full length version of TTC's intro song
This is actually a nice tool to be honest
24mm bolt should always use the mission. Please tell me sir
I bought a 1/2" Uaoaii Brushless impact off Amazon, looks very similar to that thing, uses makita batteries as well. Advertised 400tq which I don't think it's close that at all but I got it on sale for $79, came with a 4ah battery and surprisingly works pretty well. Works great for what I need it for, light automotive work. I wouldn't use it in a professional auto shop but great for a weekend warrior.
I found a ONE VAN that is 2800nm for $118 and its 1/2 drive - any chance you could test it? Its on the One van site -
Thanks