Here is a follow up to this video Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits - Do They Really Work? ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html check out this 36" bar on the 500i ua-cam.com/video/QNpMXqDsvsM/v-deo.html Thanks for watching and check out our other John Deere 2038R compact tractor videos at ua-cam.com/video/G9ccCrIRsgY/v-deo.html And subscribe to our channel at ua-cam.com/users/Rockhillfarmandhomes Buy me a coffee - www.buymeacoffee.com/rockhillfarm Thanks for watching
Thank you so much for taking the time to expose this drill bit for what it is. You saved me some hard earned money. I'm optimistic myself with stuff like that and have had my share of wasted cash on them. Great watch.
@@OxAO I don't remember the video exactly, but for starters it's for kindling, not logs.... you can't replace a $2000 log splitter with a $7 amazon tool and expect it to do the same thing...
The bit fits in a heavy duty rotary hammer drill. If you're going to use a rotary hammer drill to split wood you might as well turn off the rotary function and use chisel bits as a wedge splitter instead of risking serious injury from the rotation.
I was going to buy one to split campfire wood into smaller pieces for kindling and make big pieces smaller? This is what I was afraid of? Too good to be true ads?
This is such a fantastic example of what the internet can really accomplish: I was ready to buy a couple of these for Christmas gifts after I saw their pop-up ad, but when I flashed on your video review and learned the whole story, i.e. that they were using only the most positive aspects of the tool for advertising and selling it, and I actually saw the short-comings of it in your video ---- hey, that's all it took for me to save my money and to not give a questionable tool as a gift! Thanks very much........
For splitting big pieces of wood like this I think a couple of splitting wedges and a sledge hammer are the way forward. A better gift might be a 'wood grenade' splitting wedge.
I own one and initially tried it to deep into the wood,once I started using it approximately 3/4” in from the edge of a split log and by starting at one end and working down the log it works great for kindling It keeps me from generating kindling with a small ax. I am 66 years old without much hand strength anymore so for me I’m thankful for this product. I also am only splitting lodge pole pine
Sad to say that I also bought two different sizes of these. Same results as video. Even my big hammer drill, used for building work inc. concrete, didn't' have enough power to split wood. I guess these were originally designed for bigger industrial 'fixed/in-situ' drills, definitely not hand tools. Don't buy these.
Those are SDS bits. Looks like SDS Plus, but SDS also comes in SDS Max. Max is just a larger more powerful version of plus. SDS stands for slotted drive shaft and fits a special drill called an SDS drill. They normally perform a few functions. Hammer drill, drill, and hammer. It's kind of like having a mini jack hammer. Great for breaking and drilling thru concrete, brick, and other masonry products etc.
Thanks for sharing. I went and bought a hammer drill and tested this bit out with it in a follow up video. I still feel like it’s more hassle than it’s worth
I bought one of those splitting bits 6 years ago. Had the same results. Borrowed a Hilti hammer drill from a friend with an SDS chuck. It worked a little better but was more work than using a splitting maul. I still have it. I use it as a makeshift plumb bob
That bit is not a gimmick,it should be use in a much more powerful drill,maybe one with a extended double handed handle. I'm now retired but I've used one many times,Hope this helps you.
That style drill shank is used in a rotary hammer drill. If used in the correct drill the hammering process provided will help drive the bit deeper into the log with less force. Note this may improve the effectiveness of said bit but either way this is an impractical and more importantly (dangerous) means of splitting wood. Best of luck and always stay safe.
Thanks for sharing. I actually did a follow up video using this product with an SDs hammer Drill My final verdict is that it’s more trouble than it’s worth Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits Part 2- Do They Really Work? ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
I saw the ads for the cone shaped drill bit and decided to search for a review before purchasing. Thank you for reviewing the product. It looks like an axe or splitting maul would work better than that cone shaped drill bit. Even on a large log like the one shown; I would just split pieces off around the sides with an axe or splitting maul until the log is reduced down to a size that can be split through the middle. I wonder if a bit with a far wider cone would do the job better, say about 4 inches wide. Just a thought.
Thank you a million times over for sparring me the expense of buying this product, my finances are very very tight and I can use the money for something else. I really appreciate your help, keep doing it your way.
Right now i feel this is the best you tube video I've ever watched!! I just saw an ad for these drill bits on another channel and i thought they were a miracle. I almost plopped down the 40 bucks right there. But i searched for a review first and yours was top of the list. Not only did you save me money and potential injury...but you totally cracked me up!! Educational and entertaining too. I see from the comments that this product sucks for everyone who has tried it. Thank you so much for posting!!
Lol😂 i gotta get 1 too...after 2 hernia surgerys, my log splitting by hand, days are over. Sometimes i cut smaller trees to avoid having to split huge logs....i got 2 cords of white oak, 3 to 6 inch logs. Didnt have to split nothin
The end on that bit is SDS. It's meant for big hammer drills that make your corded drill look like a cute little toy. Also they're available in cordless.
I fucking love my SDS. I have an AEG (Rigid in the US) with a 6Ah battery, and while I have some masonry bits for it... I'd love a bunch of other bits for it too, if I could find them..
Thank you for making an update video to this one. I feel like you then gave it a fair shake/ more accurate real-world test. Looks like the guys who were having success with it, are using it on less dense woods, I would imagine!
Hello Brock, thank you for saving me three things - $ spent on this tool, disillusion, and probably a broken wrist! Your video is brilliantly watchable and so honest. All the best from Tasmania Australia. ❤️🇦🇺
@@ΤάσοςΚαυσοκαλυβίτης hundreds of people have said it but no one who is paying attention. I understand there is a left-handed version of this bit but if you just watch the video you can clearly tell this is not a left-handed bit. When you take a left-handed bit and spin it to the right it does not dig in. This bit dug in and got stuck which is proof that it is spinning the right way
Thank you for your honest review - I was thinking the same outcome but did not test them. I am a forensic engineer and could not see how the forces could be generated enough to split a decent size piece - thanks
To be fair he used it wrong. You’re supposed to split vertically not sideways lol. Those bits work awesome for splitting normal pieces of firewood. I use it daily for my woodstove.
Thanks for the video. You just saved me some money. I live in Texas and the only thing I use firewood for is my BBQ pit. I use oak and sometimes mesquite. I usually let it sit for a year before I try to split it. I have been using an old metal handle, metal shaft hatchet, and a 4 lb hammer to split it. I thought one of these screw thingys might be the answer for me but after watching your video I will take a pass on it. Glad I watched your video first. Thanks again.
Those bid ends are designed for "impact drills" often used to drill holes in concrete for anchors, but they do have a straight drilling option and also impact.
And when the tool comes with such a drill end, then maybe there is a reason? Use the correct drill, it not only drills in the wood but the impact breaks the resistance so the tool doesn't get stuck..
Thanks for sharing. I actually did a follow up video using this product with an SDs hammer Drill Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits Part 2- Do They Really Work? ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
We have a splitter similar to this that hooks up to the PTO of our tractor. We ALWAYS have to split wood going in through the side of the wood so it splitting it perpendicular with the grain. You NEVER go in to the ends exposing the rings. All that does is, like you found out, make the drill splitter literally screw into the wood and get stuck. Insanely dangerous for legs, hands, face, etc. on our tractor one if the chunk slides off the brace bar for it. That wood starts spinning like yours did and you have to get out of the way, shut the tractor off and get a pry bar or take another piece of wood and wedge it to widen the bar.
@@peaceinwartimeable Just do a UA-cam search for screw splitter for tractor. You’ll see what I’m talking about. Regardless, I don’t know how the drill one would hold up considering the massive size and torque differences between a tractor PTO screw and a drill screw. Might be worth a shot with the drill option and save you a crap ton of money vs the tractor option.
@molonlabe2645 version has been around for a long time and works great. I was just trying to review whether or not the handheld version works and it was not a great result
I purchased this tool hoping it would be easier than using a maul. My husband used to do the splitting but I recently lost him. I should have known better. I thought I just didn't have the upper body strength that a man would have. I'm glad to see in your video that you also had difficulty.
Great video! Thanks for saving me the aggravation. FYI Just broke my hand 4 months ago using a bigger older style drill that spun on me violently drilling my fork. Watching you drill gave me PSTD. Just got back to almost healed.
I had an impact wrench nearly snap my wrist, when it torqued and pinned my finger on the trigger. Luckily, the bolt I want tightening snapped, 'cause I was 30' off the ground.
Thank You my Brother, I had just seen an advertisement for this product and was ready to purchase one. I found the video you posted on it and thankfully you helped me save money. Not to mention frustration due to disappointment.
It's also going to depend on how dry your wood is. When it's dry, it's much more brittle than when it's wet and will split much easier. Judging by how wet the ground looks around you, your wood was probably pretty wet.
@@lj5777 That I don't believe. I have a hard time believing this wouldn't work on super dry wood if you start at the edge. And that's my opinion as a woodworker and homesteader in the redwood forest in California. Is it a good buy, no. But I bet it would work on super dry wood.
@dan gerous I don't think he's lying. Dry wood in the midwest is not nearly as hard as redwood. Chopped both. Maple, chestnut, oak, etc... is all we get here. Our children can chop pine. This wasn't pine in this video.
If you look closely at ALL of the wood used in any of the wood splitting videos, they use really dry Poplar with no knots in it. For those of you that haven't split much or any firewood, Poplar is the easiest type of wood to split. If a device will split Oak or Hickory with knots in it, BUY IT! The shank on the bit is known as a SDS shank. It's for medium duty drills.
Thanks for sharing. I actually did a follow up video using this product with an SDs hammer Drill Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits Part 2- Do They Really Work? ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
I use a half inch impact driver and it works great for splitting kindling wood. I have seen large versions that split firewood but they definitely have some safety issues.
I tried this on everything in my woodpile with a 1/2" hammer drill and side handle that has enough torque to rip my arm off--and it WILL rip my arm off if the wood is anchored firmly. About the largest thing these will split is a 3/4" dowel, if you split it in half with an axe first. I you want one, y'all can have mine for 50% of what I paid.
@FisherCatProductions A hammer drill doesn't hit as hard as an impact, I used a 1/2" Milwaukee M18, it would work on decent stuff. Id say up to 6,8 inch pieces. Like I said good for kindling but that about it.
I haven’t bought one these splitters yet, but was planning on getting one until I saw your video. and am glad I didn’t. One thing I believe it might be good for is splitting only very straight grained dry wood, just like in the advertisers video. Any gnarly wood grain would not give in to a bit like this. And of course neither would it give in to an ax head either, so there you have it; straight grain wood only.
Spent 5 months fighting company in ny that sold me mine Finally, filed formal complaint w NY Attorney General's office as the warranty they offered was nothing but a fraud. Finally got a refund. Product is trash. It never worked on any type of wood with any drill. We tried 5 drills and 4 types of wood. Stay away and save ur money.
Thanks for the review - the promos always used such wimpy wood I kind of expected something like this. But it was great you used cordless then corded small piece then big piece. Looks like you could easily do some wrist damage using this.
@@RockhillfarmYT Yeah, heck to get THAT thing to work you'd need like a combination pile driver and well boring machine. I suppose if you applied enough force & velocity, why you could split a block of Gum tree with a cannonball.
I was thinking of getting one of these to help split firewood. I hoped one of my cordless drills could do the job out at my wood pile, not only did you show that doesn’t work you also showed a corded drill won’t work either! I wanted help splitting 18” long rounds into fire wood. My maul and axe do a much better and easier job. Thanks for saving me time and money on this gimmick!
They can be useful and effective when used to split kindling from dry split wood. My 110 lbs wife uses one right in our living room when she has to start a fire. I cut a ton of ash and it splits ash very well. Perfect tool for our purpose.
It was splitting the small pieces just fine until you drilled and took your leg off of the piece. Then you act all surprised. I've been using one of these for years while camping as well as an axe. They work great on pieces for making kindling. That's all it's meant for. I keep a 24" piece of 2 x 8 in my camper with some nails in a straight line. I just put the wood I want to split against the nails so it can't spin out. Works great. Try it sometimesince you already bought the bits. Also, use a hammer drill.
Thanks for sharing. I bought a hammer drill and tried it again. I got a little bit better results but overall I felt it was probably more hassle than it was worth for me Thanks for watching
Thank you for this video. I have seen this ad too and from time to time get neighbors who give me wood they cut down for my fireplace. I was almost going to buy one of these for those logs, but I will not waste my money thanks to your video.
I had the same results although after using a fully charged Dewalt cordless, I went to a fully charged Dewalt impact wrench with minimal success. I returned mine.
I’ve split wood with several different hand and power tools. I was interested to see if this would actually work. The best splitter for mass usage is the hydraulic splitter you tow behind a truck. The electric comes in at second. The maul comes in at third. For kindling, the hatchet 🪓 takes some skill and seasoned wood, but is still the best.
I wonder how a half-inch impact driver would have fared, like my DeWalt DCF899. But the biggest issue I see is that no matter WHAT tool is used, a design flaw in the bit is that you can’t back it out with your tool (because the shaft unscrews). Maybe if you welded the shaft to the bit…
My 1/2" hammer drill with a side handle will spin you around or rip your arm off if the wood is anchored firmly. It did both to me. Tried holding a 6" log with my feet and all 200 lbs of me on it at first. BIG mistake. Damn near broke my ankle when it spun out from under me.
I bought 1 of these just to split kindling wood for the wood stove, it’s works good in a cordless impact driver on small dry wood, like pallet skids for kindling, it makes it a bit easier instead of splitting with a hatchet. However it doesn’t work on the really hard woods like Oak, but the softer hard woods like poplar with the right drill it seems to work fine on small dry logs, provided you got the cone speed tight on the bit, I put mine in the vice and really cranked on it, to prevent the cone from unscrewing in the wood. But I didn’t order the ones that are advertised on UA-cam, Facebook, and like places, I got it on eBay for like $8, which was way less than the other sites. I figured if it didn’t work I could either send it back or find other uses and $8 wasn’t a bad loss. So its a toss up, but I wouldn’t suggest buying it for someone that wants to split a log bigger than 6-8 inches in diameter, small dry logs and dry kindling wood great, other than that save your money and rent a log splitter.
I was looking into buying one of these, so searching for HONEST reviews of them, not just commercials, and I have to thank you profusely for yours. It's everything I was afraid of, and a little bit more. LOL One thing I did note from another video reviewing these is that they seem to work better on the slowest speed. Which your drill sounded faster. M a y b e that makes a difference? Either way, I can't see why I would buy one. LOL And the theoretically useful changeable bit seems to actually be a flaw in the design when they get stuck. LOL So ... yeah. I'm sure there's some brilliant idea for such a tool, but these ain't it.
Yeah, I had high hopes for this but it seem like you would have to jump through a bunch of hoops to make it work I saw someone else using it and seem to be happy with it on UA-cam but he was cutting tiny sliver’s If it’s not convenient to use or you need special tools then I’ll pass
Thank you man. You saved me a sum of money. You were spot on in all questions I would ask myself about that tool. I had a doubt because I didn't believe that it works and you proved that there is no real value in that tool. Thank you man for spending your time and thank you for your honesty
Unfortunately youre bang on - I almost broke my hand the first time I used it as the drill spun. Took some time to recover the bit and tried again, and again, it was hopeless and should not be sold as an answer to log splitting, of any size, its dangerous for an ordinary bloke like me. Another internet scam!
The principle is a good one. A friend of mine has something similar and it splits almost anything. Problem is, his is two feet long by about a foot wide with a huge coarse thread, and runs off the PTO on his tractor. Big rounds disintegrate in seconds, but the splitter has about 50hp going through it. I’m always on the lookout for better ways of splitting wood, so you have saved me some money here. I wish I’d seen a similar video on those ‘blade in a cage’ things before I spent cash on something so useless. I’ll stick with my 5hp hydraulic splitter, which does most sizes. Thanks for a good, clear video.
In my experience of owning one of these bits. #1 don't overwork the drill , burns up the motor. #2 great for small scrap kiln dried lumber (untreated) or sticks about an inch or two in diameter (depending on species). #3 brace the wood , little sticks can hurt . #4 use at the ends or edges avoid knots. It can be "satisfying " to use but also obsolete due to its limitations. Regarding safety and efficiency a hatchet and 2lb hammer are much more practical.
I tried a couple of these before I realized they had backwards threads. If you run the drill in reverse they work great. Even the cordless. At least for me.
Thanks for sharing. I know that they make some of these that are left-handed but clearly the ones I was using are not. If you use a left-handed bit but spin it the wrong direction , Then it doesn’t dig in. These bits were digging in so hard that they got stuck Thanks for watching
I actually did a follow up video using this product with an SDs hammer Drill Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits Part 2- Do They Really Work? ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
They actually work great for quick access door lock defeaters, gaps the deadbolts bolt from the door jam perfectly. Every firefighter should have one in their arsenal. As a log splitter though? LOL, have fun at the ER! They just need to market it towards something it actually works for. I am certain there's other uses besides being a key to the city. Would love to hear them, being as how I have one and don't need a door defeater very often, and I have lock picks for that.
My wife bought me one of those splitters for the drill last year. I had the same results as you did trying to split some oak wood. I even used a very heavy duty 1/2" drill and got the same results. I am not impressed at all with this splitter at all. In my opinion, they are a waste of $$ money! Maybe it will work good on a stick of butter, I haven't tried that yet!
@@RockhillfarmYT Yeah I love splitting. I live down south so we don't really need much wood but when I do it, it brings the caveman outta me. Thanks for the review cuz that video of them splitting looks cool but I know it's a joke.
Thank for the video, good job. Daughter and I were talking about one of these last week as a Christmas present for her boy friend and I told her that I thought that it might bind and told her he probably have to use a corded drill. I told her to save her money and get a manual sliding log splitter or maul and wedges for him. Looks to me that if you had a real powerful corded drill and it binds out you could break your wrist. Gonna have her watch your video. Thanks again and have a Merry Christmas.
Hey brother I think this bit is supposed to go into a SDS style hammer drill and the hammer drill is supposed to run on hammer only which drives it into to wood like a log splitter which would be much much safer. Try that out and let us know how it goes.
Thanks for sharing. I actually did a follow up video using this product with an SDs hammer Drill Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits Part 2- Do They Really Work? ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
we made one of these at community college but much larger that fits on a wheel of a truck , worked great until one large piece slipped and flew off the tapered screw , taking out 3 large overhead lights and sending about 15 of us diving for cover
I split wood with a maul ... My guess is the tool is too small in the first place to split anything larger than soft pine shelving planks for kindling. Even if you had the worlds strongest drill to use this tool on large logs, only 2 outcomes would possibly result. 1. the tool would bury itself into the log till the chuck and nose of the drill made contact with log stopping the operation from drilling further and result in no split. 2. The torque strength would break your grip from the drill and possibly sprain your wrists, thats if the log didn't spin first.... also no split. This only makes sense with those big screw cones people put on their old car axles as far size, weight and power needed for splitting logs. It's simple physics all around, don't waste your money people! Fun to watch this tool being put to the test though so great video!
Yeah, I went and bought a hammer drill just to give this a second chance and to me it’s just not worth the time for the reasons you mentioned Thanks for watching
I used in impact wrench 1/2" drive on the wood bit that has the 1/4" hex design and adapted my wrench down from 1/2" to 1/4" drive but best to adapt from 1/2" to 3/8" and use a 3/8" drive socket to 1/4" on the hex
@@RockhillfarmYT I understand your frustration they sell different shanked tools I got the wood splitter bit that had the 1/4" hex design. If it weren't for your video I would have gone through a lot of trouble. Using your video saved me a lot of trouble and gave me the idea ov the impact wrench and adapting it to the 1"4" hex bit. Just wouldn't split bigger stuff though but saves time for splitting kidling and smaller stuff that you would use for getting your fire going. I might share a video of my own in the near future just to demonstrate my findings I'll keep you posted when my video becomes available. Right now I just don't have the time
That "end of the shaft" shape detail is for DeWalt and other brands of Hammerdrills. All Hammerdrill bits have a slight bit of slack that enhances the power tranferrance from the Hammerdrill motor to the bit. RE: Like a hammer pounding in a nail.
Thanks for the info. I looked it up after making the video and realized that you need a special drill From the way this product was marketed to me through targeted Facebook ads I think it’s kind of crazy that they expect you to have a special drill to run it. As you saw in the video I had a A nice corded drill and a nice cordless drill neither one of them would run it so I’m not a fan of the product
@@BamaShinesDistillery Negative to your negative, they're infact called and SDS Plus drive for Rotary hammers, completely different tool then Hammer drills.
I figured that this thing was going to be a complete failure when I saw it. I'm glad to see a professional do it instead avera everyday UA-cam where that's never worked in their life. Thank you for your time I'm subscribed.
After breaking my nose with a flying off cut of wood last new year I thought I’d invest in something a little less dangerous than an axe. Saw this and got the girls to get it be as a stocking filler for Christmas. And that it did! After the frivolous day that is Christmas Day , entertaining the family, friends, cooking, drinking, eating ( I love pigs in blankets with a Jamie Oliver pork and chestnut stuffing), working your way from A to Z in the cocktail cabinet etc,( who can say no to a Snowball followed by that clear Grappa!!) Boxing Day came and time for some me time. Time to try out my new log splitter. Using my dewalt SDH323T2GB with 5.9Ah fully charged battery I eagerly , excitedly made my way down to the bottom of the garden in crocs and lounge pants to my hallowed, sacred spot that is my log pile. Log selection , simple I thought,before moving to true logs start easy, start with a simple piece of well dried decking board 12” length to split into kindling. Setting up of the board to be executed was quite easy, lay flat off we go…. First attempt, absolute delight 12” x 1” stick formed in less than a second - no effort at all. Going in for the 2nd split, lovely. Best present ever this. I’m gonna get all my log pile split up today. 3rd , 4th splits - good times, next piece of wood please ! Same again 12” plank of well seasoned timber… what happened next could only be described as that scene from Misery. In the blink of an eye the wood spun round with the full full force of the SDS set to speed 3, and twatted my left leg. Instantly bring a boiled egg sized lump to emerge on the front of my shin. Silly bugger I thought, moved my leg back, reset posture and went again. Bang! Have that! Wood bit, full 620rpm rotor blade into the right ankle taking me straight to ground better than a Stuart Pearce tackle. Result both legs looking like a bunch of black grapes , lounge pants have 2” rip in them on one leg. Right croc has the go fast strap ( ideal when chasing ice cream man ) ripped off and I’m sat with germolene on my wounds in front of an empty log burner. Packaging : 5⭐ lovingly wrapped in recycled brown Xmas paper topped with a pine cone and waxed red/ white parcel string, topped with dried orange segment and set lovingly within the Christmas tree. Quality: 5⭐ quality steel with several drill bit attachments for Standard 3/4 “ Chuck , SDS, HDS drills. Instructions and Safety precautions : 🫣 must have been displaced. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ would buy again
Oddly enough a year after you made this video UA-cam decided it was a good video to endorse this very product. 8 minutes in this bit was advertised. I was thinking of getting it but now I don't think i will be getting one thanks for the video.
Thank you! I cut down an old mapele tree yesterday and I tried splitting it with the axe and the maul but it is very hard. It’s about the same size as yours, slightly smaller. Would a CENTRAL MACHINERY 12 Amp 5 ton Electric Log Splitter from Walmart do the job. Thank you again!
THANKS for posting this, it was entertaining. Friend told me about ad for these screwy wood splitters, and then saw the ad for myself. Having split wood by hand, and with a power splitter, AND having used electric drills I just knew this thing, no make that this GIMMICK was a total joke. The promotional videos were too funny. They pictured using the drill splitter an an EASY peasy to split perfectly round and straight modestly sized piece of like Ash, which was also totally free from knots. Even then took several seconds to make the split. Meanwhile, by the time you'd fool around with this joke of a tool, I'd had my maul out, pow, pow pow. 10 inch piece of Ash done split in four and the next block set up to bat.
Thank you so much for this video. This product showed up on my feed. Look like they use a large drill and looked like super dry fire wood. I'll check out the other videos before making my final decision, but this video showed my exactly what I thought. thanks again
The shaft and I drill bit goes into a rotary hammer drill I use those types of drills all the time to do termite work drilling into the foundations of homes but they do not advertise that you need a rotary hammer drill to make this product work I really do appreciate your video I normally have to split smaller pieces of wood just for an outdoor fire pit I have in my backyard and it's always a big pain in the butt I was thinking about buying this product but after seeing your video I realize it's just a gimmick thank you for showing us we really do appreciate it
Funny, as I watching this video, the ad for the splitting drill bit came on. Of course, in the ad, it was effortless to split logs. Your video shows the reality.... Thanks for the video.
Okay. Your impression of those bits is accurate. I bought them too to test out on some small wood stove sized firewood. I had the exact same experience as you. Caveats: The wood was NOT seasoned wood. It was fairly fresh cut and green/wet. I had the same issue with the bits shaft coming loose in counter clockwise attempts to remove the bit. So I took the bit and secured it into my shop vise pipe clamp portion of jaws, tightened the jaws down and then used an impact wrench to securely bolt the shaft to the bit. Also. The cordless drill seemed to work just a little better when it was in low speed high torque settings. Overall, however, it’s not worth what we spent on the bits. The best thing to use these bits for is dried seasoned medium hardness type wood. I would not recommend using on hardwoods like Bois de ark, or black locust or sweetgum or red or white oak.
The slots in the bits are SDS bits for a Rotary Hammer Drill. There is a difference between just a hammer drill and a rotary hammer drill. Hope that helps.
I've got one of those bits that I bought on mercari. I use it with an 18v Rigid cordless drill. It works great for splitting firewood into kindling when camping. Lay the firewood flat, put your foot on one end to hold it in place, and drill into the other end about 1 inch from the end. Once or starts splitting angle the bit and start drilling towards the end you' re holding. Works good for me that way. These things are meant to split firewood into kindling, not rounds into firewood IMO.
Thanks for the video. About what I figured for this tool. As for splitting kindling, my fireplace friend is hands down the tool for 4”, maybe 6” or smaller.
EIGHT minutes in, which I forwarded to, you FINALLY see the tool!!! Got to love these UA-camrs and how they TRY to trick everyone into staying on their video for money and wasting everyone time…
Fantastic, generalization, but That is not at all the video is long. It is long for two reasons. 1. I make the type of videos that I like to watch. Everything I watch on UA-cam is long vlog style videos of guys working outside. I watch them while I’m doing other things and I hate needing to search for another video every 10 minutes. I like 30 minutes and 40 minute videos. 2. This is an old video. I didn’t understand that search based content should be shorter than vlog content I hope a little venting made you feel better this morning
Here is a follow up to this video
Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits - Do They Really Work?
ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
check out this 36" bar on the 500i
ua-cam.com/video/QNpMXqDsvsM/v-deo.html
Thanks for watching and check out our other John Deere 2038R compact tractor videos at ua-cam.com/video/G9ccCrIRsgY/v-deo.html
And subscribe to our channel at ua-cam.com/users/Rockhillfarmandhomes
Buy me a coffee - www.buymeacoffee.com/rockhillfarm
Thanks for watching
I see what you are saying Brother got you, I will check that vid out for sure I I subscribed !
I got you I see the point you were making .Yea O subscribed and
Thanks
Thanks
That bit is for a chipping gun or rotary hammer
Thank you so much for taking the time to expose this drill bit for what it is. You saved me some hard earned money. I'm optimistic myself with stuff like that and have had my share of wasted cash on them. Great watch.
I’m cool. Don’t need that bs.
Idk, mine works great
@@dustinbugal2069 Tell us what went wrong in this video? Supposed to be on a hammer drill is one i see.
@@OxAO I don't remember the video exactly, but for starters it's for kindling, not logs.... you can't replace a $2000 log splitter with a $7 amazon tool and expect it to do the same thing...
@@dustinbugal2069 Good point. Thanks
The bit fits in a heavy duty rotary hammer drill. If you're going to use a rotary hammer drill to split wood you might as well turn off the rotary function and use chisel bits as a wedge splitter instead of risking serious injury from the rotation.
Yep 👍
A Bosch Bulldog bit.
I was going to buy one to split campfire wood into smaller pieces for kindling and make big pieces smaller? This is what I was afraid of? Too good to be true ads?
GO TO TRIPLE L RUSTIC DESIGNS YOU WONT REGRET IT
@@josephjuno9555that's why I use an Axe or katchet.
This is such a fantastic example of what the internet can really accomplish: I was ready to buy a couple of these for Christmas gifts after I saw their pop-up ad, but when I flashed on your video review and learned the whole story, i.e. that they were using only the most positive aspects of the tool for advertising and selling it, and I actually saw the short-comings of it in your video ---- hey, that's all it took for me to save my money and to not give a questionable tool as a gift!
Thanks very much........
For splitting big pieces of wood like this I think a couple of splitting wedges and a sledge hammer are the way forward. A better gift might be a 'wood grenade' splitting wedge.
That tool and commercial is like the BYEDEN administration…
I own one and initially tried it to deep into the wood,once I started using it approximately 3/4” in from the edge of a split log and by starting at one end and working down the log it works great for kindling
It keeps me from generating kindling with a small ax. I am 66 years old without much hand strength anymore so for me I’m thankful for this product. I also am only splitting lodge pole pine
Sad to say that I also bought two different sizes of these. Same results as video. Even my big hammer drill, used for building work inc. concrete, didn't' have enough power to split wood. I guess these were originally designed for bigger industrial 'fixed/in-situ' drills, definitely not hand tools. Don't buy these.
Fraud is now legal in fascist/corporate America.
Those are SDS bits. Looks like SDS Plus, but SDS also comes in SDS Max. Max is just a larger more powerful version of plus. SDS stands for slotted drive shaft and fits a special drill called an SDS drill. They normally perform a few functions. Hammer drill, drill, and hammer. It's kind of like having a mini jack hammer. Great for breaking and drilling thru concrete, brick, and other masonry products etc.
Thanks for sharing. I went and bought a hammer drill and tested this bit out with it in a follow up video.
I still feel like it’s more hassle than it’s worth
@@RockhillfarmYT your best use for that is to use it like a wedge and smack it with a sledgehammer. 😂
I bought one of those splitting bits 6 years ago. Had the same results. Borrowed a Hilti hammer drill from a friend with an SDS chuck. It worked a little better but was more work than using a splitting maul. I still have it. I use it as a makeshift plumb bob
It's a wannabe wood splitter that chooses to now identify as a plumb bob 😅😂
@@brentspellmeyer8943 Now that is right up woke alley...LOL
@@brentspellmeyer8943. That’s so transphobic. Prepare to be canceled.
GO TO TRIPLE L RUSTIC DESIGNS YOU WONT REGRET IT
That bit is not a gimmick,it should be use in a much more powerful drill,maybe one with a extended double handed handle. I'm now retired but I've used one many times,Hope this helps you.
That style drill shank is used in a rotary hammer drill. If used in the correct drill the hammering process provided will help drive the bit deeper into the log with less force. Note this may improve the effectiveness of said bit but either way this is an impractical and more importantly (dangerous) means of splitting wood. Best of luck and always stay safe.
Thanks for sharing. I actually did a follow up video using this product with an SDs hammer Drill
My final verdict is that it’s more trouble than it’s worth
Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits Part 2- Do They Really Work?
ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
SDS Type
Will cause you to have trouble with your wrist later in life .
Hammer drill makes no difference. These things are a POS. Period.
That looked like so much more work than a splitting maul or axe! Thanks for reviewing and saving some people some money!
Thanks
I saw the ads for the cone shaped drill bit and decided to search for a review before purchasing.
Thank you for reviewing the product.
It looks like an axe or splitting maul would work better than that cone shaped drill bit.
Even on a large log like the one shown; I would just split pieces off around the sides with an axe or splitting maul until the log is reduced down to a size that can be split through the middle.
I wonder if a bit with a far wider cone would do the job better, say about 4 inches wide. Just a thought.
Yeah, it’s possible to make these work but it’s just more trouble than it’s worth in my opinion
I worked up a sweat just watching ... !
Thank you a million times over for sparring me the expense of buying this product, my finances are very very tight and I can use the money for something else. I really appreciate your help, keep doing it your way.
Right now i feel this is the best you tube video I've ever watched!! I just saw an ad for these drill bits on another channel and i thought they were a miracle. I almost plopped down the 40 bucks right there. But i searched for a review first and yours was top of the list. Not only did you save me money and potential injury...but you totally cracked me up!! Educational and entertaining too. I see from the comments that this product sucks for everyone who has tried it. Thank you so much for posting!!
Thanks for watching. I appreciate it
After watching this video..I am inspired to buy a 24 ton gas powered log splitter. Thank you sir.
Lol😂 i gotta get 1 too...after 2 hernia surgerys, my log splitting by hand, days are over. Sometimes i cut smaller trees to avoid having to split huge logs....i got 2 cords of white oak, 3 to 6 inch logs. Didnt have to split nothin
Or a decent axe
GO TO TRIPLE L RUSTIC DESIGNS YOU WONT REGRET IT
The end on that bit is SDS. It's meant for big hammer drills that make your corded drill look like a cute little toy. Also they're available in cordless.
About 5 minutes in, I was going to ask about putting it on an impact wrench. But yeah, an SDS rotary hammer would probably do even better.
I fucking love my SDS. I have an AEG (Rigid in the US) with a 6Ah battery, and while I have some masonry bits for it... I'd love a bunch of other bits for it too, if I could find them..
This drill bit doesn’t work with any type of drill
absolutely right a SDS as you see a grove on the shaft of the bit is for the bearing on an SDS Drill Machine not designed for regular drills
But they sell these as using a regular cordless drill, right?
Thank you for making an update video to this one. I feel like you then gave it a fair shake/ more accurate real-world test.
Looks like the guys who were having success with it, are using it on less dense woods, I would imagine!
Thanks for your efforts in producing this review. You've saved me both time and money!
Thanks for watching
Hello Brock, thank you for saving me three things - $ spent on this tool, disillusion, and probably a broken wrist! Your video is brilliantly watchable and so honest. All the best from Tasmania Australia. ❤️🇦🇺
Thanks. I think the average person would be frustrated with this tool
Thanks for watching
@@RockhillfarmYT Has anyone else told you all this time that you should have tried splitting wood on reverse? :)
@@ΤάσοςΚαυσοκαλυβίτης hundreds of people have said it but no one who is paying attention.
I understand there is a left-handed version of this bit but if you just watch the video you can clearly tell this is not a left-handed bit.
When you take a left-handed bit and spin it to the right it does not dig in. This bit dug in and got stuck which is proof that it is spinning the right way
I wondered about those things. Cant imagine a drill would have the power to split much of anything really. Thanks for taking the time to do this.
If there’s knots in it no way. 😢😢😢😢😢😢
I normally wear a lot of safety gear but I'm only making one cut. famous last words
Thank you for your honest review - I was thinking the same outcome but did not test them. I am a forensic engineer and could not see how the forces could be generated enough to split a decent size piece - thanks
GO TO TRIPLE L RUSTIC DESIGNS YOU WONT REGRET IT
To be fair he used it wrong. You’re supposed to split vertically not sideways lol. Those bits work awesome for splitting normal pieces of firewood. I use it daily for my woodstove.
@@BossMan302 go to triple l rustic design
Thanks for the video. You just saved me some money. I live in Texas and the only thing I use firewood for is my BBQ pit. I use oak and sometimes mesquite. I usually let it sit for a year before I try to split it. I have been using an old metal handle, metal shaft hatchet, and a 4 lb hammer to split it. I thought one of these screw thingys might be the answer for me but after watching your video I will take a pass on it. Glad I watched your video first. Thanks again.
Glad to hear it
Those bid ends are designed for "impact drills" often used to drill holes in concrete for anchors, but they do have a straight drilling option and also impact.
SDS system
And when the tool comes with such a drill end, then maybe there is a reason? Use the correct drill, it not only drills in the wood but the impact breaks the resistance so the tool doesn't get stuck..
Thanks for sharing. I actually did a follow up video using this product with an SDs hammer Drill
Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits Part 2- Do They Really Work?
ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
We have a splitter similar to this that hooks up to the PTO of our tractor. We ALWAYS have to split wood going in through the side of the wood so it splitting it perpendicular with the grain. You NEVER go in to the ends exposing the rings. All that does is, like you found out, make the drill splitter literally screw into the wood and get stuck. Insanely dangerous for legs, hands, face, etc. on our tractor one if the chunk slides off the brace bar for it. That wood starts spinning like yours did and you have to get out of the way, shut the tractor off and get a pry bar or take another piece of wood and wedge it to widen the bar.
Make a video that shows us. Otherwise we have to watch this crap
@@peaceinwartimeable Just do a UA-cam search for screw splitter for tractor. You’ll see what I’m talking about. Regardless, I don’t know how the drill one would hold up considering the massive size and torque differences between a tractor PTO screw and a drill screw. Might be worth a shot with the drill option and save you a crap ton of money vs the tractor option.
@molonlabe2645 version has been around for a long time and works great.
I was just trying to review whether or not the handheld version works and it was not a great result
I purchased this tool hoping it would be easier than using a maul. My husband used to do the splitting but I recently lost him. I should have known better. I thought I just didn't have the upper body strength that a man would have. I'm glad to see in your video that you also had difficulty.
Can you cook ? . I’ll split for food and gas ..
Sorry for your loss.
Great video! Thanks for saving me the aggravation. FYI Just broke my hand 4 months ago using a bigger older style drill that spun on me violently drilling my fork. Watching you drill gave me PSTD. Just got back to almost healed.
Yeah, this thing is just not worth it in my mind
I had an impact wrench nearly snap my wrist, when it torqued and pinned my finger on the trigger. Luckily, the bolt I want tightening snapped, 'cause I was 30' off the ground.
That doesn’t sound like much fun
Thank You my Brother, I had just seen an advertisement for this product and was ready to purchase one. I found the video you posted on it and thankfully you helped me save money. Not to mention frustration due to disappointment.
It's also going to depend on how dry your wood is. When it's dry, it's much more brittle than when it's wet and will split much easier. Judging by how wet the ground looks around you, your wood was probably pretty wet.
That would be a lie cause I tried it same thing on wood that was dry for years. Same results 🤷🏽♂️. Sent that shit back to Amazon 😃
@@lj5777 That I don't believe.
I have a hard time believing this wouldn't work on super dry wood if you start at the edge. And that's my opinion as a woodworker and homesteader in the redwood forest in California.
Is it a good buy, no. But I bet it would work on super dry wood.
@dan gerous
I don't think he's lying. Dry wood in the midwest is not nearly as hard as redwood. Chopped both. Maple, chestnut, oak, etc... is all we get here. Our children can chop pine. This wasn't pine in this video.
I had dried seasoned Maple, so not that dense, and still a dud. Spins, and hard to get out when it doesn't split, which is most of the time.
@@dangerous8333 It’s still a crap product
If you look closely at ALL of the wood used in any of the wood splitting videos, they use really dry Poplar with no knots in it. For those of you that haven't split much or any firewood, Poplar is the easiest type of wood to split. If a device will split Oak or Hickory with knots in it, BUY IT!
The shank on the bit is known as a SDS shank. It's for medium duty drills.
Thanks for sharing. I actually did a follow up video using this product with an SDs hammer Drill
Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits Part 2- Do They Really Work?
ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
I use a half inch impact driver and it works great for splitting kindling wood. I have seen large versions that split firewood but they definitely have some safety issues.
Exactly what i was thinking: use an impact driver, and on a more reasonably sized round.
LOL! Right.
I tried this on everything in my woodpile with a 1/2" hammer drill and side handle that has enough torque to rip my arm off--and it WILL rip my arm off if the wood is anchored firmly. About the largest thing these will split is a 3/4" dowel, if you split it in half with an axe first. I you want one, y'all can have mine for 50% of what I paid.
@FisherCatProductions A hammer drill doesn't hit as hard as an impact, I used a 1/2" Milwaukee M18, it would work on decent stuff. Id say up to 6,8 inch pieces. Like I said good for kindling but that about it.
I haven’t bought one these splitters yet, but was planning on getting one until I saw your video. and am glad I didn’t.
One thing I believe it might be good for is splitting only very straight grained dry wood, just like in the advertisers video. Any gnarly wood grain would not give in to a bit like this. And of course neither would it give in to an ax head either, so there you have it; straight grain wood only.
Right. It seems like everything has to be perfect for it to work and so it’s not worth the hassle to me
@@RockhillfarmYT agreed!
Spent 5 months fighting company in ny that sold me mine
Finally, filed formal complaint w NY Attorney General's office as the warranty they offered was nothing but a fraud. Finally got a refund. Product is trash. It never worked on any type of wood with any drill. We tried 5 drills and 4 types of wood. Stay away and save ur money.
@@RockhillfarmYT Just like all the hand jive splitter tool ads, they use dry, straight-grained wood!
I bet iwould work in my 3/4" gear reduction drill, maybe with rubbing the tool with wax.
Thanks for the review - the promos always used such wimpy wood I kind of expected something like this. But it was great you used cordless then corded small piece then big piece. Looks like you could easily do some wrist damage using this.
Yeah, I even went back later and tried it with a hammer drill. Still didn’t work
@@RockhillfarmYT Yeah, heck to get THAT thing to work you'd need like a combination pile driver and well boring machine. I suppose if you applied enough force & velocity, why you could split a block of Gum tree with a cannonball.
I was thinking of getting one of these to help split firewood. I hoped one of my cordless drills could do the job out at my wood pile, not only did you show that doesn’t work you also showed a corded drill won’t work either! I wanted help splitting 18” long rounds into fire wood. My maul and axe do a much better and easier job. Thanks for saving me time and money on this gimmick!
They can be useful and effective when used to split kindling from dry split wood. My 110 lbs wife uses one right in our living room when she has to start a fire. I cut a ton of ash and it splits ash very well. Perfect tool for our purpose.
You have a skinny wife
Ash can be split with a butter knife.
Is your wife single?
@@chadmarino2741 it depends on the day. I haven’t done anything stupid recently but that will definitely change.
My wife would be breaking my balls with that tool not working .. she said you could have bought me underware and get better results… got wood
It was splitting the small pieces just fine until you drilled and took your leg off of the piece. Then you act all surprised. I've been using one of these for years while camping as well as an axe. They work great on pieces for making kindling. That's all it's meant for. I keep a 24" piece of 2 x 8 in my camper with some nails in a straight line. I just put the wood I want to split against the nails so it can't spin out. Works great. Try it sometimesince you already bought the bits. Also, use a hammer drill.
Thanks for sharing. I bought a hammer drill and tried it again. I got a little bit better results but overall I felt it was probably more hassle than it was worth for me
Thanks for watching
Thank you for this video. I have seen this ad too and from time to time get neighbors who give me wood they cut down for my fireplace. I was almost going to buy one of these for those logs, but I will not waste my money thanks to your video.
I had the same results although after using a fully charged Dewalt cordless, I went to a fully charged Dewalt impact wrench with minimal success. I returned mine.
I even went and bought a hammer drill and still didn’t work.
Thanks for watching
I’ve split wood with several different hand and power tools. I was interested to see if this would actually work. The best splitter for mass usage is the hydraulic splitter you tow behind a truck. The electric comes in at second. The maul comes in at third. For kindling, the hatchet 🪓 takes some skill and seasoned wood, but is still the best.
EXACTLY!
I wonder how a half-inch impact driver would have fared, like my DeWalt DCF899. But the biggest issue I see is that no matter WHAT tool is used, a design flaw in the bit is that you can’t back it out with your tool (because the shaft unscrews). Maybe if you welded the shaft to the bit…
Dewalt craps the bed on everything...better try milwaukee!
Simple, you would break your arm.
My 1/2" hammer drill with a side handle will spin you around or rip your arm off if the wood is anchored firmly. It did both to me. Tried holding a 6" log with my feet and all 200 lbs of me on it at first. BIG mistake. Damn near broke my ankle when it spun out from under me.
@@FisherCatProductions The company that made it is obviously in China where you can't sue them. ;)
Thank you. Your frustration saved me from experiencing my own.
I bought 1 of these just to split kindling wood for the wood stove, it’s works good in a cordless impact driver on small dry wood, like pallet skids for kindling, it makes it a bit easier instead of splitting with a hatchet. However it doesn’t work on the really hard woods like Oak, but the softer hard woods like poplar with the right drill it seems to work fine on small dry logs, provided you got the cone speed tight on the bit, I put mine in the vice and really cranked on it, to prevent the cone from unscrewing in the wood. But I didn’t order the ones that are advertised on UA-cam, Facebook, and like places, I got it on eBay for like $8, which was way less than the other sites. I figured if it didn’t work I could either send it back or find other uses and $8 wasn’t a bad loss. So its a toss up, but I wouldn’t suggest buying it for someone that wants to split a log bigger than 6-8 inches in diameter, small dry logs and dry kindling wood great, other than that save your money and rent a log splitter.
I was looking into buying one of these, so searching for HONEST reviews of them, not just commercials, and I have to thank you profusely for yours. It's everything I was afraid of, and a little bit more. LOL
One thing I did note from another video reviewing these is that they seem to work better on the slowest speed. Which your drill sounded faster. M a y b e that makes a difference? Either way, I can't see why I would buy one. LOL And the theoretically useful changeable bit seems to actually be a flaw in the design when they get stuck. LOL So ... yeah. I'm sure there's some brilliant idea for such a tool, but these ain't it.
Yeah, I had high hopes for this but it seem like you would have to jump through a bunch of hoops to make it work
I saw someone else using it and seem to be happy with it on UA-cam but he was cutting tiny sliver’s
If it’s not convenient to use or you need special tools then I’ll pass
@The Trashman yeah that guy seems to get a weekly paycheck from Amazon and the Chinese Communist Party
Thank you man. You saved me a sum of money. You were spot on in all questions I would ask myself about that tool. I had a doubt because I didn't believe that it works and you proved that there is no real value in that tool. Thank you man for spending your time and thank you for your honesty
LMAO 🤣🤣 "hey look guys, we split wood with it".
That was awesome! Made me laugh and made my day. Thanks!
Proof of concept right there.
Now if we just chuck each piece of wood up in a drill press we will be good
Unfortunately youre bang on - I almost broke my hand the first time I used it as the drill spun. Took some time to recover the bit and tried again, and again, it was hopeless and should not be sold as an answer to log splitting, of any size, its dangerous for an ordinary bloke like me. Another internet scam!
Agreed
Thanks for watching
The principle is a good one. A friend of mine has something similar and it splits almost anything. Problem is, his is two feet long by about a foot wide with a huge coarse thread, and runs off the PTO on his tractor. Big rounds disintegrate in seconds, but the splitter has about 50hp going through it. I’m always on the lookout for better ways of splitting wood, so you have saved me some money here. I wish I’d seen a similar video on those ‘blade in a cage’ things before I spent cash on something so useless. I’ll stick with my 5hp hydraulic splitter, which does most sizes. Thanks for a good, clear video.
That bit is made for Bosch SDS usually a medium duty hammer drill. Not the biggest but very common in construction/destruction industry.
Not just Bosch. Most manufactures make SDS drills, have been around at least 40 years that I can remember.
In my experience of owning one of these bits. #1 don't overwork the drill , burns up the motor. #2 great for small scrap kiln dried lumber (untreated) or sticks about an inch or two in diameter (depending on species). #3 brace the wood , little sticks can hurt . #4 use at the ends or edges avoid knots. It can be "satisfying " to use but also obsolete due to its limitations. Regarding safety and efficiency a hatchet and 2lb hammer are much more practical.
Agreed
Thanks for sharing
Thanks for the test. I had been interested in this for some time, but hesitated because it looked gimmicky.
Glad I didn't waste any money.
I tried a couple of these before I realized they had backwards threads. If you run the drill in reverse they work great. Even the cordless. At least for me.
Thanks for sharing. I know that they make some of these that are left-handed but clearly the ones I was using are not.
If you use a left-handed bit but spin it the wrong direction , Then it doesn’t dig in. These bits were digging in so hard that they got stuck
Thanks for watching
That crazy looking bit shank is for a heavy duty masonry drill. Thanks for sharing!!!
Thanks for watching
Called an sds drill
I actually did a follow up video using this product with an SDs hammer Drill
Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits Part 2- Do They Really Work?
ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
Both the bit and the drill aren't enough. Thank you for taking the time and saving me money.
That shank is for an SDS (rotary hammer) drill. Seems like just a flat bit would work better if you had a rotary hammer drill anyway.
Thanks
I went and bought a hammer drill just to test us with and got basically the same result
Yes. That’s the same shank my Bosch hammer drill uses.
They actually work great for quick access door lock defeaters, gaps the deadbolts bolt from the door jam perfectly. Every firefighter should have one in their arsenal. As a log splitter though? LOL, have fun at the ER! They just need to market it towards something it actually works for. I am certain there's other uses besides being a key to the city. Would love to hear them, being as how I have one and don't need a door defeater very often, and I have lock picks for that.
Some people have suggested a big sinker for fishing
Thank you. Just spotted this ad on Twitter and got curious if this is bad. This did not disappoint me.
My wife bought me one of those splitters for the drill last year. I had the same results as you did trying to split some oak wood. I even used a very heavy duty 1/2" drill and got the same results. I am not impressed at all with this splitter at all. In my opinion, they are a waste of $$ money! Maybe it will work good on a stick of butter, I haven't tried that yet!
Agreed
Thanks for watching
Just use a maul. Exercise and like woodcutters say, "Splitting firewood warms you twice."
Yeah, I split a fair bit of wood this winter with a maul before getting my hydraulic splitter
@@RockhillfarmYT Yeah I love splitting. I live down south so we don't really need much wood but when I do it, it brings the caveman outta me. Thanks for the review cuz that video of them splitting looks cool but I know it's a joke.
@@RockhillfarmYT any recommended maul brand, specs that I could buy?? Thanks
any recommended maul brand, specs that I could buy?? Thanks
If you sell firewood you might as well be as fast as you can.
Thank for the video, good job. Daughter and I were talking about one of these last week as a Christmas present for her boy friend and I told her that I thought that it might bind and told her he probably have to use a corded drill. I told her to save her money and get a manual sliding log splitter or maul and wedges for him. Looks to me that if you had a real powerful corded drill and it binds out you could break your wrist. Gonna have her watch your video. Thanks again and have a Merry Christmas.
Hey brother I think this bit is supposed to go into a SDS style hammer drill and the hammer drill is supposed to run on hammer only which drives it into to wood like a log splitter which would be much much safer. Try that out and let us know how it goes.
Thanks for sharing. I actually did a follow up video using this product with an SDs hammer Drill
Testing Firewood Splitting Drill Bits Part 2- Do They Really Work?
ua-cam.com/video/_xYnKKCer8k/v-deo.html
Great video RF! I was actually thinking about purchasing one of those. Thanks for saving me a few bucks and aggravation along the way! 👍👍
Yeah, it is possible to set up perfect conditions and make it work but it’s more trouble than it’s worth to me
Thank you for the great video. You are a brave man risking injuries to show us the real thing.
we made one of these at community college but much larger that fits on a wheel of a truck , worked great until one large piece slipped and flew off the tapered screw , taking out 3 large overhead lights and sending about 15 of us diving for cover
Man you wrote one of the most funniest replies I've ever seen. Way2go❤ I can still see it in my eye. 😅
I split wood with a maul ... My guess is the tool is too small in the first place to split anything larger than soft pine shelving planks for kindling. Even if you had the worlds strongest drill to use this tool on large logs, only 2 outcomes would possibly result.
1. the tool would bury itself into the log till the chuck and nose of the drill made contact with log stopping the operation from drilling further and result in no split.
2. The torque strength would break your grip from the drill and possibly sprain your wrists, thats if the log didn't spin first.... also no split.
This only makes sense with those big screw cones people put on their old car axles as far size, weight and power needed for splitting logs. It's simple physics all around, don't waste your money people!
Fun to watch this tool being put to the test though so great video!
Yeah, I went and bought a hammer drill just to give this a second chance and to me it’s just not worth the time for the reasons you mentioned
Thanks for watching
I used in impact wrench 1/2" drive on the wood bit that has the 1/4" hex design and adapted my wrench down from 1/2" to 1/4" drive but best to adapt from 1/2" to 3/8" and use a 3/8" drive socket to 1/4" on the hex
@@monstermouse434 I wanted to try this on a regular impact but couldn’t find anything that would adapt the SDS shank down
@@RockhillfarmYT I understand your frustration they sell different shanked tools I got the wood splitter bit that had the 1/4" hex design. If it weren't for your video I would have gone through a lot of trouble. Using your video saved me a lot of trouble and gave me the idea ov the impact wrench and adapting it to the 1"4" hex bit. Just wouldn't split bigger stuff though but saves time for splitting kidling and smaller stuff that you would use for getting your fire going. I might share a video of my own in the near future just to demonstrate my findings I'll keep you posted when my video becomes available. Right now I just don't have the time
@@monstermouse434 why not just use a hatchet? Quicker, plus cheaper and NO dislocated joints!
Thanks for the review and test
That "end of the shaft" shape detail is for DeWalt and other brands of Hammerdrills.
All Hammerdrill bits have a slight bit of slack that enhances the power tranferrance from the Hammerdrill motor to the bit. RE: Like a hammer pounding in a nail.
Thanks for the info. I looked it up after making the video and realized that you need a special drill
From the way this product was marketed to me through targeted Facebook ads I think it’s kind of crazy that they expect you to have a special drill to run it.
As you saw in the video I had a A nice corded drill and a nice cordless drill neither one of them would run it so I’m not a fan of the product
Negative. It is for a SDS drill. Hammerdrill covers a wide range.
@@BamaShinesDistillery Negative to your negative, they're infact called and SDS Plus drive for Rotary hammers, completely different tool then Hammer drills.
@@Girrthedogxxx uhhhh Rotary Hammer Drill... thanks for agreeing with me saying hammer drill covers a wide range.
I went and bought a hammer drill that only accepts SDS Bits. I had about the same luck trying it as I did with his drill
Bottom line, DON’T BUY IT!
Ha! I bought one of these things and had the same experience. Glad to see it wasn’t just me
Higher speed and angle the drill bit!
Fuck nah
I’m sure it’s possible to get it to work but it was not convenient so I put it in the junk drawer
NO
The worst thing about that bit are all the fractured wrists from backspin.
I thought the product was a good idea but most of my rounds are 24” and bought a hydronic log splitter. After watching this, I’m glad I did.
Thanks for the demo. You not only saved me money but time.
Thanks. I had my doubts before I saw this video. I will pass on buying it.
I figured that this thing was going to be a complete failure when I saw it. I'm glad to see a professional do it instead avera everyday UA-cam where that's never worked in their life. Thank you for your time I'm subscribed.
After breaking my nose with a flying off cut of wood last new year I thought I’d invest in something a little less dangerous than an axe. Saw this and got the girls to get it be as a stocking filler for Christmas. And that it did!
After the frivolous day that is Christmas Day , entertaining the family, friends, cooking, drinking, eating ( I love pigs in blankets with a Jamie Oliver pork and chestnut stuffing), working your way from A to Z in the cocktail cabinet etc,( who can say no to a Snowball followed by that clear Grappa!!) Boxing Day came and time for some me time. Time to try out my new log splitter. Using my dewalt SDH323T2GB with 5.9Ah fully charged battery I eagerly , excitedly made my way down to the bottom of the garden in crocs and lounge pants to my hallowed, sacred spot that is my log pile.
Log selection , simple I thought,before moving to true logs start easy, start with a simple piece of well dried decking board 12” length to split into kindling.
Setting up of the board to be executed was quite easy, lay flat off we go….
First attempt, absolute delight 12” x 1” stick formed in less than a second - no effort at all.
Going in for the 2nd split, lovely. Best present ever this. I’m gonna get all my log pile split up today.
3rd , 4th splits - good times, next piece of wood please !
Same again 12” plank of well seasoned timber… what happened next could only be described as that scene from Misery.
In the blink of an eye the wood spun round with the full full force of the SDS set to speed 3, and twatted my left leg. Instantly bring a boiled egg sized lump to emerge on the front of my shin. Silly bugger I thought, moved my leg back, reset posture and went again. Bang! Have that! Wood bit, full 620rpm rotor blade into the right ankle taking me straight to ground better than a Stuart Pearce tackle.
Result both legs looking like a bunch of black grapes , lounge pants have 2” rip in them on one leg. Right croc has the go fast strap ( ideal when chasing ice cream man ) ripped off and I’m sat with germolene on my wounds in front of an empty log burner.
Packaging : 5⭐ lovingly wrapped in recycled brown Xmas paper topped with a pine cone and waxed red/ white parcel string, topped with dried orange segment and set lovingly within the Christmas tree.
Quality: 5⭐ quality steel with several drill bit attachments for Standard 3/4 “ Chuck , SDS, HDS drills.
Instructions and Safety precautions : 🫣 must have been displaced.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ would buy again
UA-cam is where I always go to see if something is legit or not. Thanks for offering that service!
Thank you for posting! To be honest what you experienced is about what I thought every time I’ve seen the video.
Oddly enough a year after you made this video UA-cam decided it was a good video to endorse this very product. 8 minutes in this bit was advertised. I was thinking of getting it but now I don't think i will be getting one thanks for the video.
Thank you! I cut down an old mapele tree yesterday and I tried splitting it with the axe and the maul but it is very hard. It’s about the same size as yours, slightly smaller. Would a CENTRAL MACHINERY 12 Amp 5 ton Electric Log Splitter from Walmart do the job. Thank you again!
Thank you. You saved my arse from buying one. Had it in the shopping cart, ready to buy!
Hoping to get my dad a wood splitting device for father's day. This was very informative! Thank you!
THANKS for posting this, it was entertaining. Friend told me about ad for these screwy wood splitters, and then saw the ad for myself. Having split wood by hand, and with a power splitter, AND having used electric drills I just knew this thing, no make that this GIMMICK was a total joke. The promotional videos were too funny. They pictured using the drill splitter an an EASY peasy to split perfectly round and straight modestly sized piece of like Ash, which was also totally free from knots. Even then took several seconds to make the split. Meanwhile, by the time you'd fool around with this joke of a tool, I'd had my maul out, pow, pow pow. 10 inch piece of Ash done split in four and the next block set up to bat.
Thanks for the video. This video saved me from buying this product and wasting money.
Thank you for saving my hard earned money. You showed me exactly what I wanted to know!
I bought those also, A 5 tonne electric log splitter is perfect for making kindling in the garage and splitting larger logs.
I watched both videos. It was great to get an honest video without an agenda. Thank you.
Glad i watched this instead of just buying it. Thanks 😊
Saved me some money just now...
Thank you so much for this video. This product showed up on my feed. Look like they use a large drill and looked like super dry fire wood. I'll check out the other videos before making my final decision, but this video showed my exactly what I thought. thanks again
Big thanks for the consumer testing and information. You makes difference
The shaft and I drill bit goes into a rotary hammer drill I use those types of drills all the time to do termite work drilling into the foundations of homes but they do not advertise that you need a rotary hammer drill to make this product work I really do appreciate your video I normally have to split smaller pieces of wood just for an outdoor fire pit I have in my backyard and it's always a big pain in the butt I was thinking about buying this product but after seeing your video I realize it's just a gimmick thank you for showing us we really do appreciate it
Funny, as I watching this video, the ad for the splitting drill bit came on. Of course, in the ad, it was effortless to split logs. Your video shows the reality....
Thanks for the video.
Okay. Your impression of those bits is accurate. I bought them too to test out on some small wood stove sized firewood. I had the exact same experience as you.
Caveats:
The wood was NOT seasoned wood. It was fairly fresh cut and green/wet.
I had the same issue with the bits shaft coming loose in counter clockwise attempts to remove the bit. So I took the bit and secured it into my shop vise pipe clamp portion of jaws, tightened the jaws down and then used an impact wrench to securely bolt the shaft to the bit.
Also. The cordless drill seemed to work just a little better when it was in low speed high torque settings.
Overall, however, it’s not worth what we spent on the bits. The best thing to use these bits for is dried seasoned medium hardness type wood. I would not recommend using on hardwoods like Bois de ark, or black locust or sweetgum or red or white oak.
Thank you. You have been very helpful because I was going to buy this product.
The slots in the bits are SDS bits for a Rotary Hammer Drill. There is a difference between just a hammer drill and a rotary hammer drill. Hope that helps.
Great video. You have saved me lots of money, aggravation, and possibly injury.
Thanks
Thank you for showing me this is useless, I was going to buy one, you saved me some money.
Thanks ,you've just saved me money and time
I've got one of those bits that I bought on mercari. I use it with an 18v Rigid cordless drill. It works great for splitting firewood into kindling when camping. Lay the firewood flat, put your foot on one end to hold it in place, and drill into the other end about 1 inch from the end. Once or starts splitting angle the bit and start drilling towards the end you' re holding. Works good for me that way.
These things are meant to split firewood into kindling, not rounds into firewood IMO.
I went through the same exact progression you did..Maybe on super dry pine.
Thanks for the video. About what I figured for this tool. As for splitting kindling, my fireplace friend is hands down the tool for 4”, maybe 6” or smaller.
EIGHT minutes in, which I forwarded to, you FINALLY see the tool!!!
Got to love these UA-camrs and how they TRY to trick everyone into staying on their video for money and wasting everyone time…
Fantastic, generalization, but That is not at all the video is long. It is long for two reasons.
1. I make the type of videos that I like to watch. Everything I watch on UA-cam is long vlog style videos of guys working outside. I watch them while I’m doing other things and I hate needing to search for another video every 10 minutes. I like 30 minutes and 40 minute videos.
2. This is an old video. I didn’t understand that search based content should be shorter than vlog content
I hope a little venting made you feel better this morning
Thanks for saving me the time and money!
Thank you for taking the time and making the effort for the video and giving a real review.