Tunajoe
Well-known member
I've looked all over to no avail.
I have a rock wall I'm trying to drill thru and I need an extension
I have a rock wall I'm trying to drill thru and I need an extension
Could someone explain to me the reason for the SDS design, vs a traditional bit shank (I think that's the correct term)? Using my soon-to-be father-in-law's hammer drill with SDS bits seems frustrating in comparison to my buddy's Dewalt hammer drill that takes standard shank bits.
If it makes any difference, I'm putting holes in the block walls of my garage for mounting pegboard and the like, nothing super heavy duty. Generally 3/16" holes for 1/4" Tapcons.
My experience is contrary to yours.
Dewalt SDS goes through concrete floors like a hot knife through butter, even with a 3/4” bit, where a regular hammer drill struggles.
Are your SDS bits sharp, and do you have the drill properly set up, ie hammer
drill vs drill only or hammer only?
Looking at the bit design of the SDS, it seems the drill motor pounds on the back of the bit, which is free to slide in the collar, and the rotary motion is transferred through the flutes or grooves on the bit shank. The thrust is thus decoupled from the mass of the drill motor., more effectively transferring force to the bit tip.