500W Power
13mm Chuck Size
2,900rpm Load Speed
49,300bpm Impact rate
The Black & Decker 500W Hammer Drill can drill up to 8mm holes in masonry and up to 25mm in timber.
500W Power
13mm Chuck Size
2,900rpm Load Speed
49,300bpm Impact rate
The Black & Decker 500W Hammer Drill can drill up to 8mm holes in masonry and up to 25mm in timber.
Tip: 700w is recommended for easy concrete drill.
Is the Load Speed and Impact rate more important?
Xmas present for the wife sorted. Now I just need band aids that are 13mm wide for myself.
Boring.
That makes sense. Cheers.
How boring? Just a bit?
What are you tourqing about? It's chuck loads.
That wooden make sense unless they're in the know.
@DashCam AKA Rolts: Ok, no need to hammer home the point.
I am not good at following when people are torquing about being in the know.
I am not good at following when people are torquing about being in the know.
You're scr3wed.
@DashCam AKA Rolts: Well, if you're going to drill down to it. Yes.
But someone people are just fastener than I.
@WSDtightwad: Nailed it.
Think I've got this one. It seems to keep on creating spooky smoke when I use it (the burning electrics kind). I chalk this up to not installing the handle low down enough my first time trying to use it. Don't make my mistake
Free delivery with OnePass
It's like the old days when Kmart sold $20 power tools.
I still occasionally use a $20 supercheap, esp for masonry work. Its 15 plus years old and was only drill for 5 or so years until i got the $125 Stanley pair from Masters
.
how come they can produce electric tools so cheap ..not just in sale ones but lots of cheap ones out there ..
Step 1 - make tools
Step 2 - ?
Step 3 - Profit
Let's be real here cheap stuff cuts corners (metaphorically, not physically a lot of the time lol). This is true in basically every industry.
It's just a matter of if the corners they cut are a dealbreaker to you or not.
the flip is that does the avg. consumer need or have any appreciation of an AEG or Panasonic or sometihng truly top end? and does he need to bear the cost of that?
That's the thing. You buy this for a quick, cheap home job and it will probably do what you want it to. It may or may not be suitable for the next task you have down the track, but it was $20 so you're not too fussed. You shouldn't buy this relying on it for regular usage.
How does this compare to battery operated ones say 18V ryobi/ozito etc. Looking to drill holes to mount speaker in concrete walls in apartment.
Get a decent masonry bit and it will be fine for that job. The bit will cost a high % of the drill's cost. If you were doing extensive renovations you'd want something better.
Seems to go for $70 on Amazon.