Sparktrician
Member
That right angle chuck has saves my wrists more times than not, especially when installing/replacing drawer glides and adjusting drawer fronts, both on my older C12 as well as my CXS.
[smile]
[smile]
Just be careful there. There's a cheap version that is known to break / disintegrate / evaporate in your hands and a pricier, but solid version.Ken Nagrod said:Alan m said:i have too many drills as it is with out buying another one.jmbfestool said:Alan m said:i have needed the right angle chuck several times. shame i dont own one
WHAT!!!!!
im looking for a 90 degree attachment that works with normal drills
Milwaukee
Works. Not as easy to use as the right angle attachment for any of the Festool drills, but I recommend it. Especially for really tight spots.
Sean Ackerman said:Just be careful there. There's a cheap version that is known to break / disintegrate / evaporate in your hands and a pricier, but solid version.Ken Nagrod said:Alan m said:i have too many drills as it is with out buying another one.jmbfestool said:Alan m said:i have needed the right angle chuck several times. shame i dont own one
WHAT!!!!!
im looking for a 90 degree attachment that works with normal drills
Milwaukee
Works. Not as easy to use as the right angle attachment for any of the Festool drills, but I recommend it. Especially for really tight spots.
Ken Nagrod said:Alan m said:i have too many drills as it is with out buying another one.jmbfestool said:Alan m said:i have needed the right angle chuck several times. shame i dont own one
WHAT!!!!!
im looking for a 90 degree attachment that works with normal drills
Milwaukee
Works. Not as easy to use as the right angle attachment for any of the Festool drills, but I recommend it. Especially for really tight spots.
GhostFist said:Ken Nagrod said:Alan m said:i have too many drills as it is with out buying another one.jmbfestool said:Alan m said:i have needed the right angle chuck several times. shame i dont own one
WHAT!!!!!
im looking for a 90 degree attachment that works with normal drills
Milwaukee
Works. Not as easy to use as the right angle attachment for any of the Festool drills, but I recommend it. Especially for really tight spots.
First thing I did when I got my first festool drill is throw that Milwaukee chuck attachment as far as i could
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I kept mine, it's somewhat more compact than the Festool RA head and could actually save the day at some point. [wink]
RonWen said:GhostFist said:Ken Nagrod said:Alan m said:i have too many drills as it is with out buying another one.jmbfestool said:Alan m said:i have needed the right angle chuck several times. shame i dont own one
WHAT!!!!!
im looking for a 90 degree attachment that works with normal drills
Milwaukee
Works. Not as easy to use as the right angle attachment for any of the Festool drills, but I recommend it. Especially for really tight spots.
First thing I did when I got my first festool drill is throw that Milwaukee chuck attachment as far as i could
[/quote]
I kept mine, it's somewhat more compact than the Festool RA head and could actually save the day at some point. [wink]
in regards to the head being more compact i have to disagree as the head has to be held in place with one hand and the drill with the other as this chuck doesn't fix to a position like on the festool drills. IMO the cxs is the way to go as far as right angles in tight spaces until festool or someone else comes up with something better