Naildrivingman
Member
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2017
- Messages
- 509
Wondering why there is no ability to have the impact feature transferred through the adaptor to the rt angle and offset chucks. I can see how this would be helpful.
I get that, but wonder how a tiny T10 bit can take the stress of impact.Birdhunter said:My uneducated guess would be the gear train would not take the stress.
Naildrivingman said:I get that, but wonder how a tiny T10 bit can take the stress of impact.Birdhunter said:My uneducated guess would be the gear train would not take the stress.
If the gears are non-metal, then I can see how the impact would affect them.
It seems like you're talking about hammer drills where the force pushes the drill bit into the work. The thread is about impact drivers where the hammering force is in the direction of the rotation of the bit. A totally different tool with a totally different goal.aloysius said:Impact drills work by having a steel ripple disc rotate against a fixed one.
This explains in part why they aren't very effective in comparison to the pneumatic piston versions, why they're prone to premature wear & why they make such a god-awful noise.
Without a solid, unbroken, continuous link through the drivetrain, the rather miserable shockwaves generated naturally dissipate. Liken it to using impact bits with rubber shanks.
aloysius said:Impact drills work by having a steel ripple disc rotate against a fixed one.
This explains in part why they aren't very effective in comparison to the pneumatic piston versions, why they're prone to premature wear & why they make such a god-awful noise.
Without a solid, unbroken, continuous link through the drivetrain, the rather miserable shockwaves generated naturally dissipate. Liken it to using impact bits with rubber shanks.
Bosch manufactures a right angle adapter for their 1" rotary SDS-Plus rotary hammers.
If it has enough torque to drive straight, then it has enough torque to drive through angle adapter. What do you think is the loss there? 1-2%?antss said:Even if FT decided to pursue this, the t15 doesn't produce enough torque to make an adapter very useful anyway.
antss said:Bosch manufactures a right angle adapter for their 1" rotary SDS-Plus rotary hammers.
And how well does it work or last ? I'll bet it's more of a gimmick than anything.
Even if FT decided to pursue this, the t15 doesn't produce enough torque to make an adapter very useful anyway.
That is a hammer drill with longitudinal impact. The attachment shown also provides longitudinal impact. Large loss is due to the mass of the drill being not in line with the impact direction. The OP was referring to impact driver for screws with tangential impact where loss will be lower.Frank-Jan said:In the video the guy says it "only" loses 40% of the hammering power. (Nonetheless it looks useful in some situations for me)
And washer head lag screws...antss said:............waaaaaaaay more than 2% Svar. :
Are you using it for close quarters HVAC type work ?