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Thread: In the mortar or in the brick ?
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7th April 2004, 11:24 PM #16
Just as a matter of interest bunnings have the $100 rotary hammer back in stock again.
A bargin in anyones terms.
I baught one & so did a couple of builder mates.
The seem to work well & come with 3 sds bits and a chisel.
To complete the package , go to trade tools & grab their cheep sds bit set. A fist full of sds drill bits in 3 lengths and 4 chisels for about $50 bucks.
neithe will stand up to the pounding like a hilti or such but for the ocasional user beats grinding away with an ordinary hammer drill.
O btw general comment about ramset drills.
If they used a standard sds bit more people might buy them.
I wouldn't touch one with a barge pole while they persist with a proprietary bit system.
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8th April 2004, 11:50 AM #17Intermediate Member
- Join Date
- Feb 2004
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You're absolutely right - more people would use the Ramset drills if they used a generic SDS bit.
And in fact the smallest drill in the range, DD520 2kg hammer will take a generic SDS bit to cater for the small users looking for economy.
However the R3 bit was designed for the industrial user, with reliability and speed a priority. It is extremely fast and long lasting. The key design triples the chuck life of the Ramset tool. Subbies simply can't in any fashion jam the chuck with a SDS bit put in backwards. That all saves the tool owner time and money from less problems and breakdowns on site - at $40 an hour you want to go as fast as you can with no delays.
It is also to my knowledge the only Australian based multifit bit patent on the market =)
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