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#1
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Masonary drill bits
I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits.
I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy |
#2
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Masonary drill bits
On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote:
I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) |
#3
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Masonary drill bits
On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote:
I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you using a good carbide tipped bit or a cheap steel? At work we used carbide bits to drill into concrete to anchor machines and did dozens of holes with the same bit. A good rotary hammer drill with SDS bits should last for many holes. If you bought the bits at the dollar store you got what you paid for. |
#4
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Masonary drill bits
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 1:31:29 PM UTC-5, Roger Smith wrote:
On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote: I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) Yes. I used a Century Tungsten Carbide bit. Andy |
#5
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Masonary drill bits
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 1:34:25 PM UTC-5, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote: I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you using a good carbide tipped bit or a cheap steel? At work we used carbide bits to drill into concrete to anchor machines and did dozens of holes with the same bit. A good rotary hammer drill with SDS bits should last for many holes. If you bought the bits at the dollar store you got what you paid for. Will this work in a regular hammer drill? The shank is an unusual design. "https://www.homedepot.com/p/Drill-America-1-4-in-x-4-in-Carbide-Tipped-SDS-Plus-Masonry-Hammer-Drill-Bit-SDS144/304744764" |
#6
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Masonary drill bits
"A K" wrote in message ... On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 1:34:25 PM UTC-5, Ed Pawlowski wrote: On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote: I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you using a good carbide tipped bit or a cheap steel? At work we used carbide bits to drill into concrete to anchor machines and did dozens of holes with the same bit. A good rotary hammer drill with SDS bits should last for many holes. If you bought the bits at the dollar store you got what you paid for. Will this work in a regular hammer drill? The shank is an unusual design. "https://www.homedepot.com/p/Drill-America-1-4-in-x-4-in-Carbide-Tipped-SDS-Plus-Masonry-Hammer-Drill-Bit-SDS144/304744764" Only in an SDS Plus drill. They do things differently to simple hammer drills. |
#7
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Lonely Psychopathic Senile Ozzie Troll Alert! LOL
On Sat, 13 Apr 2019 04:57:55 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rot Speed,
the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: Only in an SDS Plus drill. They do things differently to simple hammer drills. I wonder how many folks (online AND in real life) would like to drill an SDS Plus drill bit into your thick psychopathic head, senile Rot! -- FredXX to Rot Speed: "You are still an idiot and an embarrassment to your country. No wonder we shipped the likes of you out of the British Isles. Perhaps stupidity and criminality is inherited after all?" Message-ID: |
#8
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Masonary drill bits
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 11:53:43 -0700 (PDT), A K
wrote: On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 1:34:25 PM UTC-5, Ed Pawlowski wrote: On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote: I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you using a good carbide tipped bit or a cheap steel? At work we used carbide bits to drill into concrete to anchor machines and did dozens of holes with the same bit. A good rotary hammer drill with SDS bits should last for many holes. If you bought the bits at the dollar store you got what you paid for. Will this work in a regular hammer drill? The shank is an unusual design. "https://www.homedepot.com/p/Drill-America-1-4-in-x-4-in-Carbide-Tipped-SDS-Plus-Masonry-Hammer-Drill-Bit-SDS144/304744764" SDS bits will woek in a standard chuck. If it is a hammer drill it will work in "mode 2" so it will not be as effective as in a "mode 3" SDS hammerdrill |
#9
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Masonary drill bits
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 14:31:20 -0400, Roger Smith
wrote: Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? Thanks for the chuckle of the day. Been a long time since that has been mentioned. (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) Some never check if the bit is tight in the chuck; so it doesn't slip or if they just slipped a clutch. LMAO. |
#10
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Masonary drill bits
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 4:01:31 PM UTC-5, Oren wrote:
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 14:31:20 -0400, Roger Smith wrote: Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? Thanks for the chuckle of the day. Been a long time since that has been mentioned. (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) Some never check if the bit is tight in the chuck; so it doesn't slip or if they just slipped a clutch. LMAO. Using a new masonary bit, I went slower and finished one hole. But that was it as the tip looks like it's melted. Andy |
#11
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Masonary drill bits
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 16:30:43 -0700 (PDT), A K
wrote: On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 4:01:31 PM UTC-5, Oren wrote: On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 14:31:20 -0400, Roger Smith wrote: Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? Thanks for the chuckle of the day. Been a long time since that has been mentioned. (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) Some never check if the bit is tight in the chuck; so it doesn't slip or if they just slipped a clutch. LMAO. Using a new masonary bit, I went slower and finished one hole. But that was it as the tip looks like it's melted. Andy It sounds like your hammer drill is not hammering. |
#12
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Masonary drill bits
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 7:21:41 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 16:30:43 -0700 (PDT), A K wrote: On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 4:01:31 PM UTC-5, Oren wrote: On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 14:31:20 -0400, Roger Smith wrote: Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? Thanks for the chuckle of the day. Been a long time since that has been mentioned. (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) Some never check if the bit is tight in the chuck; so it doesn't slip or if they just slipped a clutch. LMAO. Using a new masonary bit, I went slower and finished one hole. But that was it as the tip looks like it's melted. Andy It sounds like your hammer drill is not hammering. It is hammering. Even if it wasn't, the bits are still designed for regular drills. I did find out that they are for cinder block and bricks. I bought some Bosch Blue Granite Turbo bits. They are designed for concrete and granite. Andy Andy |
#13
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Masonary drill bits
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 4:01:31 PM UTC-5, Oren wrote: On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 14:31:20 -0400, Roger Smith wrote: Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? Thanks for the chuckle of the day. Been a long time since that has been mentioned. (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) About a dozen years ago we had a guy in maintenance that was a little slow at times. One day he had a project to do and came to the supervisor and complained that the drill bit was dull. The supervisor sharpened it and gave it back. A few minutes late, the guy comes back and laughs, "Joe you can't sharpen a drill for ****!" You can guess the rest. |
#14
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Masonary drill bits
On 04/12/2019 12:49 PM, A K wrote:
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 1:31:29 PM UTC-5, Roger Smith wrote: On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote: I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) Yes. I used a Century Tungsten Carbide bit. Andy DeWalt, Bosch, Makita... Depending on the application you could rent a Hilti powder actuated driver. BANG! and the stud is in place. |
#15
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Masonary drill bits
On 4/12/2019 7:30 PM, A K wrote:
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 4:01:31 PM UTC-5, Oren wrote: On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 14:31:20 -0400, Roger Smith wrote: Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? Thanks for the chuckle of the day. Been a long time since that has been mentioned. (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) Some never check if the bit is tight in the chuck; so it doesn't slip or if they just slipped a clutch. LMAO. Using a new masonary bit, I went slower and finished one hole. But that was it as the tip looks like it's melted. Andy Then you're pushing too hard. Let the hammer in the hammer drill do the work. Applying more pressure will simply heat and dull the bit. |
#16
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Masonary drill bits
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 8:39:09 PM UTC-5, A K wrote:
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 7:21:41 PM UTC-5, wrote: On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 16:30:43 -0700 (PDT), A K wrote: On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 4:01:31 PM UTC-5, Oren wrote: On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 14:31:20 -0400, Roger Smith wrote: Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? Thanks for the chuckle of the day. Been a long time since that has been mentioned. (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) Some never check if the bit is tight in the chuck; so it doesn't slip or if they just slipped a clutch. LMAO. Using a new masonary bit, I went slower and finished one hole. But that was it as the tip looks like it's melted. Andy It sounds like your hammer drill is not hammering. It is hammering. Even if it wasn't, the bits are still designed for regular drills. I did find out that they are for cinder block and bricks. I bought some Bosch Blue Granite Turbo bits. They are designed for concrete and granite. Andy Andy Found the right bit for my app. "https://www.dropbox.com/s/1ehedz6miqpyojy/GraniteBit.jpg?dl=0" I also use water for cooling. Andy |
#17
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Masonary drill bits
On Saturday, April 13, 2019 at 2:48:18 PM UTC-5, Colonel Edmund J. Burke wrote:
On 4/12/2019 11:49 AM, A K wrote: On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 1:31:29 PM UTC-5, Roger Smith wrote: On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote: I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) Yes. I used a Century Tungsten Carbide bit. Andy That twern't his question, ya god damned ****tard! anger.management.problem |
#18
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Masonary drill bits
A K posted for all of us...
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 1:34:25 PM UTC-5, Ed Pawlowski wrote: On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote: I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you using a good carbide tipped bit or a cheap steel? At work we used carbide bits to drill into concrete to anchor machines and did dozens of holes with the same bit. A good rotary hammer drill with SDS bits should last for many holes. If you bought the bits at the dollar store you got what you paid for. Will this work in a regular hammer drill? The shank is an unusual design. "https://www.homedepot.com/p/Drill-America-1-4-in-x-4-in-Carbide-Tipped-SDS-Plus-Masonry-Hammer-Drill-Bit-SDS144/304744764" No, look up SDS and SDS plus and prepare to spend money. To answer your original question you may be pushing too hard and not clearing the dust out? What are you drilling, block, concrete, stones? Look at some U tube vids and get some tips. I do not know the quality of the bits you posted. -- Tekkie |
#19
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Masonary drill bits
On 4/13/2019 4:14 PM, A K wrote:
On Saturday, April 13, 2019 at 2:48:18 PM UTC-5, Colonel Edmund J. Burke wrote: On 4/12/2019 11:49 AM, A K wrote: On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 1:31:29 PM UTC-5, Roger Smith wrote: On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote: I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you running the drill motor in the correct direction? (Sorry if that seems like a silly question but we do have several democrats here so I had to ask.) Yes. I used a Century Tungsten Carbide bit. Andy That twern't his question, ya god damned ****tard! anger.management.problem How is "yes" not an answer, trumptard? |
#20
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Masonary drill bits
On Monday, April 15, 2019 at 3:19:23 PM UTC-5, Tekkie® wrote:
A K posted for all of us... On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 1:34:25 PM UTC-5, Ed Pawlowski wrote: On 4/12/2019 2:22 PM, A K wrote: I have used 2 different brand of masonary bits. I can not even drill one hole before it becomes dull. I used both a regular drill and a hammer drill. Geez. Andy Are you using a good carbide tipped bit or a cheap steel? At work we used carbide bits to drill into concrete to anchor machines and did dozens of holes with the same bit. A good rotary hammer drill with SDS bits should last for many holes. If you bought the bits at the dollar store you got what you paid for. Will this work in a regular hammer drill? The shank is an unusual design. "https://www.homedepot.com/p/Drill-America-1-4-in-x-4-in-Carbide-Tipped-SDS-Plus-Masonry-Hammer-Drill-Bit-SDS144/304744764" No, look up SDS and SDS plus and prepare to spend money. To answer your original question you may be pushing too hard and not clearing the dust out? What are you drilling, block, concrete, stones? Look at some U tube vids and get some tips. I do not know the quality of the bits you posted. -- Tekkie The bit worked great along with water. The tip showed no signs of melting. Andy |
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