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Default Bosch drills: DRE or DFR

Hi,

Is it worth paying extra for the changeable chucks on the DFR or
should I save money and buy the DRE? I think I''d only use the DFR for
masonry, i.e. sds bits, and anything else would go in my cordless.
Would I ever need to change chucks?

TIA
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Default Bosch drills: DRE or DFR

I've got a GBH2-26DFR - tens years old now, and a brilliant tool.

I don't use the 3-jaw chuck very often, but for some things - like
hole cutters in heavy timbers and larger (10mm+) holes in steel - it's
brilliant.

I now have a DeWalt high torque drill, so the bosch interchangable
chuck will come out less frequently now - but before I bought this,
the bosch was my tool of choice when I needed something that wouldn't
easily stall under load. Far, far more torque than my bosch 14v combi.

I *can* stall the bosch GBH under load, but not that easily. The
Dewalt high torque drill would tug my arms out of my shoulders first
(and requires some forethought where that could happen).

If you can afford/justify a separate high torque drill, buy that. If
not, get the extra chuck.
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Default Bosch drills: DRE or DFR

In article ,
Fred wrote:
Hi,


Is it worth paying extra for the changeable chucks on the DFR or
should I save money and buy the DRE? I think I''d only use the DFR for
masonry, i.e. sds bits, and anything else would go in my cordless.
Would I ever need to change chucks?


Might be worth it if out on a job and only want to carry one drill - but
otherwise no. SDS drills tend to be rather unwieldy compared to an
ordinary one - and don't have the best speeds for GP drilling.
I do have a clip in ordinary chuck for my DeWalt SDS - and that also slops
around rather too much.

TIA


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Default Bosch drills: DRE or DFR


I do have a clip in ordinary chuck for my DeWalt SDS - and that also slops
around rather too much. *


Not a problem with the DFR - the sds chuck comes off, and the 3 jaw
goes on in it's place - my 10 year old and heavily used bosch shows
not the slightest wear or looseness in this area.
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