Steve
I use an impact driver which has a 1/4" hex quick change chuck. If I
need a long reach I typically use a long bit.
i normally use a slider. Didn't two days ago. Pushed hard and drill slipped
off and drive a hole in my thumb. Blood leaks all over when you do that.
Karl
I have a couple of different types of quick couplers but rarely use
them because they aren't completely reliable and can drop the bit into
the bushes below the ladder, and I don't yet have a set of GOOD drill
bits with grooved hex shanks. I probably drill a lot more home-made
steel and stainless fittings than the average hardware store customer.
Industrial-quality bits are as easy to lose in the leaves as cheap
ones.
My Makita's most recent job was holes for 1/2" lag screws 200' from
the nearest electric outlet.
jsw
Ditto here, either a long bit or hex extension. www.Rockler.com has
2, 3, and 6" square bits for a couple bucks apiece. I buy from them
when they have their free shipping sales.
http://www.rockler.com/product.cfm?page=299&filter=square%20drive%20bit
The 2" is my most used, but in tight spaces, the 6" works wonders.
I also bought a 1/4" hex drive 3/8" keyed drill chuck for use with the
impact. The Impactor ate my $1.50 HF keyless chuck in about 30
seconds.
--
STOP THE SLAUGHTER! Boycott Baby Oil!
"I have absolutely no idea of what you're talking about, Karl" as he
hid his scarred hand.
The trick is to whap the back of the driver to sink the screw tip,
then start turning it. You don't need to hold the screw after that so
it's much safer.
P.S: Phillips tips make good skin drills, don't they?
Put down a tarp before you put up the ladder, Jim. And/or carry a
magnet on a stick which will help you find lost hardware and bits.
I keep a welding triangle in the truck with a coat hanger tied to it.
>My Makita's most recent job was holes for 1/2" lag screws 200' from
>the nearest electric outlet.
Yeah, cordless drivers are an absolute necessity in most construction
areas. But I think he meant "hex extension bit holders" there, big
fella. ;)
Yes, just like in the socket wrench world there are separate impact
rated extensions, the ordinary hex extensions that work fine on
drill-drivers are destroyed by impact drivers.
I'm on my 2rd 1/4hex x 1/4square adaptor, but the newest one is U.S.
made and is lasting better. I had a couple good HF adaptors (plus the
first bad one) but I lost them. The only 1/4hex x 3/8square adaptor
I've tried (from HF, used for driving 6"-8" x 1/2" lags into beams)
has held up well, too.
Pozidriv and Robertson screws don't tend to fall off their respective bits :-)
Mark Rand
RTFM
They show what they're selling. <grin>
If they showed other "goodies" then their customers would expect to see
them in the box when it arrives and, when the "goodies" were found to be
missing, demand a full refund + legal expenses.
After all, Steve, we're talking about a customer base that truly believes
that you can get a top-of-the-line battery-powered industrial tool for
$19.95 + S&H! ("Order in the next 10 minutes and we'll send you a second
tool absolutely FREE!" sez the 3:00 AM Infomercial.)
>
>"Steve B" <desertt...@dishynail.net> wrote in message
>news:b33h97-...@news.infowest.com...
>Because TV ads are generally created/approved by liberal arts graduates who
>can only think in terms of what "looks good" to them. The douchebags who
>did the ad you're referring to probably don't know which end of a screwdriver
>is the handle much less anything about quick change adapters.
Remember the Crapsman ad for their new vicegrip product? they showed
some absolute bozo shearing metal off the nut on a bicycle axle with
the pliers on backwards. It only showed a few times before it was
removed, but I was on the floor laughing from it every time I saw it,
thinking how well it fit the current crap Searz is foisting on the
public.
I haven't had to watch anything the lib arts grads put together for 3
years now, and I'm very happy with my choice to stop watching
broadcast TV.
True, but getting a screw started often can be quite tough.
Didn't you hear? You can go to Kmart to be ripped off with Crapsman.
--
Lead free solder is Belgium's version of 'Hold my beer and watch this!'
slider extension
Karl
Good observation re. the mentality of those victims of advertising who only appreciate "cheap".
Bob Swinney
"RAM�" <s31924...@netscape.net> wrote in message
news:Xns9D5AA0148DBBB...@74.209.131.10...
> Good observation re. the mentality of those victims of advertising who
> only appreciate "cheap".
The late-night infomercials are far more humorous than the sitcoms...
<grin>
OTOH, I've been told that I have an "unusual" sense of humor... <GRIN>
>>Pozidriv and Robertson screws don't tend to fall off their respective bits :-)
>
>True, but getting a screw started often can be quite tough.
Yesterday, I was helping uncle put some sheets of drywall up on a ceiling and he had
Robertson drywall screws. I've never seen drywall screws with square (Robertson) drive
before.
Wes
--
"Additionally as a security officer, I carry a gun to protect
government officials but my life isn't worth protecting at home
in their eyes." Dick Anthony Heller
> Check them out for almost any sort of screw you
> would ever want.
>
Eh?
Let's keep it clean, shall we? <grin>
You got it.
Lew