Combi Hammer Drill is suitable for light repairs and maintenance jobs. Suitable for drilling in wood, steel, brick, concrete. Driving construction screws into hard woods.
Impact Energy: 8 J
Wattage: 1500 W
Weight: 4.88 kg
Width: 260 mm
Height: 100 mm
Length: 380 mm
Maximum Diameter (Masonry): 32 mm
Voltage: 220-240 V
No Load Speed: 850 /min
Rated Speed: 850 /min
Power Type: Corded
bb8 :wink:
12 comments
callum84
22 Dec 16#1
Looks very similar to screwfix Titan which is a cracking drill.
Cant go wrong for under 40 quid.
Besford
22 Dec 16#2
"...suitable for light repairs..." What? This thing is a monster!
Great price though.
fitzycat
23 Dec 161#3
Looks like a good price for a powerful SDS drill.
I bought a Challenge 900W from Argos in a sale 4-5 years ago for a mid £30's price because I could not get through the hard concrete where I live, that beast sailed through it and even though the neighbours borrowed it more than once it still does the same job.
jasee
23 Dec 16#4
Good price for a masonary and `breaker` type drill. Single slow speed only so rather slow when drilling wood for instance using twist type drills. Variable speed would have been nice. SDS with no conventional chuck so you will need to get special SDS bits which generally are more expensive than ordinary twist drills.
Not really suitable for general household use, I don`t think.
Besford to jasee
23 Dec 16#10
Does include 5 bits though - which is more than my £45 one from B&Q did! I think by the time you get to this sort of heavy duty kit a conventional chuck is getting a bit redundant. Buying something like this just to drill holes in wood, brick ,etc. is definitely overkill.
iz123456789
23 Dec 16#5
help
would this drill go through concrete wall...?
thanks
jasee to iz123456789
23 Dec 16#6
A normal household wall, consisting of bricks or blocks or both, yes.
Provided the drill was long enough of course.
It would struggle with real concrete (such as found in concrete lintels etc, but anything would)
bigbak
23 Dec 16#7
My titan had no problem with real concrete.
kasapin
23 Dec 16#8
This looks interesting. I will be needing something like that to get some holes into an old brick house. And do some tough concrete drilling.
However, this particular unit seems a bit odd – it weights only 5KG and claims 8J power and 1500 wattage. Almost all other tools are at least 7KG for this kind of power output.
Which means this one is either entirely plastic inside or nowhere near the claimed output. In either case it could be bad, especially if the stated clutch is a plastic one.
kasapin
23 Dec 16#9
This looks interesting. I will be needing something like that to get some holes into an old brick house. And do some tough concrete drilling.
However, this particular unit seems a bit odd – it weights only 5KG and claims 8J power and 1500 wattage. Almost all other tools are at least 7KG for this kind of output.
Which means this one is either entirely plastic inside or nowhere near the claimed output. In either case it could be bad, especially if the stated clutch is a plastic one.
iz123456789
23 Dec 16#11
anyone who is hesitating on getting this please tell me why
because I'm thinking of getting this for my old hard concrete wall (to drill to put tv on the wall and etc)
Opening post
Combi Hammer Drill is suitable for light repairs and maintenance jobs. Suitable for drilling in wood, steel, brick, concrete. Driving construction screws into hard woods.
Impact Energy: 8 J
Wattage: 1500 W
Weight: 4.88 kg
Width: 260 mm
Height: 100 mm
Length: 380 mm
Maximum Diameter (Masonry): 32 mm
Voltage: 220-240 V
No Load Speed: 850 /min
Rated Speed: 850 /min
Power Type: Corded
bb8 :wink:
12 comments
Cant go wrong for under 40 quid.
Great price though.
I bought a Challenge 900W from Argos in a sale 4-5 years ago for a mid £30's price because I could not get through the hard concrete where I live, that beast sailed through it and even though the neighbours borrowed it more than once it still does the same job.
Not really suitable for general household use, I don`t think.
would this drill go through concrete wall...?
thanks
Provided the drill was long enough of course.
It would struggle with real concrete (such as found in concrete lintels etc, but anything would)
However, this particular unit seems a bit odd – it weights only 5KG and claims 8J power and 1500 wattage. Almost all other tools are at least 7KG for this kind of power output.
Which means this one is either entirely plastic inside or nowhere near the claimed output. In either case it could be bad, especially if the stated clutch is a plastic one.
However, this particular unit seems a bit odd – it weights only 5KG and claims 8J power and 1500 wattage. Almost all other tools are at least 7KG for this kind of output.
Which means this one is either entirely plastic inside or nowhere near the claimed output. In either case it could be bad, especially if the stated clutch is a plastic one.
because I'm thinking of getting this for my old hard concrete wall (to drill to put tv on the wall and etc)
this is funny