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No hay artículos en el carroCaptain Repurpose
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 19 de febrero de 2024
The headline is pretty much the story. You hook up the vacuum, turn it on, put your bit through the opening all the way through, see the tip onto your spot, push the HERZO against the wall, and go. I got a bit lucky and my bits had a smooth shank where it rode against the orange guide, but if it had eaten the guide I do not see why I would care. There is enough suction to overwhelm any air leaks.The provided bracketry and supports are way over the top for household use. I like a cool gadget, but all that is WAY overkill for six holes and then on to another project. Especially as it pretty much stays in place if you do anything to support the vac hose. On most things, including drywall, I can drill one-handed and support this with the other.Tip: for drywall, I put a little pad of the felt side of Vecro on the little bottom ear to not mar the surface.
The Sin Lifter
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de octubre de 2024
Clever design. This or hollow drill bits if you want zero dust drilling.
Mike D S
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 18 de enero de 2024
So, you ever need to drill a hole in drywall and you do all kind of crazy things to try and keep the dust from falling on the floor? Well this solves all of that. While I think its primarily designed for rotary hammer and concrete/masonry it works great for drywall too. Attached to my normal shop vac I got essentially zero dust when drilling some test holes in drywall. I'm sure it'll work great with other stuff.The only thing I noticed was if the drill and the collector get off axis a bit the drill bit seems to catch a little. So it may get more wear than it should over time but even with some wear I'm sure it'll still keep collecting the dust fairly well.I give it a thumbs up.
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