LarryFine
Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
- Location
- Henrico County, VA
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
The former. It clamps onto the housing and angled head just like the short coupling tube. Inside the long tube is basically a 3-foot version of the double-hex piece that couples the output shaft of the drill motor to the 90-degree head.westelectric said:is that your standard right angle drill with an add on piece or is that an entirely different tool?
It uses the original chuck (which is a pain to remove - you have to chuck a large allen wrench in it and hit it with a hammer - after removing the left-hand-threaded hex-head screw inside it - that's one you only overlook once.)
I believe I can drill straight holes through joists 11 feet above the floor - without a ladder. I'm 5'15" and I can touch an 8' ceiling, and the drill can drill horizontally 3' above my hands. Remember, I'm a gold-medal-winning driller.
It's strength is in drilling up and down while standing, as well as horizontally overhead. I've even used it for drilling through studs for receptacle runs so I didn't have to disassemble it. You just have to get used to standing back a bit.
Added: One other easily-overlooked use for it is to drill down through bottom plates in exterior walls. With a short auger, you can angle it back into the crawl space, avoiding the band joists and minimizing the need for nail-plates.
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