You got the Impact driver 150Nm, you need the Impact Wrench 215Nm. Get an Impact Wrench Socket aslo, the Impact sockets are black, due to the heat preparation they go through. Make sure you get a 6 point, not 12 point to fit your wheel studs. Just so you know, the 150Nm driver is basically used for driving screws into harder material that the 50Nm drill you got won't. 50Nm> 150Nm> 215Nm see the difference in power. Any attachments you get for the Impact Wrench, make sure they are impact rated. Hope this helps. Plus you may need up to 350Nm to remove nuts, corded rattle guns seem to to the job best.
Yep, and I’ve renovated a whole house with Ozito stuff. Nothing broke and if it did there’s a 5 year replacement warranty. If you’re a working tradesman then spend the extra bucks on tools otherwise, these a more than capable of doing the job..
@@flamingfumanchu2837 Flaming Fumanchu Totally agree. I rate Ozito tools very highly for the home user. This was brought about after I got an Ozito corded impact drill to replace a burnt out Makita. As it has turned out, I didn't need to worry that I couldn't afford another expensive name brand. The $40 Ozito has well and truly exceeded my expectations. I have thrashed that thing almost every day for 10 plus years and I still use it. She just keeps going and going, no matter what I throw at it. Ozito is, in my opinion, one of the best budget tool brands on the market for the DIY'er.
I thought he'd been the butchers and was opening a cob of beef...
You need an impact wrench..That’s a impact driver for driving screws..😂😂😂
What a useless comment, that badboy has been treated poorly and removes any bastard bolt that stands in it's way
MK_Heretic Nope. Impact wrench is more suited to removing bolts. One day, It’ll undo that bolt that the driver can’t do...
@@flamingfumanchu2837 I know I know, just saying that it can still do alot of things other than "driving screws"
You got the Impact driver 150Nm, you need the Impact Wrench 215Nm. Get an Impact Wrench Socket aslo, the Impact sockets are black, due to the heat preparation they go through. Make sure you get a 6 point, not 12 point to fit your wheel studs. Just so you know, the 150Nm driver is basically used for driving screws into harder material that the 50Nm drill you got won't. 50Nm> 150Nm> 215Nm see the difference in power. Any attachments you get for the Impact Wrench, make sure they are impact rated. Hope this helps. Plus you may need up to 350Nm to remove nuts, corded rattle guns seem to to the job best.
You should be using an Impact Wrench for the nuts on the car wheels
Which is the best beetween this two drill??
Wrong tool for the job champ.. Nothing wrong with the Impact driver, just your expectations.
Cheapest type tool from Bunnings Austealia
Yep, and I’ve renovated a whole house with Ozito stuff. Nothing broke and if it did there’s a 5 year replacement warranty. If you’re a working tradesman then spend the extra bucks on tools otherwise, these a more than capable of doing the job..
@@flamingfumanchu2837 Flaming Fumanchu Totally agree. I rate Ozito tools very highly for the home user. This was brought about after I got an Ozito corded impact drill to replace a burnt out Makita. As it has turned out, I didn't need to worry that I couldn't afford another expensive name brand. The $40 Ozito has well and truly exceeded my expectations. I have thrashed that thing almost every day for 10 plus years and I still use it. She just keeps going and going, no matter what I throw at it. Ozito is, in my opinion, one of the best budget tool brands on the market for the DIY'er.
XU1 is the cheapest. Ozito is pretty decent for the money.
Mabye try to loosen it rather than do it up