BOLTR: Does HILTI hold up to the hype? SDS Rotary Hammer.

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  • Опубликовано: 15 май 2015
  • Bored of lame tool reviews? Hilti TE 6. Cordless 36V Li-ion battery powerd monster of industry.
    The machining in this beast is like nothing we've seen before.
    Right off the bat, I let the smoke out of the battery. The teardown goes sidewards from there.
    Per usual, the subtexts this week are: the transposal of preposterous professional shibboleth for Canadian Ebonics and the slow destruction of vile dogma in all some of it's forms. (*wink*) Pinch-faced-low-testosterone-suffering oldens take heed; we might enjoy a knowing chuckle or three.
    I apologize for my butcherment of the Deutch language, however, I unabashedly revel in murderlating the Queen's English. I ams what I ams.
    Check out Paul Krzysz's Channel: • Knifemaking - Forging ...
    Help support my Hollywood English Locution Lessons! Let us all enjoy the collective loss of perspicacity. "Uh-huh?"
    / ave
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Комментарии • 885

  • @CiderPang27
    @CiderPang27 8 лет назад +137

    Hilti changed from Aluminium conrods to plastic years ago, The reason was when the Aluminium gave up the ghost it would punch a hole in the top housing too. With plastic it would break and get chewed up to save destroying the top housing as well. Cheaper in the long run. I repaired Hilti's for 12 years. Great machines to work on.

    • @engjds
      @engjds 2 года назад +2

      I just bought this tool for £90 on the car boot, hopefully I will get some more years out of it.

  • @jaxturner7288
    @jaxturner7288 4 года назад +46

    I love how we’ve gone from “sorry focus” to “ focus YOU...”

    • @sourbrothers73
      @sourbrothers73 3 года назад +12

      *Fack!*

    • @carlosqlv
      @carlosqlv 3 года назад +1

      i dont get it

    • @DillonV
      @DillonV 2 года назад +3

      Keep your stick on the ice too 😂😂

  • @CEverly
    @CEverly 9 лет назад +71

    "Zero cheap-ass fuckery going on with this thing." ROFL, I want that on a T-shirt.

    • @jetjazz05
      @jetjazz05 9 лет назад +4

      ***** Reminds me of something I heard in a video about 3 years ago, will never forget it... "In house bastard piece of shit". Love it.

  • @kirksway1
    @kirksway1 8 лет назад +263

    I love your technical jargon

    • @Minifreak739
      @Minifreak739 8 лет назад +19

      I think it's safe to say that we all do. Hell I have watched so many of his videos that the jargon has become a part of my day to day speach. Some people look at me wierd when I say that there is a "Grade A failure to chooch" but usely all it takes is for me to tell them to "FOCUS U FACK!!!"

    • @Swimmingmachinebroke
      @Swimmingmachinebroke 8 лет назад +3

      +Minifreak739 same thing is happening to me

    • @andrewwalters3234
      @andrewwalters3234 7 лет назад

      same here, and loving every minute lol

    • @andrewwalters3234
      @andrewwalters3234 7 лет назад

      lmao

    • @sousamaster06
      @sousamaster06 7 лет назад +6

      It's contagious or something, isn't it?! I am a guy who "wrangles the ones and zeroes for a living" as AvE would say and I have been saying things are choochin' along when people ask if it's loading. Or the other day someone showed me a shiny new piece of gear and I said it was pretty friggin skookum! All naturally mind you. Not a second of hesatation. And just two days ago I was putting something together for my girlfriend and asked for a hammer because "it was just a blonde one too big"... I immediately cupped my hand over my mouth, but it was too late. I had to explain... that I had been watching too much AvE again...

  • @RenThraysk
    @RenThraysk 9 лет назад +141

    Ah HILTI... the choice of professionals that have to get into bank vaults overnight.

  • @martinda7446
    @martinda7446 7 лет назад +15

    For anyone interested, pre decimalisation in the UK, which occurred over a couple of years ending I believe in 1971, the British used the duodecimal system (which as a kid I heard as jewy decimal) based on base 12. The pound had 240 pennies and 240 pennies was 20 shillings a crown was 4 shillings a half crown 2 shillings, there were farthings (parts of a penny) threepences and sixpences. The smallest note when I was a toddler was a 10 shilling note, which disappeared in 1971 as well I think. So in today's money the old sixpence is 2.5 new pence.
    Things were called 'new' pence for ages, and without taking out a coin and shuffling through old 2ps I don't know when they stopped using that. We were pretty much forced by Brussels to drop our weights and measures in line with the rest of Europe, but its amazing how many still say a pound of sugar, a pound of potatoes a pint of milk or beer and we all still use miles per hour. We are all pleased if we are 6 foot high - mm is ok, they are useful. Never understood why we always used CC/litres here for engine displacement though - even pre decimalisation, in fact always?

    • @chalky7906
      @chalky7906 7 лет назад +3

      A crown was 5 shillings, not 4, and half a crown was 2s and 6d. 2 shillings (aka 2 bob) was called a florin. A farthing was half of a ha'penny, ie a quarter of an old penny. When I was a kid 12 pennies in your pocket meant you had to wear braces to keep your shorts up. They were heavy and 100% copper.

  • @plakumunac
    @plakumunac 9 лет назад +19

    The plastic used in the con rod is a pretty effective steel replacement. Usually it comes from BASF or EMS (called Grivory). The lighter you make the con rod the less vibration you get and the lower the power requirement. I'm actually pretty impressed to see it in there.

    • @sourbrothers73
      @sourbrothers73 3 года назад +1

      Also, if it grenades, it wont tear up the housing its in.
      It'll just mash into a bunch of pieces and not take any other casualties on it's way out.

  • @PaulKrzysz
    @PaulKrzysz 9 лет назад +27

    As always this was a great review. And thanks a ton for mentioning my channel!

  • @jeremysetdec
    @jeremysetdec 8 лет назад +44

    The flame test seemed a lil wingnut, try the Vinegar Test. Five drips of white vinegar on a clean, bright spot, wait 93 milliseconds, bubbles=Magnesium, boring = Aluminium

    • @rihamy2nd
      @rihamy2nd 7 лет назад +19

      Super Taster I put five drips of white vinegar on your comment and waited 93 milliseconds. It's aluminum.
      (Sorry...couldn't resist)

    • @ponyboycurtis007
      @ponyboycurtis007 5 лет назад +2

      @@rihamy2nd I put a couple drops on my Weiner and it just burned. But that might have been from my weekend activities

  • @horle
    @horle 9 лет назад +57

    As far as I know the torque limiting clutch is not to protect the gear but to protect the user. That beast can break your arm if your drill gets stuck. Hilti also uses some electronics called atc in addition to the mechanical mechanism to stop the motor when the rpm changes weirdly.

    • @horle
      @horle 9 лет назад +1

      ***** maybe they only have it in some newer or bigger machines. But they definitely advertise both saftey features.

    • @horle
      @horle 9 лет назад +2

      Monkeh616 used a Hilti DD 150 with a 6 inch core drill free hand standing on a ladder last week because my buddy did not bring the anchor bolts. That was intimidating but I needed that hole :D

    • @collar1022
      @collar1022 9 лет назад +3

      horle Hilti has some REALLY impressive safety features built in. IDK about this battery operated version but I know the corded "big boys" like the TE 76 have the ATC feature. We used to demonstrate it by running the drill in free air and then jerk it left or right (rotationally), simulating as if the bit got jammed and the unit started spinning. The drill would cut out within a turn or two. This is why the handle is designed the way it is... if you are drilling in "forward" you should use your right hand. When reversing you should use your left. This is so the handle will be pulled out of your grip rather than twisting your arm like a noodle. Also, as a side note, almost all of Hilti's corded stuff has a nifty feature: *IF* you are holding the trigger down when it's plugged in, the unit will NOT run. You have to release the trigger, you will hear a relay withing the trigger housing click, and THEN you can resume operation. I seriously doubt this would be useful with a battery operated tool but if they used the same trigger electronics ... who knows.

    • @pierresgarage2687
      @pierresgarage2687 9 лет назад +2

      ***** I already had a few bad experiments with drills jamming... Good thing the clutch acted, got hurt a little but nothing broke (mostly my hand and fingers), when I work I'm not always in the perfect position in 100% control of the tool, so a well design clutch is useful even in lower torque tooling... Pierre

    • @collar1022
      @collar1022 9 лет назад +1

      Monkeh616 You are absolutely correct however you are referring to the clutch. I was talking about the ATC. The ATC is the little bit of the electronics in the trigger handle that, IF the handle is pulled from your hand and the drill itself starts to freespin, detects when the torque drops suddenly. When there is a drastic drop in torque the ATC activates and cuts the power. The drill will actually power off. We used to demonstrate it to the customers to make sure they understood that this was by design and they didn't think they broke it.

  • @bain5872
    @bain5872 9 лет назад +2

    New sub...so truly enjoy your vids and wickedly great sense of humor! Love it. I worked for an air tool manufacturer back in the late 80's early 90's. ARO Corp. They were bought out by Inger-soild-and-ran. While my time there, I ran lathe and ID,OD grind operations and I have to say that our work was on par with this hammer drill you opened here. The workmanship was impressive just as in this tool. Bearing surfaces were held at +/- .0003 with run out and taper no greater than .0005. The finishes I ran were held to between 32 to 16 micro depending on part. I'm not sure if the quality is what it use to be but this tool reminded me of the work I use to be a part of. Thanks for the vid.

  • @GolfTube
    @GolfTube 9 лет назад +24

    CF = Carbon fiber
    GF = Glass fiber
    AF = Aramid fiber (Kevlar)

  • @leehodge2415
    @leehodge2415 8 лет назад +31

    best tool reviews on youtube. my fav youtubber.

  • @ratatomskr
    @ratatomskr 8 лет назад +88

    PA is not Polyacryalate, PA is Polyamide and CF is not Glassfibre its Carbonfibre !
    Greetings From Germany and I apologize for my butcherment of the English language :-)

    • @ethansmith9065
      @ethansmith9065 5 лет назад +16

      For all the difference it makes 3 yrs later, you did fine with the englishing and butcherment is my word of the week, so thanks for that

    • @gregparker8349
      @gregparker8349 4 года назад +1

      He doesn’t respond to people that correct him

    • @RACGump
      @RACGump 4 года назад +1

      @@gregparker8349 Its the first thing he addressed in the part B video on this HILTI.

    • @franklindavidson9193
      @franklindavidson9193 3 года назад +4

      @@gregparker8349 Oh he responds. He just does it in another video. Somehow I doubt he has the time to respond to everyone's input individually.

    • @sourbrothers73
      @sourbrothers73 3 года назад +1

      No butcherment. "Fibre" is brittish/ UK spelling, "fiber" is american. So you're actually correct, considering you're in Europe!

  • @Satavtech
    @Satavtech 8 лет назад +1

    I love your passion for good work. It's so hard these days to find people who can actually appreciate true craftsmanship.

  • @stevieb0768
    @stevieb0768 7 лет назад +52

    casually throws in a small block chevy firing order

    • @starkindustries26
      @starkindustries26 7 лет назад +3

      Steven Baglione I'm glad I'm not the only one that caught that

    • @starkindustries26
      @starkindustries26 7 лет назад +3

      Steven Baglione and small block Mopars happened to be the same it's just more associated with Chevy

    • @rogerdyer2162
      @rogerdyer2162 6 лет назад

      Steven Baglione RIGHT!

    • @keith73z28
      @keith73z28 6 лет назад

      Good comment-Also the oldsmobile V-8 firing order, but opposite distributor rotation due to the dist. bore being on the left side of the camshaft instead of the right side like the Chevy.(had a nightmare trying to start up my 455 after a rebuild.)- could help someone.

    • @stevendunn6255
      @stevendunn6255 4 года назад

      That is the firing order for all stock cam Chevy v-8, small or big block.

  • @deefdeefdeef
    @deefdeefdeef 9 лет назад +1

    These tool reviews are absolutely excellent. I learn something new every time. I'm an electrical guy, by profession, so a lot of the mechanical details are new to me. I love learning this stuff, so thanks for sharing.

  • @calthmlikiseethm704
    @calthmlikiseethm704 7 лет назад +35

    I used used Hilti drills for years professionally they are one tough machine and that clutch is to save the operator death by drill

    • @georgebowyer5170
      @georgebowyer5170 7 лет назад +5

      Yeah most sds drills have the clutch to stop you from tearing up your shoulder

    • @moony_thequeen2852
      @moony_thequeen2852 7 лет назад +3

      Hilti has Active Torque Control which is an electronic mechanism that stops the motor as soon as the tool rotates more than 15% on the user. This is a unique feature to Hilti. Off course, we also have a mechanism on the clutch but it requires the user to be attentive and in a postion that allows him to hold the tool hard enough. This second mechanism is mandatory by law

    • @SkillBuilder
      @SkillBuilder 7 лет назад +5

      That Active Torque Control is not exclusive to Hilti. It is a Bosch sensor and you will find it in Bosch and Hitachi as well as Hilti.

    • @tpike32
      @tpike32 4 года назад

      Hilti does NOT have a torque control!! If it does. It does not work. We use Hilti all the time . Many many times these things can rip your Arm off if not careful. We drill into cocncrete. When you hit rebar, the drill bit stops dead but drill will spin and rip your arm

    • @crashlandon220
      @crashlandon220 4 года назад

      tpike32 then you don’t have the model labeled “ATC”. Hilti makes versions of the TE 60 and the TE 70 with and without ATC. Of course you may also have a much older version of one of these two combihammers that didn’t have the option of that feature.

  • @zoidberg444
    @zoidberg444 9 лет назад +25

    Firstly. Congratulations on the correct pronunciation of Aluminium.
    Secondly. We've had metric money since the 1970's!
    Although our system is fucked up. Our roads use miles and yards, beer and milk come by the pint. Although petrol is sold in litres. Babies are measured in pounds and ounces. But market sellers got in trouble for selling fruit and veg by the pound!

    • @narseh123
      @narseh123 5 лет назад +3

      Coming from the metric world, I was first amused by the way Brits labeled milk bottles. Seriously, who would measure milk to the fourth decimal place in litres until I realized it was a pint converted to metric.

  • @Cafferssss
    @Cafferssss 8 лет назад +12

    "she's a skookum choocher"
    I lose it every time :')

  • @willderbeast454
    @willderbeast454 9 лет назад

    Thanks for another tear down video this videos are really nice. Its nice to see someone who isn't always afraid to take the thing about just to see the guts and sometimes get her back up and running.

  • @mf90quip
    @mf90quip 7 лет назад

    Glad to have found an entertaining and down to earth channel with content I enjoy. Thank you for your time and effort put into the videos.

  • @StefanGotteswinter
    @StefanGotteswinter 9 лет назад +58

    Hilti is not a german company..it sits in Lichtenstein :)
    The conrod is PA6CF20? Thats no glass reinforcement, thats carbon fibre.
    Awesome machining on the parts
    An midrange hammer drill like a Duss (They are a german company!) would also be an interesting victim or one of the smaller Makita hammer drills... ;)
    Keep on going!

    • @StefanGotteswinter
      @StefanGotteswinter 9 лет назад +4

      ***** I think its more about the yield strength than about selflubrication but thats just out of my mind without any reference ;)

    • @julianreverse
      @julianreverse 5 лет назад +4

      But the machines are made in Germany and Austria ;-)

    • @ReinhardSchuster
      @ReinhardSchuster 5 лет назад +2

      And most Parts are made in Austria, and most Hilti Workers are from Austria or Germany

    • @DeliciousDeBlair
      @DeliciousDeBlair 5 лет назад

      Yeah I was instantly thinking carbon fiber too.

    • @Tubethunder1
      @Tubethunder1 2 года назад

      I am sure that most of the engineers working on this machines are not native "Liechtensteinians". Its a tiny "country". They have barely enough people to fill the banks and the bakeries. Most of the work will be done by german and other "Gastarbeiter" and "Grenzgänger". Greetings from the german south.

  • @detaart
    @detaart 9 лет назад +75

    Dude srsly ... clothing, weight, looks, opinions ...
    DO NOT ENGAGE!
    ABORT !!! ABORT !!!

    • @jetjazz05
      @jetjazz05 9 лет назад +4

      detaart Especially opinions. lol

    • @jr540123
      @jr540123 9 лет назад +1

      Jesse Crandle Light was on but nobody was home when the wife asked that question.

    • @TheCrederer
      @TheCrederer 8 лет назад +1

      +detaart I grew up with a sensitive mother so I learned at a young age that white lies are ok in certain situations. Any time the woman asks my opinion my default response is along the lines of "You always look beautiful babe".

  • @cabbycabby1770
    @cabbycabby1770 8 лет назад +2

    I learn so much from these videos. I learn mechanics, quality control, and to speak Canadian.

  • @Dodobyer
    @Dodobyer 9 лет назад +1

    Yes! I've been waiting for a HILTI tear down. I've used two of their rotary hammer drills, one of them being this one. They are just phenomenal. They don't even compare. The battery themselves last forever too. Not just per charge but over the life of the tool. They sink right into the hardest of concrete like freakin butter.

  • @squamishscepter
    @squamishscepter 9 лет назад +2

    Im a big fan of Hilti tools. As an end user I always knew they were the best you could buy but just by feel and performance. Looking at the precision this tools is built to its now easy to know why they are great tools. Great video AvE, keep choochin!

  • @rmkensington
    @rmkensington 7 лет назад +1

    The "plastic conrod" is made that way on purpose, not to be cheap. They last a really long time. They are made out of plastic to prevent it from grenading the piston tube when it breaks and flying out of the tool like metal ones used to.

  • @kevinsimard
    @kevinsimard 7 лет назад

    I just found you're channel last week. Good job sir love your knowledge & tech jargon. Keep the vids comming. I like the end of this video where you make three graphs. So true buddy .

  • @zZrEtRiBuTiOnZz
    @zZrEtRiBuTiOnZz 8 лет назад +208

    Yeah, your technical jargon (e.g. chooch, skookum, cuntstun tongueslide, et cetera), and your comedic genius, is one of the big reasons I watch your channel. Obviously, learning stuff is fun too, but if I had to just listen to some dude monotone his way through a overly technical video about something I don't understand, it wouldn't be near as fun.
    And yes, I do binge watch, and I'm running out way faster than you are pumping them out, so I have a feeling this is gonna end up like Game of Thrones; good fun while you have 5 seasons you can watch anytime you want, and real bad when you done goofed and watched them all in like a week...
    And yeah, the lingo is definitely rubbing off. People are gonna start wondering if I had a stroke or something. You know how when you order chinese food, and while it's ringing all you can think about is not saying; _"Herro, can I get rhe chrikin and brockorry preez?"_ Yeah, it's starting to get like that.

    • @zZrEtRiBuTiOnZz
      @zZrEtRiBuTiOnZz 8 лет назад +5

      JohannaMueller57 Basically "Chooch" = work, and "Skookum" = good. It's a rough translation, but that's the jist of it. A "Skookum choocher" would be something that works very well.

    • @zZrEtRiBuTiOnZz
      @zZrEtRiBuTiOnZz 8 лет назад +1

      +Einar Vading Yeah, it can probably mean a lot of similar things.

    • @inthefade
      @inthefade 8 лет назад +4

      +Joe Blow I was setting up a sound system this weekend, a really nice one, and I told the venue owner that it was skookum... He looked at me cockeyed for a half-second, but he rolled with it.

    • @inthefade
      @inthefade 8 лет назад

      edenholme
      Awesome.

    • @armelind
      @armelind 7 лет назад +6

      Pixie dust = electrons described perfectly! I had a friend in tech school like this. He would call capacitors "Captain Ass Eaters". Too Funny.

  • @PeterBrockie
    @PeterBrockie 9 лет назад +19

    If you're worried about the battery when you have it apart; a good trick is to wrap all the batteries and wires in aluminum foil.
    Protects you from electrons because they bounce off the foil back into the wires to self-charge the battery.

    • @lgzz4885
      @lgzz4885 5 лет назад +1

      That’s a joke?

    • @wickedcoolname399
      @wickedcoolname399 5 лет назад +1

      @@lgzz4885 That only works if you heat the batteries with a torch with one hand while you're teasing a bobcat with the other one.

  • @error079
    @error079 9 лет назад +2

    Better then anything on TV. Keep up the good work!

  • @RadDadisRad
    @RadDadisRad 8 лет назад +2

    My company got sold on one of these with the Dust Recovery System. This thing is amazing. It takes whatever you throw at it and it doesn't break. I'd be willing to drop my Milwaukee M18 for one of these even at almost triple the price tag.

  • @yotheguy521
    @yotheguy521 8 лет назад +1

    this is the best and most informative review of anything I have ever seen. Good job man I really enjoyed this, and am definetly going to be checking out your other videos. Keep em coming

  • @imelitetrooper
    @imelitetrooper 7 лет назад +24

    half your vocabulary is foreign to me but i feel like it belongs there.

  • @YumariiWolf
    @YumariiWolf 8 лет назад +2

    I have no idea what is going on here, it's 5:30am and I just can't stop watching this.

  • @HannesPowerLoad
    @HannesPowerLoad 8 лет назад +1

    you sir are AWESOME! would love to hang out and have a dram and a laugh! loving the lingo!

  • @necrosbowen
    @necrosbowen 5 лет назад +1

    hi AvE just wanted to say a Guinea isnt used in the uk currency it hasnt been since 1971 before my time glad to say lol. pounds are easy like metric 10 or 100 of everything, 10mm 1cm 100cm 1 metre etc, 100 pence to a pound pretty simple really lol. its how its taught here in education, AF always found more awkward to use and work out because not the standard here so hardly ever used. everything is metric, apart from pipe fittings etc which are still in imperial as obviously it would be pretty hard to convert all of that over nothing would fit be a lot of leaks well i gather thats one of many reasons why it wouldnt make sense too. love your channel so entertaining and informative, love your sense of humour too and have learnt a lot over time watching, keep it up i'm from wales btw :D

  • @fatei
    @fatei 9 лет назад

    Just discovered your channel and I must say I love your videos! Work for a plumbing company here in Switzerland and am fortunate enough to have a boss who only insists on HILTI tools and machines. Definitely not cheap to replace, as the TE 6 belonging to my colleague was pinched on site last month...

  • @6Wildchild6
    @6Wildchild6 9 лет назад

    Have used that a lot, never got any problems. Intrested to see whats in there. Cant wait part 2

  • @wrxbungle
    @wrxbungle 9 лет назад

    Very fascinating and impressive display of some in depth technical knowledge, thanks for a great video!

  • @Nebulax123
    @Nebulax123 7 лет назад +1

    Had a HILTI drill for about 12 years used in industrial plant maint. I got it so crusty on the inside I had to open it up and clean all the crud out of it. I couldn't kill it so when I retired I bought another new set of batteries and gave it to my son 3 years ago and he uses it daily in his job. Best made tool I ever had by far.

  • @unibrow9
    @unibrow9 6 лет назад +1

    Couple years back I did a Streibig Optisaw install at a Home Depot and was using a bosch hammer to drill the floors for the concrete anchors, the guy at the tool rental had gotten some of these brand new hiltis cordless and I used it , was a real killer worked preety damn fast.

  • @eugenerk
    @eugenerk 9 лет назад +2

    The PA6 on the plastic is PolyAmide 6, more commonly known as Nylon 6, and I think you're right about the 35% glass fiber fill, it really ups the strength of the plastic considerably.

  • @mrstanlez
    @mrstanlez 9 лет назад +2

    Bearings are installed under temperature of the liquid nitrogen -209 celsius for axe
    and 50 celsius for bearing. After a while come both temperatures to environment 25 celsius and this connection will be fixed.

  • @theslimeylimey
    @theslimeylimey 9 лет назад

    Excellent video man. You are right about the difficulty in making money in midrange manufacturing. Every penny still counts like the low end but the end product still has to have a good manufacturing work flow and consistent quality similar to the high end but with everything pushed to the edge of failure.

  • @JasonFiske
    @JasonFiske 7 лет назад

    Addicted! It's good the know that the knowledge of the species is being archived on the RUclips!

  • @TheWupperdo
    @TheWupperdo 8 лет назад

    +AvE, Thank you so much for all your work showing and explaining the innards of tools. Really appreciate the detail you go to, helped me make a much better informed decision. I was about to bite the bullet of buying some DeWilts, but thanks to your breakdowns I avoided that mess and got some auctioned Hilti drills instead. Again, thanks for your videos and all the effort you go to in order to explain what goes on to all us peasants who don't know any better.

  • @ahritomic5185
    @ahritomic5185 7 лет назад +1

    Goddammit I love every aspect of ur videos... The jargon, the idea, every fucking thing you do pleases my ears and eyes...

  • @leewalker1327
    @leewalker1327 7 лет назад +11

    hi Ave. as a hilti repair tech I would be I interested to see a review on the hilti te 76

  • @ericjohnson1811
    @ericjohnson1811 8 лет назад

    Excellent videos AvE! Thank you for posting!

  • @stevenragsdale9603
    @stevenragsdale9603 8 лет назад

    Man, when ever I have a shitty day, or just need a good laugh and want to learn some cool stuff, I enjoy watching your videos on choocher disassembly

  • @spikester
    @spikester 9 лет назад

    You are a genius at explaining this in easy to understand term, including bonus on defacto tool industry profiting tactics.

  • @Aceoffroad4x4
    @Aceoffroad4x4 3 года назад

    Love your vids aVe. Good luck putting that back together

  • @timjrvine
    @timjrvine 9 лет назад

    I love these videos AvE, keep up the good work.

  • @firoxlion
    @firoxlion 9 лет назад

    I kept hearing about Festools and I couldn't remember where I'd seen the name, but then it hit me. We had these disk grinders for wood on my last school, that we'd use 3 times a year at best. Those all had Festool vacuumcleaners as dust suckers.
    And we always wondered why there was never any money left for decent soap...
    Anyway, enjoyable vidya once again!

  • @ionutgur
    @ionutgur 8 лет назад

    hope you know your enthusiasm is contagious

  • @PhilsProjects
    @PhilsProjects 9 лет назад +1

    yep 1200$ but mine has lasted 15 yrs of regular use without service
    Love your video's
    Cheers Philippe

  • @rainbowananas5040
    @rainbowananas5040 8 лет назад +1

    That torque limiting clutch has provided so much laughter for myself. Guys coming to me with Hilti claiming that it doesn't work when they push it like hell when drilling :D Just ending up with a hole which isn't round and the bit is stuck.

  • @Volvith
    @Volvith 8 лет назад +8

    When a woman asks you what you think about her new clothes, she doesn't actually want your opion, she just wants confirmation on what she thinks of it. -_-
    Well then, time to get back to drinkin.
    CHEERS.

  • @davidcrook7028
    @davidcrook7028 7 лет назад +1

    5:40 in the morning and after discovering your channel I've been watching for hours. If I couldn't sleep before, I absolutely won't sleep now until I watch your entire catalog. Thank you for teaching me more in three hours then I can usually learn in month watching youtube. As you say "inquiring minds NEED to know". Cheers!

  • @TheSynthesiaplayer
    @TheSynthesiaplayer 9 лет назад

    Dog bless you for these awesome videos. I really enjoy them, just keep 'em coming!

  • @rich1051414
    @rich1051414 9 лет назад +26

    That retaining pin being a softer metal is intentional. They knew that little slug of metal would not keep tight tolerances, so they stuck something softer in there than would do damage to the parts it is retaining. You see a lot of things using brass for that. That is just another small detail they did not overlook. Its soft so it can safely bounce and bang around without hurting anything. If it was harder, all that damage you see would be on the gears instead of not even mattering on the pin :P
    And that plastic is carbon fiber reinforced nylon. Tough and not cheap stuff. Not even deserving of the title 'plastic' really.

  • @jpalm32
    @jpalm32 9 лет назад +1

    Hilti!!! Bought over 50 of them over the years when I owned a security company.
    The expense in the Bits.
    Gave me the drills free, I spent so much on bits.

  • @polishguywithhardtospellna8227
    @polishguywithhardtospellna8227 9 лет назад +1

    Love you man, i asked for hilti revie and there it is

  • @sebastiengilmour6972
    @sebastiengilmour6972 7 лет назад

    This is one of the most entertaining series of videos on the internet. I just subscribed.

  • @phitsf5475
    @phitsf5475 9 лет назад +6

    "Plastic (conrod), thumbs down!"
    What would you do instead? Put some bearings in there? (lol?). I think the plastic should get a thumbs up here.
    Great video, had to pounce on this though.

  • @markrainford1219
    @markrainford1219 9 лет назад

    Great vid as per. Had one of those myself few years back. Only gripe was, you could not really use it without the front handle, and you can't use it with, unless you move it to one side or the other coz you can't get your mitts round it. Battery replacement cost made my eyes water, £250 METRIC English pounds if I remember correctly. lol
    Keep 'em coming.

  • @FireFarter72
    @FireFarter72 8 лет назад

    I just found your channel yesterday and I barely could stop watching. It´s so interesting and educational, but foremost you´re hilarious! You are already on my top 10 RUclips-list and I just can´t stop laughing.

  • @daniellooh2896
    @daniellooh2896 7 лет назад +5

    yea same i learn so much from watching your vids !
    could you make a vid on how to read plastic stamps

  • @acorona4ever
    @acorona4ever 7 лет назад +2

    Hey man i love your vids.. watch all of them.. my wife sometimes finds me passed out in the man cave with your channel still playing. Please do the Hilti BX3 battery nail gun.. it looks like a laser blaster out of star trek. For $3000 i would assume its like the Ferrari of all nail guns.

  • @user-gc2ms9de2r
    @user-gc2ms9de2r 5 лет назад

    Great explanation of crib deaths and production parameters.

  • @ziptiesnbiasplies
    @ziptiesnbiasplies 7 лет назад +13

    anyone else get the tree fitty firing order?

    • @kingsaltman
      @kingsaltman 3 года назад

      Any small block Chevy for that matter

  • @BRBTechTalk
    @BRBTechTalk 8 лет назад

    I have watched 20 or 30 of your videos. I have picked up here and there when you talk about things to guess what your age might be. I am also guessing you are a millwright based in the mining industry. From what I can tell you are younger than me by at least a decade.
    I consider myself pretty knowledgeable on many topics. I am also a person that will try and tear stuff apart and fix it when it breaks and I collect certain broken things for donor parts. However your range of knowledge of such a vast range of topics blows me away. Knowing what things are made of by looking at part numbers. Looking at a bearing and knowing where it was made and if the company still exists. Marketing tools (the graph you drew in this episode) and the kickbacks (another episode). Lubricants and being able to tell what they are by how it sticks to your fingers. Seeing marks on a gear and knowing if it was forged or cut with tools. You sir, are pretty incredible, you must have hung around in a shop of some kind as soon as you were able to stand up and pee.
    I do have a question for you tho', did your dad or grandfather get you started by teaching you about machines at a young age then you started building things when you were able to handle the tools?
    Keep up the great videos, they are interesting and sometimes quite funny.
    Cheers eh?

  • @TilmanBaumann
    @TilmanBaumann 9 лет назад +29

    Nicely trolled.
    The British have decimal currency and are almost 100% metric.
    Quite a while already.
    The only thing not metric are beer, milk and newborns and the highway code.

    • @jetjazz05
      @jetjazz05 9 лет назад +3

      Tilman Baumann Damn those imperial babies! HAR HAR, get it? IMPERIAL BABIES?

    • @bigbadbugga
      @bigbadbugga 9 лет назад +6

      Sorry, but milk is sold by the litre here in sunny Liverpool, just like everything else. We do prefer the mile though and work out our cars fuel efficiency in mpg.

    • @chrisstephens6673
      @chrisstephens6673 9 лет назад +1

      John Redmond Well we still get milk delivered in Pint glass bottles here in the leafy suburbs of NW London.

    • @s0nnyburnett
      @s0nnyburnett 9 лет назад

      John Redmond I get my milk by the gallon, my soda by the liter and my mpg's aren't your mpg's but I'd rather have your mpg's to feed my ego.

    • @TilmanBaumann
      @TilmanBaumann 9 лет назад +1

      ***** :) Very obscure ancient measure. Still widely used in the British tabloid press.

  • @VadoVoodoo
    @VadoVoodoo 8 лет назад

    and I'd like to add that your videos are superb m8. Good work, keep it up. 07

  • @Jacoyoyo
    @Jacoyoyo 7 лет назад +4

    This is so entertaining and i have no idea what half of the stuff even is.

  • @justinbell4611
    @justinbell4611 7 лет назад

    Gonna pretend that shoutout in the credits was for me. Cheers, love the vids.

  • @nhrifle
    @nhrifle 3 года назад

    My buddy has a Hilti hammer drill and I love it!

  • @notaseagull
    @notaseagull 9 лет назад +9

    at 22:30 the cap was off that sharpie for ever. Its rather painful to watch and makes me cringe. don't let sharpies die when they don't need to.

  • @peteradkins9550
    @peteradkins9550 6 лет назад

    The realness in you and what you do. You can really tell it’s a passion and not a job. Go hard!

  • @Watchyn_Yarwood
    @Watchyn_Yarwood 9 лет назад +1

    The Simpson's writers must watch your vids. Last Sunday's episode had a self-help group sitting in a circle and one dude talking pops out "Chooch". LMAO!

  • @marcrhodes7177
    @marcrhodes7177 5 лет назад

    Damn I watched every second of this and thank the universe for being able to buy a couple hilti pieces back when I had the dough. When you pulled that big ol shaft out of there with those big thick and veiny cogs well, I couldn't stop a few drops of s....n from drizzlin out

  • @rogerdyer2162
    @rogerdyer2162 6 лет назад

    You've become my favorite channel! I'm a maintenance tech in a factory and watch your channel daily. Loved the firing order reverence in this one. Never know what you'll say next. I'm thinking of putting some cool shit on the internet myself and I'm curious of your equipment and production technique?

  • @whowhat691
    @whowhat691 9 лет назад

    For some reason i just love your videos as specific as they are, they are just very informative. Keep up the great work, also what is your job title.

  • @DJBigMD
    @DJBigMD 8 лет назад +27

    can you compare a cheap bosch machine ( green) and a professional one ( blue)?
    aaand yeah btw hilti isn't german, it's from liechtenstein.

    • @julianreverse
      @julianreverse 5 лет назад +4

      But the machines are made in Germany and Austria ;-)

    • @-----REDACTED-----
      @-----REDACTED----- 4 года назад +2

      Tomato tomato...

    • @luigiaqua2263
      @luigiaqua2263 3 года назад

      Original Hilti was Austrian, they moved headquarters to cheaper tax location Fürstentum Liechtenstein 🇱🇮

  • @richardvsassoon5144
    @richardvsassoon5144 8 лет назад

    at minute 21, you shed some serious insight into marketing that bears on the current state of tools in construction ( my specialty ) and in general. You're dig on Milwaukee is well deserved - I have a 30 year old 1/2" drill that will not die, but there current battery tool crap doesn't last even one year with moderate use. The same could be said for Skilsaw , Dewalt - they still make one of the best chop saws tho).
    On the positive side, Hilti has always made an impression on me for not just quality construction, but they actually do the job better than anything else...their rotohammers are in a class by themselves.
    Love the manic chatter...do you have to go in every once in a while for a tune up?

  • @anthonytrepess4441
    @anthonytrepess4441 7 лет назад

    I got a new hilti 250v power drill in the 70s it ran for 25 years with only 2 breakdowns in hard regular use then stopped working
    Hilti wanted to sell me an exchange for 3000 gigles witch would not take any of my old drill bits "sds not sds+" so I sent it to my brother in Hungary & he had it fixed there for a six pack ! Its still running well o! I am British & live & work in France so I comprend
    sterling & inches, tea bags & metric. the hilti & I work a little slower now Grrreat vids

  • @ww321
    @ww321 9 лет назад +4

    I worked with some guys that could still kill a Hilti. Not completely though, they would always make it back from Hilti repair center.

  • @chaumas
    @chaumas 7 лет назад +11

    17:30 Wouldn't CF20 mean 20% carbon fiber?

  • @DavidLebold
    @DavidLebold 7 лет назад

    Just stumbled on your channel, great stuff. I have drilled a lot of holes for lag bolts in concrete and nothing compares to the Hilti. It's like pushing your sckoocum through warm butter.

  • @rickybobby43
    @rickybobby43 9 лет назад

    your commentary literally couldnt get any better. A+++++

  • @TheBlaert
    @TheBlaert 6 лет назад

    I've got one of the original black cap Hilti TE-17's (1968 or so). Works as good as new. They really do make fantastic tools

  • @franksgarage8551
    @franksgarage8551 7 лет назад

    These videos are very entertaining, somewhat edjumacational. Thanks for your work.

  • @JonathanHenry
    @JonathanHenry 9 лет назад +2

    Interesting comments.
    I wanted to say, as has probably already been said somewhere in the 423 comments.
    What he said in my understanding of Kneipe Deutsch was "Factory exit closed" as in the Autobahn exit for the Factory was closed.
    Thus not boding well for the factory mentioned in the video.
    As far as the fight between metric and imperial measure.
    Many moons ago i learned that it is not about the measure at hand, just the calculations that can be derived from them.
    I could make up a standard unit of measure for any given situation and do the same math in much the same manner. It's just the values of the units not the units themselves that is important. So i'm down with micro inches, micometers and the standard fractions of a pixie fart.
    But, i digress.
    I like Imperial, just 'cause it irks people and is slightly amusing that we as Americans are using an Imperial anything.
    Good show, off to part 2.

  • @Biketunerfy
    @Biketunerfy 7 лет назад +1

    I'm a Brit machinist and like nothing better than to watch you disassemble all sorts of gear and listen to you work lingo which to us is a wtf does he mean moments but other than that I agree with you about the old currency values and names. I won't go into it as you will have a big WTF is he ranting on a bout moment but if you ever get the chance to listen to a Scottish engineer work slang (lingo) you will never diss your English bros. by the way plse try and get hold of a old style planetary automatic car gear box because those things are PFM (Pure F-ing Magic)

  • @flavortown3781
    @flavortown3781 8 лет назад

    i watch you partly because you you are so Canadian it hurts, and because you are really really good

  • @Antzzz_Manzzz
    @Antzzz_Manzzz 4 года назад

    Your narration is hilarious 😂. Keep up the good work 🙏🏼👍🏼

  • @paaaaaaaaq
    @paaaaaaaaq 7 лет назад +1

    Mine has a zip tie around the switch. Saves a lot of finger power that way.

  • @MrDustyn3
    @MrDustyn3 8 лет назад

    Dude, dont ever stop talking lol, not only are your videos educational but your funny as hell. keep up the good work.