Also, the drilling capacity you are talking about is for drilling a complete hole (selfeed bits). With the Big Hawg Hole Cutter (shown) it is only cutting the exterior of the hole and therefor is not removing near the amount of material that a selfeed bit would.
This would be the best drill to use with the Big Hawg Hole Cutter. The Milwaukee Super Hawg (used in video) is the only drill this size with a clutch. This will prevent the kickback that you see with other drills this size. The clutch only works in high speed. The person in the video is not a "professional actor" he is a product manager for Milwaukee. When the tools are used correctly the danger you mention(bwstuber) does not exist.
Poor choice of drill to use. With new big gullet hole cutters like this and TCT carbide hole cutters from Blue Boar all you really need is a 18 volt cordless. I have cut 6-1/4" holes in 1" Advantech with the Milwaukee M18 cordless and the DeWalt 18v cordless drills. What works the best is DeWalt 3-speed gearbox model using its middle speed range. With modern big gullet hole saws you can use a 2" max hole saw or self-feed bit rated hand drill to easily cut 6" diameter holes in wood, MDF, FRP, etc
Been in the business for 40 years..2 Super Hogs (shown), 1 Hole Hawg, 2 B&D Timberwolfs. 4 1/2" holes every day with hole saws. Through steel too. Get a life,,,and learn to use the tool, O.K.
Person cutting hole was using Milwaukee Hole Hawg, most powerful hand drill around. It weighs 15 pounds. A lot of drill to handle and when it jams it will do a good job breaking the operator's wrists. Video should have a disclaimer - "professional actor shown - do not try this at home". Most 1/2" drills are rated for a max hole saw of 3-1/2" when cutting wood - even the massive Hole Hawg is rated for a hole size of 4-5/8" when cutting wood and only using self-feed bits, not hole saws.
shut the hell up, if you don't know how to use a drill don't even try it, simple as that and I own two of those drills and I've been drilling big holse for 8 years and I've never broken a sigle bone
Ya i'm only 15 I got the bench in the grage when I was 10 but anyway even with 3 and 1/2 inch holes thay have alot of force when they jam I couldnt imagine that good tool though.
Word.
croakerchoker504 1 year ago
And thus the joist collapsed :-)
blzbub1 1 year ago
@blzbub1 you would shore it up on either side before you drill, if you knew anything about weight distribution
croakerchoker504 1 year ago
Also, the drilling capacity you are talking about is for drilling a complete hole (selfeed bits). With the Big Hawg Hole Cutter (shown) it is only cutting the exterior of the hole and therefor is not removing near the amount of material that a selfeed bit would.
untouchable5602 1 year ago
This would be the best drill to use with the Big Hawg Hole Cutter. The Milwaukee Super Hawg (used in video) is the only drill this size with a clutch. This will prevent the kickback that you see with other drills this size. The clutch only works in high speed. The person in the video is not a "professional actor" he is a product manager for Milwaukee. When the tools are used correctly the danger you mention(bwstuber) does not exist.
untouchable5602 1 year ago
Poor choice of drill to use. With new big gullet hole cutters like this and TCT carbide hole cutters from Blue Boar all you really need is a 18 volt cordless. I have cut 6-1/4" holes in 1" Advantech with the Milwaukee M18 cordless and the DeWalt 18v cordless drills. What works the best is DeWalt 3-speed gearbox model using its middle speed range. With modern big gullet hole saws you can use a 2" max hole saw or self-feed bit rated hand drill to easily cut 6" diameter holes in wood, MDF, FRP, etc
bwstuber 2 years ago
I want one!
garthqueen 2 years ago
Been in the business for 40 years..2 Super Hogs (shown), 1 Hole Hawg, 2 B&D Timberwolfs. 4 1/2" holes every day with hole saws. Through steel too. Get a life,,,and learn to use the tool, O.K.
usrbean1 2 years ago
THAT'S A BIG ASS OLE SAW
dewalt23293 2 years ago
Person cutting hole was using Milwaukee Hole Hawg, most powerful hand drill around. It weighs 15 pounds. A lot of drill to handle and when it jams it will do a good job breaking the operator's wrists. Video should have a disclaimer - "professional actor shown - do not try this at home". Most 1/2" drills are rated for a max hole saw of 3-1/2" when cutting wood - even the massive Hole Hawg is rated for a hole size of 4-5/8" when cutting wood and only using self-feed bits, not hole saws.
bwstuber 3 years ago
shut the hell up, if you don't know how to use a drill don't even try it, simple as that and I own two of those drills and I've been drilling big holse for 8 years and I've never broken a sigle bone
ls1phsyco 3 years ago
Ya i'm only 15 I got the bench in the grage when I was 10 but anyway even with 3 and 1/2 inch holes thay have alot of force when they jam I couldnt imagine that good tool though.
VeryTucker 3 years ago
took the word right out of my mouth, He's asking for a snapped wrist.
ls1phsyco - I can imagine the only bone you have broke is your dick in car exhaust you twat !
civicandy 3 years ago 3