Moze
Active Member
...but finished.
Other than the frustration of the ridges and so on that kept diverting the bit off course, everything went pretty well.
I'm posting this more to tout the tool more than my work. After using a Hilti for similar installations (such as the monument in the background with the limestone face), I was a little concerned about whether or not a cordless version would perform as required. I have to say, I'm thrilled with it. I have five of the 20V Max batteries and brought them all with me as well as the charger, my generator and a DeWalt corded SDS rotary hammer in the event the cordless wasn't up to the job. Each letter has three to four studs, so I had to drill somewhere between 75 and 100 quarter inch holes in the stone face. I went through one battery in the process and barely part of a second one. Oh, and this was using the DeWalt Rock Carbide bits. They're pretty great.
For those of you who do similar installs, I would definitely recommend it. It beats lugging a generator and corded version around.
This is the drill:
And the completed project (and yes, I agree, the contrast of the letters against the background is pretty bad...nothing I had a say in unfortunately...):
The limestone one for kicks...
Other than the frustration of the ridges and so on that kept diverting the bit off course, everything went pretty well.
I'm posting this more to tout the tool more than my work. After using a Hilti for similar installations (such as the monument in the background with the limestone face), I was a little concerned about whether or not a cordless version would perform as required. I have to say, I'm thrilled with it. I have five of the 20V Max batteries and brought them all with me as well as the charger, my generator and a DeWalt corded SDS rotary hammer in the event the cordless wasn't up to the job. Each letter has three to four studs, so I had to drill somewhere between 75 and 100 quarter inch holes in the stone face. I went through one battery in the process and barely part of a second one. Oh, and this was using the DeWalt Rock Carbide bits. They're pretty great.
For those of you who do similar installs, I would definitely recommend it. It beats lugging a generator and corded version around.
This is the drill:
And the completed project (and yes, I agree, the contrast of the letters against the background is pretty bad...nothing I had a say in unfortunately...):
The limestone one for kicks...
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