Bosch 36V Cordless Litheon Compact SDS-plus Rotary Hammer 11536C-1
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sweet |
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If you follow the Toolnut.com advertisement to their website = The Joe Kinder Model, which is featured on the main page of the website, is a great deal. $451 including shipping, main drill package and they send you an extra slimpack battery (so you get 2 total) and some bits for free. |
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John L, I am hoping that was the case. Do you know anyone who has used the compact in granite or quartzite, does it handle those hard rock types? It seems most people were using the compact in limestone which tends to be a "softer" rock type. |
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I am using 1/2 by 2.75 bolts for most of my stuff, so I would think a dozen holes should not be to difficult to attain. Thanks for your input. |
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Killis Howard wrote:Anyone A/B'd the compact model versus the bigger VSR model? Just looking at the specs, appears that the impact energy is different: 1.25 ft-lbs versus 2.2 ft-lb. Makes me think it'll hit harder (more weight isn't going to hurt there). Might drill faster? |
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I have been using the 36v Compact version for a couple of months now and it is exceeding my expectations. The drilling I have been doing has been in granite and quartzite and they are no challenge for this drill. |
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lance bateman wrote:If I were buying a new drill I would not buy the Bosch I would save my money and buy a 36v LI Hilti which is light and well designed. None of this matters if your rap bolting though. Interested to hear from some lead bolters and what setup people are using. I've drilled on lead with my Hilti TE-6A by flipping it upside down, cradling it in the palm of my hand, and squeezing the trigger with my pinky. Works well for really getting a bolt high. |
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Monty, why just 30 feet? That means you have to stop and move the batteries up every 30 feet. I have a 100 foot cord on my rig. |
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I use a Hilti TE-2A for drilling on lead, sold my Bosch Annihilator a few years ago. I agree with Lance, don't even think of using the Bosch for lead bolting. The challenge is that with such a long body you arm has to be above your head with your hand about 18 inches from the rock. Not only is this position very tiring it is also tough to get a well drilled hole as inevitably you have the drill off from perpendicular to the rock. |
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Kevin Stricker wrote:...don't even think of using the Bosch for lead bolting. The challenge is that with such a long body you arm has to be above your head with your hand about 18 inches from the rock. Well, I don't have a TE-2A for comparison, but, my bet is if you measure yours, its longer than the new Li Bosch. Mostly a center of gravity type difference that might make it more difficult to drill with, not length, IMHO. |
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Let me know if you have any questions or concerns. Wanted to chime in and clear the air about any lemon batteries as well. We've gone thru quite a few of these since the ad broke in Rock and Ice and I haven't received one complaint or concern about batteries |
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We are comparing apples to oranges here...Check out this link to compare drills Hilti Drills |
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lance bateman wrote: I like having the option of holding onto the motor housing, there have been a few times this was really handy for getting the drill to engage which was another question I had. Some drills are harder to get the hammering mechanism to engage and if you can't keep constant pressure on the drill than you have to keep fighting to keep the drill drilling. Wondering if this is any better with the Bosch? My experience was that the Bosch engaged easier than my Hilti. I too have had challenges with Li batteries at work. I do not know if it is the batteries or the technology though. Most newer Li drills have built in circuitry to keep from undercharging, that is what makes them just stop from one second to the next. This would be pretty dicy if you were run out bolting on lead. |
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Kevin Stricker wrote:We are comparing apples to oranges here...Check out this link to compare drills Hilti Drills Check out these new Panasonic Rotary Hammers: EY7840LN2S EY7880LN2S I've sold quite a few of the 28 volt to a customer of mine who had an exclusive contract on this: sue.polinsky.com/wp-content… He loves the damn thing and I think his crew has 4 or 5 now. No complaints or issues, has had'em up and running over a year. I've never held or felt the 14 v but I would imagine it weight near the Bosch 11536c-1 but doesn't have the punch. The 28 is going to be too heavy for you guys in my opinion, it'll crush the Bosch in hitting power, but she's got some girth as well as being significantly bigger than the Bosch. It does have a hard hit mode and soft hit which is pretty cool. Helps maintain a longer battery life. If you don't need full power it's almost like upshifting in a vehicle to a gear that will lose less gas and run at a lower RPM. Pretty nifty stuff. |
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Lance makes a great case for staying with the Hilti. When I feel the 12 pounds from my Hilti, all that weight scares the hell out of me and makes me timid on more steep terrain. How in the hell you do those steep lines on lead befuddles me. Is the key that you can see a stance coming up and are gunning for it? Hopefully the falls are clean and maybe inspire more confidence too? |
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Killis Howard wrote:Lead bolting with the new compact Bosch. Works great, good price from Toolnut, been using it for all ASCA rebolting in Calico Hills as well as ground-up new routing in parts unknown. The unit works so well, I haven't had to pull out the hooks yet. We're yo-yoing to keep it honest, and are getting 2-3 bolts in during cruxes before flaming out and turning over the lead. I couldn't be happier. Light, balanced, won't shake you off the stance, and FAST. I don't know what the other considerations might be for rap bolters, but the ones that matter to me have been two thumbs up. Thanks, Sean. Hey Killis, thanks for the order and of course the review. We just got another 15 of these puppies back in, free batteries as well. |
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Sean, pm sent on a drill |
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It's been like 6 months now. Any further thoughts on the Bosch? |
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John Wilder wrote: SDS Chuck- mine has started sticking, which is semi-annoying, but ive managed to keep it working- my guess is the sandstone dust isnt all that good for the unit. not sure if/when this will become an issue, but even if it does, i'm still happy with it. Do you keep up on the grease? |