To be honest I've never used it LOL. I assume it is only good for screws in decking or whatnot. It came as a set, deal price. The sawzall was separate.How do the cordless impact drivers compare to the air ones? I've only occasionally used air ones.
I've got a DeWalt that works pretty fucking well.How do the cordless impact drivers compare to the air ones? I've only occasionally used air ones.
To be honest I've never used it LOL. I assume it is only good for screws in decking or whatnot. It came as a set, deal price. The sawzall was separate.
I just read: https://www.thesawguy.com/electric-pneumatic-impact-wrench/ & it looks like if you're not an industrial user, cordless, although more expensive, ends up being more useful around the house.
Alright. Seems like the 'non-hulk' version of the wrench?thats an impact wrench, what everyone is talking about is an impact driver.
Alright. Seems like the 'non-hulk' version of the wrench?
With what? Have you ever done the epoxy/sand thing in the past?
A decade ago I did the basement and garage thing with my Dad. The prep work is a little painstaking, but worthwhile in the long run.Going to look into that as we want to do the same in the garage.
There are times when you want the drill clutch to slip. Those times you hate the impact.a drill basically becomes obsolete for anything other than drilling when you have an impact driver. Theyre great. My gear is pretty old, 18v hitachi stuff from probably 2008 or so and it drives 3/8th lags through 2x6s with no problem.
the whole "fuck the drill clutch is slipping" or "fuck, the drill spun too fast and torqued outta the shitty phillips head" largely becomes a non issue with impact drivers too
Its not really the tool you're thinking of, which is a "put my lug nuts on" type tool.
this is an application where, if it were me, I wouldn't add the flecks. But the sand in it would make it so child-running-on-wet-concrete friendly, it's ridiculous.I have a concrete wraparound porch that id like to do this to as well.
A decade ago I did the basement and garage thing with my Dad. The prep work is a little painstaking, but worthwhile in the long run.
we used something damn close to this: https://www.homedepot.com/p/Rust-Ol...Floor-Coating-Kit-Case-of-2-203373/202765176?
Note: the little flecks you add right after you put the epoxy paint down is nice for hiding the dirt BUT in the garage, after a couple yrs, where the tires constantly track, 90% chip away. Everything else looks great and lasted beautifully. This isn't to say don't do it, there's just those 4 stripes (2 car gar). The basement looks amazing and not a day older than when we painted it. It doesn't get quite as much foot traffic though..