Buy TR 4-Piece Industrial-Grade Electric Demolition Jack Hammer comes with three bits: a point, a flat, and a scoop shovel spade bit.

It has the power you can trust to break through concrete, clay, concrete floors, and many other things.

Jackhammer, hex/flat/spade chisels, safety goggles, and working gloves are all included.

Hammering speed: 800 Blows per minute. It comes with a 6.5-foot power cord and a 360-degree swivel auxiliary handle, which makes it easy to move and handle.

11 amp motor, 1,800 bpm, and TÜV-tested: This drill has a lot of power for heavy-duty drilling.

Safety: Inspected and certified with an ETL listing, a double-insulated plug, and a cable that has been approved by UL.

It’s easy to break through concrete. You can also break through clay and concrete floors. There are also safety goggles, oil containers, oil/repair wrenches, and working gloves made of suede. A blow-molded case makes it easy to carry around. It’s held in place with strong metal clips and rollers. With power and durability, it has an 11-amp motor, blows 1,800 blows per minute, and has been used for 176 hours with no sign of slowing down. The safety of this product has been approved by Intertek’s ETL listing. It has an insulated plug and a weather-resistant, UL-approved rubber cable.

Worked on our 55,000-gallon in-ground pool and the sidewalk around it on my days off for the last few months with mostly this tool. I’ll show you some pictures that show how strong this tool is, so you can believe me. So far, I’ve ripped up about 100 feet by 10 feet of 4 inch thick, rebar-reinforced walkway and blown a few big holes in the bottom of the swimming pool. There hasn’t been a drop in the level of oil, and the brushes haven’t worn out yet.

In order to keep oil from leaking, I used Valvoline VV614 Multi-Purpose Grease, which I read will help keep the bits from getting dirty before I used them for the first time.

Some of the things I’ve learned so far in this project. This is my first jack-hammer, by the way.

It’s not as fun to use a jack hammer in real life as it looks in the movies. To avoid pain, wear rubber gloves that can protect against shocks, take off your rings, and cut your nails. With this rig, you don’t really need to wear ear protection.

2. Rebar is a bad thing, and it should not be used. Reinforcement: The cement path had 6×6 wire fence style rebar in it. If you have the same, you can cut it with a pair of small bolt cutters as you break off chunks. This rebar will also go right through a boot, so it will be very strong.

Because concrete can be pushed together, it has a strong point and a weak point. If you try to blow a hole all the way through, you’ll get your bit stuck. If you work in a way that you always knock off a triangle of concrete, it will split easily and you’ll get bigger chunks of the concrete. In the first part of the path, I worked it down to a semi-circular shape so I always had a chunk with two exposed ends that I could break off.

jackhammer: When you get the bit stuck, remove it from the jackhammer. Then, use your second bit to get the first one out. In the beginning, I had to do that a few times.

It took me about 150 feet to get to the pool, so I used 12/3 romex and connected it to a 20 amp breaker in the breaker box. Then I rolled it out about 150 feet. I used a GFI outlet in a water-tight box to connect it to the unit. From there, I use a 12 gauge extension cord to plug in my phone.

For now, here are a few pics..

Update.

Finally, I had a reason to use the spade tool. A shovel couldn’t break through hard, dried clay that was about one foot down in a post hole I was digging. So I decided to give it a try. My “where have you been all my life” moment came right after I fired the gun.

In order to dig the fourth post hole, I came up with a way to drive the spade 6 times outside, making a circle, then shoveling out the rubble and doing it again. Makes life a lot more easy.

If I could, I’d give this 6 stars.

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