Had 2 associates with higher ups on the phone and the head of the tools department lol. They really didn't want to honor the price because of how it was ringing up and the scan. They're pretty solid for 40 bucks the carbide versions are 150!
I'm sure only diamond tips work for sharpening carbide but the bi metal should be softer. I'm gonna plumb in a supply next saturday (hopefully) from the kitchen faucet to a washing machine and these babies are gonna make the two holes for each line (hot and cold). Wonder what milwaukee's policy voids if you try sharpening these
@@TOOL_TECHNICAL interesting thought. No idea. I feel like only thing they would replace is catastrophic failure (welded seam ripping apart) which seems super rare considering how thick these things are. If going through something you can get to both sides I usually go halfway then go to the other side and continue, that way you don’t blow out massive chips on one side. Obviously doesn’t matter going through places you can’t see, because you can’t see the backside. Haha
@@CluckingCraftsman that was actually a tip I was gonna share in that future video since the guide bit on these are flush with the teeth. Cheap landlords use cabinets made of basically chipboard so blowout is unavoidable. I'll drill out the center point first if anything. Thanks for sharing!
😁 safety first
Had 2 associates with higher ups on the phone and the head of the tools department lol. They really didn't want to honor the price because of how it was ringing up and the scan. They're pretty solid for 40 bucks the carbide versions are 150!
Man that’s cheap! I have the bigger set and have done a crazy amount of holes with it, they get dull but can rock them around and they still cut.
I'm sure only diamond tips work for sharpening carbide but the bi metal should be softer. I'm gonna plumb in a supply next saturday (hopefully) from the kitchen faucet to a washing machine and these babies are gonna make the two holes for each line (hot and cold). Wonder what milwaukee's policy voids if you try sharpening these
@@TOOL_TECHNICAL interesting thought. No idea. I feel like only thing they would replace is catastrophic failure (welded seam ripping apart) which seems super rare considering how thick these things are.
If going through something you can get to both sides I usually go halfway then go to the other side and continue, that way you don’t blow out massive chips on one side. Obviously doesn’t matter going through places you can’t see, because you can’t see the backside. Haha
@@CluckingCraftsman that was actually a tip I was gonna share in that future video since the guide bit on these are flush with the teeth. Cheap landlords use cabinets made of basically chipboard so blowout is unavoidable. I'll drill out the center point first if anything. Thanks for sharing!