Owner of 8 year old PBH 1500 here. 🙂 All the Parkside PBHs are pneumatic hammers, including the tiny corded PBH 800 and even tinier cordless PABH/PBHA/PBHAP. The difference is only the drive of the pneumatic mechanism, in large hammers, it's crankshaft and connecting rod, in smaller ones, it's a disc that's not perpendicular to the shaft it's mounted on (shaft parallel to be the chuck axis) and a thing that wraps the disc but doesn't rotate, thus producing back-and-forth movement for the cylinder. You can look up disassembling or fixing videos for each of the tools over here where the mechanism is clearly visible. I've been watching them to decide if I should buy a smaller hammer for my apartment and leave the heavy PBH 1550 at the place where I'll need to drill some holes through half meter of stone wall. I decided to keep hauling the big one there and back again because the apartment has walls of concrete where every Joule of hammer energy counts 😅
I have the exact same issue with my house as it's built from cast concrete using a massive wooden form. The walls are over 12" thick so a conventional hammer drill struggles to make a hole past the plaster. A pneumatic hammer drill is capable of drilling right through but, as you say it's a bit bulky, especially for putting a shelf up.
Owner of 8 year old PBH 1500 here. 🙂
All the Parkside PBHs are pneumatic hammers, including the tiny corded PBH 800 and even tinier cordless PABH/PBHA/PBHAP. The difference is only the drive of the pneumatic mechanism, in large hammers, it's crankshaft and connecting rod, in smaller ones, it's a disc that's not perpendicular to the shaft it's mounted on (shaft parallel to be the chuck axis) and a thing that wraps the disc but doesn't rotate, thus producing back-and-forth movement for the cylinder.
You can look up disassembling or fixing videos for each of the tools over here where the mechanism is clearly visible. I've been watching them to decide if I should buy a smaller hammer for my apartment and leave the heavy PBH 1550 at the place where I'll need to drill some holes through half meter of stone wall. I decided to keep hauling the big one there and back again because the apartment has walls of concrete where every Joule of hammer energy counts 😅
I have the exact same issue with my house as it's built from cast concrete using a massive wooden form. The walls are over 12" thick so a conventional hammer drill struggles to make a hole past the plaster. A pneumatic hammer drill is capable of drilling right through but, as you say it's a bit bulky, especially for putting a shelf up.
Hi,do you know if Puch have same size wheels like Tomos?
@@Matt-hj4mw the Puch maxi had larger 17" wheels. There are some Tomos models that had 17' wheels but not the A3 and A35.
@@Themoporium Thx very much.