I can give you some tips that make it so that make it so that bottles arent as big of an issue 1. Make your hand into a fist 2. Extend your thumb and bend it to a 90 degree angle 3. Move your thumb so that it matches the lower part of your index finger 4. Grip lightly with your thumb and twist 5. Enjoy
Right. I have gen 2 mid torque which is plenty but also the half in high torque. Don't think I'll ever need 1400 ft lbs or whatever it is but I have it. This for me is like having a Ferrari that can't go over 50mph
I have the 3/4" Milwaukee impact in my semi for changing tires on the road myself. The 1" doesn't seem a whole lot quicker on the lugnuts, but taking that yoke nut off was impressive.
I’m thinking to buy Milwaukee 1 “ only for Lugnuts to change my tires on my semi truck, shall I go ahead with 3/4” for this particular purpose? Will it have enough power to get it done?
“We’re going to use this random truck in the parking lot, I don’t know the last time these were taken off” *is the cleanest truck in the parking lot with brand new tires*
Don't be affraid to use the fast forward button. I watched this video in under 2 minutes and got all the good out of it! The fast forward button has collectively saved me weeks of time over the course of my youtube viewing! Try it. You'll never waste time on stupid videos again!
@@patrickfarley8036 Absolutely true. This guys videos seems to have no edit or a really poor one Doug Demuro too, 15min about 'infotainment systems' and even in some cases 0 about engine data or other relevant facts
It's a shitty trend in content creators. They just want our views and view time. Too many 10 min video with less than 2 min of content these days. And they insert one too many ads during the video to ruin their watchability
The power of Milwaukee tools is unquestionable. My tools had gone through dust, rain, fall off my ladder and they still performing like the first day, just charge and go. Thank you for the good video
I bought one of those also (Milwaukee 1/2 Fuel, 1400 ft lb.) and couldn't remove the lug nuts on a small car. They were torqued to 95 ft lbs. I like Milwaukee and wanted to be impressed. Instead I was disgusted with it.
f-ton of power with precision torque measurement isn't very compatible, load is measured with delicate load cells and this boi hammers a chunka chunka anvil 3000 times a minute like thor, but that is why he have engineers and research :)
@@vasya88 maybe you could have the drill switched into two different "modes." Like a power setting and a finishing or torque setting that could use a different drive or gear inside the unit. It would definitely be interesting and cool to see!
Ive got a 1/2 in one and a older 3/4 in one. The new 1/2 does 1,400ft lbs off and 1,000 on and the 3/4 does 1,200 off and 1,000 on, you have to be careful and use a torque stick if you can, then check it with a torque wrench
That yoke nut tho. I think that is the toughest nut to break on a truck that I have ran into. I’ve had to soak with PB blaster or wd40 over night and bang on it with a 1” air gun like the one on the video for a long time to Get it off. Very impressed
Yup, most people don't understand torque specs are not only to keep the bolt from coming off. The purpose of getting a proper torque spec is to reduce the repeated load on a fastener which leads to fatigue failures.
@@elguajacodeguajaka6722 yeah, I did it as an O/O locally while going to college full time but now I’m also an electrical engineer and took a a few metallurgy classes, believe me even though I worked 70-80hrs a week and went to class 15 hrs a week I still payed attention.
Air is always more powerful. The Milwaukee is much easier to carry around and alot lighter. I work on the the railroads and I love the Milwaukee. Me and my co workers were tired of carrying that big ass hose around
B K yea I'm a diesel mechanic and it sucks changing wheel studs because that's a new wheel seal and all that but I gotta say that I'm impressed with the tool no doubt
Wonder if that pneumatic impact had been oiled, took me a few years to figure out that not only do you oil it in the little hole to oil the insides But you also have to oil it daily for optimal performance through where you hook up the air line. When i did that the 1/2" Blue Point impact i had started blowing sparks off larger 2" nuts, way more power was being made from a 85psi air line. The thing is now 15+ years old going just as strong as when i first got it, but to think the first 2-3 years i never thought of it lol.
Just bought this and the m12 ratchet. The impact is no joke. I just wonder how many charges the battery can cy me but your video is spot on and accurate. It's a BEAST.
Happy to hear “good buddy Mark’s” voice in the video. Miss seeing all your buddies from home helping you out. Glad things are looking up for you though.
I’m not trying to sound rude but I want you to know what you’re talking about and every reply on this is so far from being correct and it’s bothering me It’s obvious that none of you know a lot about these trucks and I would rather you just say that instead of getting on here acting like you know what’s going on because when someone gets on here looking to learn from these posts you’re all giving them BS and packaging the BS as truth but the truth is none of you have any idea what you’re talking about and it just sounds crazy to those of us who really know what we’re talking about, you’re embarrassing yourself Nothing wrong with not understanding all of this, we all had to learn, but you have to get hands on with these trucks so you don’t continue to look like fools
peace out If you’re working on your own truck I would seriously advise you to have a real mechanic to go behind you, just for safety sake because it seems that you just need to put the time in so you can understand more and know what you’re talking about because it’s clear you don’t
I run the car maintenance TH-cam channel in Korea. I'm always learning such a great ideas on your channel. I hope we have a chance to be together. Thank you.
I have both these guns and did my own test on Budd nuts on school busses that wouldn't come off after we were compelled to turn the air down at the compressor, now I really love Milwaukee but it was never the winner, the winner is usually a smaller new gun with a new snap-on impact socket or the hand crank version (both of which are subject to self destruction), my Ken Tool 4way with Jack stand support just bent the length of pipe I was jumping on, my Milwaukee 3/4 gun was just as strong as the 1inch but eventually self destructed (but was warranted) would have to say that there is no comparison between the two with the air being the winner and the cordless filling a niche. I'm glad you made the video for comparison Thank You.
Who needs fancy packaging when the real treat is the product itself! Just got the M12 Drill/Driver, Impact Driver, and cordless Ratchet combo today! Nothing but power!
For those who don't know. Milwaukee has a gigantic D handle 1"impact with 2k ftlbs of breaking power. Long anvil and short. I have the short anvil and I love it.
Doing cylinder work track jobs and rotators on booms and excavators I take my air out the Milwaukee is a badass gun but it cannot beat on a bolt as long as an air impact can
@@freedomfox8183 I agree having the batteries is nice but now I have to change them and charge them in the truck instead of just grabbing my Airline out of the truck to do a hard big job the cordless impacts are really nice for simple fast jobs
I bought a Milwaukee M18 Fuel drill motor and 1/4" impact driver kit for work a couple of years ago. After using it a few times I don't buy anything else for work or my own tools. If you haven't tried the Milwaukee M18 Fuel tool line yet you should at your first opportunity and you too will become a believer.
Gonna keep my air tools around for another 60 years. Cordless is great but you cant beat the old school air tools. They just hold up and work and you never need to charge them.
I just saw one of these at the farm store today and was wondering how it would perform. I had gotten a 1/2" impact 6mo ago and have been impressed with it. I was one of the old school cordless..ha..good luck with that until the last couple of years then I got my hand on my first Milwaukee . My 1"air seems to have grown legs and walked off and was debating buying another but I seem to need one while out on the road more than when I'm on home time. With one of these I'd be willing to take the weight and mount my spare on a rim. Not only will it last longer and not fill with road debris, I know it would hold air b4 it was mounted on the side of the road. Plus I would have time to get to the tire shop of my choice and not sit on the side of the road for hours on end for an extorting bill. There is no cost saving better than having the tools available out on the road and going cordless has made my life so much easier and willing to tackle some jobs in oddball places I normally wouldn't consider. Last week I was taking a truck out for a shakedown run, 2 air bags were leaking, 1 on each axle. Stopped by peterbilt got 4 bags, and all hardware. Home depot to get air line caps. (Cap 1 axle and use the othe as a Jack to make room for the bags) replaced all 4 in just over an hour including clean up in the parking lot at the reciever and still got a good sleep in. (Used the good ol PC to bobtail to ts for shower n dinner.) As a side note..the heavier impacts will tend to break nuts free faster even with a lower torque because of the heavier anvils used. 5lb sledge vs 1lb....both will do the job....one just has to wor( harder and faster to do it in the same time or just take the time needed.
I've been using the 2 year oldish half inch drive Milwaukee with friction ring on the anvil...holy hell the power that thing has, I don't miss the air line. I work as an automotive and light truck tech full time. Even the 3.8s impact is a touch NUTS!
@@nbrowser i agree milwaukee its coming with great impacts, my brother said one day that battery impacts was not good at all, but when he use my 2864 3/4 inch he was like oh shit this is powerful
@@nbrowser is the convenience that great compared to air tools? I know battery powered tools have come a long way. But it takes forever to charge a 5.0+ amp hour battery. They were using an 8.0. batteries are not cheap and often overlooked when purchasing tools. And they're also a consumable item. Batteries do die. They lose power and eventually fail to hold a charge. That's how these tool companies make their money now. I'm battery sales. I'm not a mechanic, but if my shop has air, I would prefer air. I wouldn't go and instantly change all my air tools for battery either.
For a home garage, my dad was an ex-diesel tech, used only air tools, me having to use an air compressor from time to time to fix my car or some blades, air tools works best in my scenario. At my work, all I need is the tool itself, use the company's M18 batteries and presto.
After removing lug nuts on four semi trailer wheels and reinstalling them it was already cutting out due to over heating, (keep in mind, it had time to cool off in the shade while tires were getting swapped) so air guns aren't dead just yet.
bahopik everyone thinks that it works one day and ingersol is going to run and hide lol Let’s see how this holds up after a year of shop truck road call duty. My bet is one every two months.
i am impressed...i was a truck mechanic for 25 yrs and i have seen wheels put on with 1 inch guns all the time and 1200 ft lbs...really pissed me off because I used a torque stick on every lug and most are 450-500 ft lbs...i have spent hours taking off lug in my life and I had some of the best air tools in the market...I would have given this tool a real test over the yrs between lugs and U-bolts and see if it could last long term....battery tools were just arriving in the market when i got out but obviously they have come a long way...i missed it, how much for this bad boy????
Lol. Deboss did his vid first. But I like Greg's video better. Except I kind of felt sorry for the lug nut. That they probably stretched trying to get it to stop tightening with the air impact 😂
Thank you for your totally unbiased review, as indicated by the 100 or so links to Amazon to purchase Milwaukee tools. Certainly there was no financial gain to be had for your commercia... I mean, review. You need to watch Project Farm's channel and take notes, dude.
Heh, well having worked as a mechanic for a plywood yard on the semi's; couple stretched bolts in about the least of your worries. Different world and 1000lbs is a bit normal. Maintenance was "ahem" sometimes reallllyy bad, the stuff is built for heavy mileage. We used to put a 6 foot iron pipe on a 1 inch breaker bar and jump on the end to loosen some of the LUGs. This was back during the days of split rims, then you would rip tire off and hope the split didnt decide to go kablowie. First tire wasnt bad; the second one the split (and your possible imminent demise) was staring you in face.
Hey Greg nice video. The gun seems pretty impressive. I’d like to see you try it on something that my pneumatic 1” has a tough time with and that’s an outrigger ram piston nut/bolt (depending on the make) on a backhoe. I usually have to heat them up to break the locktite. Travis
My Ingersoll Rand 7150 cordless 1/2 inch Drive impact has 1150 foot-pounds of reverse torque. It's a 20 volt I use it for automobiles. I agree that the cordless game is taking over air tools, only thing is air tools are much smaller and get into tighter spaces.
Of coarse they used a prehistoric air impact that's probably never been oiled and runing on like 80-90 P.S.I of air.. and god knows how many restrictions in the lines
I've used the 1/2 in drive just to dick around on the master link bolts on a JD 750k dozer lil basterd actually backed 2 of the 4 off pretty sure this one might pull off an undercarriage.
Damn that's got some serious power behind that and by watching this video this makes me want to really go out and by one of these bad boys because I do have tuff problems breaking off hub nuts on vehicles that have never been removed in so long
I hope I don't catch grown men working on my truck playing with their tools and using it as a test subject. Beyond that thanks for the video. I'm buying one
Great video!!! That definitely is impressive up against the air impact. I bought my first Milwaukee 1/4 inch driver it takes lug nuts off my tractor quick really surprised me I love it. My son has had one for years uses it all the time for buildin houses. Thanks for sharing be safe have fun
*I just bought the Dewalt 899 1/2 impact on offerup with 6ah battery and fast charger for $200 and it's a beast impact but this Milwaukee is obviously more powerful so if the 899 starts to struggle the Milwaukee will be my next purchase.*
The 1" air impact is stronger but the cordless is still impressive. The anvil on the air is probably twice as big, you can hear the difference the air one makes a lower pitched noise so more mass, the milwaukee is relying on speed to achieve harder impact which would also wear down the components faster.
Also, by what I hear in the air impact gun, the speed control on the air impact seems to be turned down somewhat, compared to if the speed control was maxed out.
Great for a home shop or portable mechanic for sure. Shop owners for cost and long haul reliability I think Air tools are the standard honestly. I’m all for the new line of battery driven hand tools, but air is king! :)
Dang that things got some ludicrous power! Watching this video brings back memories of when I had an entry level mechanic job at an excavation company. That shit was hard as hell. I took a 2 year college diesel program to start off at $11 an hour greasing dump trucks. I quit after only a year to go work construction. I think if youre short and stocky its not a bad career, but if your tall and skinny youll hurt your back too easy like I did.
I sure wouldn’t want that to be my truck you over tightened the living crap out of it those studs are junk. Great video though that’s one impressive tool
One of the coolest features of this gun is the way the battery clips in it’s designed with bumpers in it and it’s a little loose so it can vibrate but the battery never comes loose
FYI, you will not strip the bolt or nut by overtightening the lug nut on the lug bolt. You actually stretch the lug bolt and it will sheer off once you pass a certain torque that exceeds the engineering of the bolt. I've seen it many times, even with 1/2" impact wrenches. Usually happens when the grease monkey has the wrench set incorrectly to "righty tighty" instead of "lefty loosey" when trying to remove the lug nuts.
One of the best reviews I have run across on TH-cam, really good presentation, not only talking but a lot of action too, hate it when ur watching a vid and the reviewer is just running his mouth but doing nothing, and I'm thinkin' we didn't come to watch a vid to hear u run ur mouth that's not the point of watching a vid
I work in a foundry with very large and powerful machines. A bolt requiring a 3” socket is a common thing. That Milwaukee impact is no joke. Hit the threads with Kroil, let it set a few minutes, then the impact. She smokes and she screams, fights you every turn, but off it comes.
I have the 1/2 inch and its a beast. Only on my US school bus wheel nits it has no chance. Im relictant to buy the 1 inch and wait a year for the tech to improve even more.
@@BlueCollar_Motorsports I'D RATHER HAVE MY WIFE NOW THAN THE WINNING LOTTERY TICKET:) SOUNDS LIKE YOU & YOUR LADY HAVE THE SAME THING, I'M JUST GLAD WE DON'T SHARE OUR BEDS WITH A JODI ARIAS TYPE:(
Even though I'm just a hobby mechanic so I have no revenue on tools, and I'm derinitely not financially well set - I live above the arctic circle. Most of our roads are either flowing lakes of magnesium chloride 5 months of the year and along the coast there's a lot of NaCl that makes its way into the air downpour the rest of the year. So when working on mostly 20 year old cars, if it's not rusted off it's rusted solid. I've been doing everything by hand tools up until 6 months ago. Because of a shoulder injury, Infigured it was time to get an impact gun (no space for large enough compressor). While for me, wicked expensive (about equiv. 850 USD around these parts), I took the advice of a friend "buy once, buy the" biggest" you can afford) - and got the 1/2" High torque Fuel/onekey from Milwaukee. Never looked back - this thing is amazing. And it works really well even when so cold outside it could freeze the balls of a moose. I was about to get the non onekey model for ~65 USD less - but ultimately decided against it, thinking the newer onekey model was probably a little refined in other aspects too. But boy, am I glad I did. Being able to program torque and speed curves (independently!), hqve 4 of them on the ugaduggah at a time, but as many as I want in the app and cycling that to the machine taking like 5 seconds with the app... Man. This thing isn't just stupidly powerful. It's impressively versatile. Only a few years ago, just about any really useful uggaduggah-gun meant a big compressor, hoses, an on-off trigger and a fwd/rev toggle. Now we have this. Its a glorious time to be alive, for all powertool-wielders.
Cordless is great for remote applications, stuck on the side of the road or in the field. I love my air tools and have no intention of trading them for a battery op tool. That being said, i'll be happy to add one to my arsenal for times when I can't use the air. I do not believe these would out torque a quality airgun of equal spec though.
Plus Air gun will last for years beat the hell out of them as long as you keep with a little oil in the barrel Think of all the batteries you would have to purchase over 10 years and I don't think the cordless gun would last that long but in a pinch air is fine.
I work at a Honda dealer and each time we take off the harmonic balancers we use a 1inch air impact and are compressor went out and there are four cordless impacts ones a newer Milwaukee(5 month) Matco(1 year old) and Snap on(2 month old) one and my 3 year old Dewalt (all 1/2 inch ) and none of them but dewalt removed it all of them where fully charged
I use cordless Milwaukee impacts 1/4”, 3/8”, 1/2” and 3/4” for my 3500, 4500 and 5500 construction maintenance and I must say I’ve only used my 3/4 drive once…. I have trucks full of cordless Milwaukee and DeWalt tools I hardly use my air compressors any more
every video ive seen shows this impact doing a wheel or so. how is the battery going to hold up to a steer and 3 drive axles. how about a couple of trailer axles after that? i think this would be great for changing a tire in the field, but ill keep my air impact in the shop. i have run every 1/2 battery operated impact over the years in the oilfield, my air 1/2 still out performs them.
This is really incredible because I’ve done this kind of work and you really need tons of power to open these rusted nuts. Milwaukee is just amazing! I really can’t believe it! 😆
I’ve run into some water bottle caps that could use this thing
Lol
😂
I can give you some tips that make it so that make it so that bottles arent as big of an issue
1. Make your hand into a fist
2. Extend your thumb and bend it to a 90 degree angle
3. Move your thumb so that it matches the lower part of your index finger
4. Grip lightly with your thumb and twist
5. Enjoy
Best comment
😂
I will NEVER need a tool like this, and yet here I am fully invested in this video 😂
Right. I have gen 2 mid torque which is plenty but also the half in high torque. Don't think I'll ever need 1400 ft lbs or whatever it is but I have it. This for me is like having a Ferrari that can't go over 50mph
@Kw #1 lol, get into equipment repair and report back how it goes without a 1” gun
I have the 3/4" Milwaukee impact in my semi for changing tires on the road myself. The 1" doesn't seem a whole lot quicker on the lugnuts, but taking that yoke nut off was impressive.
I’m thinking to buy Milwaukee 1 “ only for Lugnuts to change my tires on my semi truck, shall I go ahead with 3/4” for this particular purpose? Will it have enough power to get it done?
Just plain "Bad to the Bone !" I really thought you were going to need a torque multiplier to get that nut off ! They are usually a bear to get off !
“We’re going to use this random truck in the parking lot, I don’t know the last time these were taken off” *is the cleanest truck in the parking lot with brand new tires*
He starts actually using it at 7:18
Dude wouldn’t shut the hell up 😩
Don't be affraid to use the fast forward button. I watched this video in under 2 minutes and got all the good out of it!
The fast forward button has collectively saved me weeks of time over the course of my youtube viewing! Try it. You'll never waste time on stupid videos again!
@@patrickfarley8036 Absolutely true. This guys videos seems to have no edit or a really poor one Doug Demuro too, 15min about 'infotainment systems' and even in some cases 0 about engine data or other relevant facts
Bless your soul sir
It's a shitty trend in content creators. They just want our views and view time. Too many 10 min video with less than 2 min of content these days. And they insert one too many ads during the video to ruin their watchability
The power of Milwaukee tools is unquestionable. My tools had gone through dust, rain, fall off my ladder and they still performing like the first day, just charge and go. Thank you for the good video
Yes agree but the very high price 😀
I recently purchased the 1/2" version. It features 1400 lb-ft of removal torque, with 1000 lb-ft of installation torque. It is insanely awesome.
I bought one of those also (Milwaukee 1/2 Fuel, 1400 ft lb.) and couldn't remove the lug nuts on a small car. They were torqued to 95 ft lbs. I like Milwaukee and wanted to be impressed. Instead I was disgusted with it.
@adamr8628 what size battery?
I'll be impressed when they can start making those stop on the exact foot pounds of torque that you need and for it to be digital
f-ton of power with precision torque measurement isn't very compatible, load is measured with delicate load cells and this boi hammers a chunka chunka anvil 3000 times a minute like thor, but that is why he have engineers and research :)
@@vasya88 maybe you could have the drill switched into two different "modes." Like a power setting and a finishing or torque setting that could use a different drive or gear inside the unit. It would definitely be interesting and cool to see!
I have been wanting this for so long now lol
Hytorc LiON gun, pretty much exactly that. I think it can do degrees too.
They've had that for years, B-RAD etc. Will go tighter than this too.
I work in the construction industry and that is all we use now to break out bolts Milwaukee tool. Great buy for big stuff
Note to self: this is for taking stuff OFF, not putting stuff on.
I agree with you.
Ive got a 1/2 in one and a older 3/4 in one. The new 1/2 does 1,400ft lbs off and 1,000 on and the 3/4 does 1,200 off and 1,000 on, you have to be careful and use a torque stick if you can, then check it with a torque wrench
That yoke nut tho. I think that is the toughest nut to break on a truck that I have ran into. I’ve had to soak with PB blaster or wd40 over night and bang on it with a 1” air gun like the one on the video for a long time to Get it off. Very impressed
@Lorne Johnson can you do this sentence over so i can understand it......
PB blaster sucks.... try "3&1 oil" or "Liquid wrench" don't believe me... watch the project farm test of penatrating oil
That impact wrench is absolutely amazing. I drive semi and realize the value in this tool.
Milwaukee is the best hands down I’ve had my cordless brushless set for like 7 years and they are still going strong
I have a milwaukee hammer drill, 10 years old, batteries still hold a charge
I wish America still made Milwaukee
7 years? What do you use it once a week?
Just bought one for my company and I can tell you this product is made to do some serious work. Light years away from competitors.
You are overtightening those lug nuts. That stretches and weakens the studs setting up a future failure. There is a reason for torque specs.
I did the exact thing your saying and on my way back from work I saw my rear dually driver side tires passing me up on the freeway... no bueno
Yup, most people don't understand torque specs are not only to keep the bolt from coming off. The purpose of getting a proper torque spec is to reduce the repeated load on a fastener which leads to fatigue failures.
Torque sticks are the ticket 👌🏻
Are you a truck driver?????
@@elguajacodeguajaka6722 yeah, I did it as an O/O locally while going to college full time but now I’m also an electrical engineer and took a a few metallurgy classes, believe me even though I worked 70-80hrs a week and went to class 15 hrs a week I still payed attention.
But the air gun still sounds absolutely magnificent when it breaks the fastener loose
Milwaukee will just add a little speaker that makes that noise lol kind of like the new teslas have exhaust noises inside the car haha
Air is always more powerful. The Milwaukee is much easier to carry around and alot lighter. I work on the the railroads and I love the Milwaukee. Me and my co workers were tired of carrying that big ass hose around
True, but you can't carry it around
@@teamwork84 th-cam.com/video/pKLRhT7PGbo/w-d-xo.html
@@teamwork84
Not true anymore
Damn I feel sorry for the poor guy that has to change all those studs y'all stretched when they snap
Porsha Brewer no kidding !!!!!
Porsha Brewer EXACTLY! Just because it took 1800 ft lbs to remove a rusty nut; doesn’t mean you should retorque it to 1500 ft lbs! WTF
B K yea I'm a diesel mechanic and it sucks changing wheel studs because that's a new wheel seal and all that but I gotta say that I'm impressed with the tool no doubt
You feel sorry for the guys watching and enjoying every minute of it after they told him it was ok? Makes sense...
@@freedomfox8183 you actually think the people at the shop own those trucks? SMH
Wonder if that pneumatic impact had been oiled, took me a few years to figure out that not only do you oil it in the little hole to oil the insides But you also have to oil it daily for optimal performance through where you hook up the air line. When i did that the 1/2" Blue Point impact i had started blowing sparks off larger 2" nuts, way more power was being made from a 85psi air line. The thing is now 15+ years old going just as strong as when i first got it, but to think the first 2-3 years i never thought of it lol.
The yoke nut was impressive
Hell yeah it really was
My Milwaukee 3/4 did that same job with the 9.0 battery 🔋
@@deamslarrabee7468 the 9volt batt def unleashes the full power!
There is toolmarks at the beginning, sure it was "impressive" . Milwaukee add....
Where? Didnt see any on the nut. Glare yes, toolmarks, no
I got excited and started to cheer when the yoke bolt started no move; after that NOTHING can stop this beast.
The m18 fuel super sawzall is amazing also! I personally love Milwaukee power tools!
That can reverse the earths spin to take us back in time.
Glad to see you making videos again, we missed you! I hope you and the family are doing good and are all settled in.
Just bought this and the m12 ratchet. The impact is no joke. I just wonder how many charges the battery can cy me but your video is spot on and accurate. It's a BEAST.
Happy to hear “good buddy Mark’s” voice in the video. Miss seeing all your buddies from home helping you out. Glad things are looking up for you though.
I'm here Crying/dying laughing how he really is Destroying the heck out of those random Wheel Studs 😂😂😂🤦🏽♂️
@CAPTAIN DABBIN
We will here about a trucker losing a wheel on the road
On steer axles tsk tsk.
I’m not trying to sound rude but I want you to know what you’re talking about and every reply on this is so far from being correct and it’s bothering me
It’s obvious that none of you know a lot about these trucks and I would rather you just say that instead of getting on here acting like you know what’s going on because when someone gets on here looking to learn from these posts you’re all giving them BS and packaging the BS as truth but the truth is none of you have any idea what you’re talking about and it just sounds crazy to those of us who really know what we’re talking about, you’re embarrassing yourself
Nothing wrong with not understanding all of this, we all had to learn, but you have to get hands on with these trucks so you don’t continue to look like fools
CAPTAIN DABBIN
Did you mean break instead of brake?
peace out
If you’re working on your own truck I would seriously advise you to have a real mechanic to go behind you, just for safety sake because it seems that you just need to put the time in so you can understand more and know what you’re talking about because it’s clear you don’t
I work on rock crusher plants and this impact is amazing! Use it all the time. It’s fast easy and VERY powerful.
Damn! That's incredible. I love how smooth it sounds once the lug is loose. Beautiful tool!!! Great video-I just subscribed, thanks.
I run the car maintenance TH-cam channel in Korea. I'm always learning such a great ideas on your channel. I hope we have a chance to be together. Thank you.
Now kish.
카맨형 여기서 뵙는군요 ㅎㅎ
“The” lol
Nice channel btw
now im watching in subtitles lol
I have both these guns and did my own test on Budd nuts on school busses that wouldn't come off after we were compelled to turn the air down at the compressor, now I really love Milwaukee but it was never the winner, the winner is usually a smaller new gun with a new snap-on impact socket or the hand crank version (both of which are subject to self destruction), my Ken Tool 4way with Jack stand support just bent the length of pipe I was jumping on, my Milwaukee 3/4 gun was just as strong as the 1inch but eventually self destructed (but was warranted) would have to say that there is no comparison between the two with the air being the winner and the cordless filling a niche. I'm glad you made the video for comparison Thank You.
Do you even know how much torque you're applying when tightening them? It kinda matters.
@MONSTER ENERGYDRINKS has
Who needs fancy packaging when the real treat is the product itself! Just got the M12 Drill/Driver, Impact Driver, and cordless Ratchet combo today! Nothing but power!
For those who don't know. Milwaukee has a gigantic D handle 1"impact with 2k ftlbs of breaking power. Long anvil and short. I have the short anvil and I love it.
My Proto J199WP would smoke that thing
@@terrellscaife2411 that's cool. Enjoy not taking it anywhere becuz you're stuck to an air line. So you have to bring a whole compressor 😂
Proto tools have been around for over 100 years
I want one to add to my collection of tools I DON'T USE.
NewYorkBlack youngotta at least take the tires off your own vehicle before you put it away for months!!
Lol me too.
I’d like to test it in the heavy equipment world! This would be perfect for field and shop techs that do track jobs on dozers!
I watch a video on TH-cam where they took a 2 9/16" nut off to rebuild a hydrolic ram on a skider
Doing cylinder work track jobs and rotators on booms and excavators I take my air out the Milwaukee is a badass gun but it cannot beat on a bolt as long as an air impact can
Here's another reviewer up your alley.
th-cam.com/video/lCRegy5s4Mc/w-d-xo.html
@@MsBAYOU it can if you got enough batteries .. I got 9 or 10 good batteries for work .. I'm sure people with more serious jobs have alot more
@@freedomfox8183 I agree having the batteries is nice but now I have to change them and charge them in the truck instead of just grabbing my Airline out of the truck to do a hard big job the cordless impacts are really nice for simple fast jobs
I bought a Milwaukee M18 Fuel drill motor and 1/4" impact driver kit for work a couple of years ago. After using it a few times I don't buy anything else for work or my own tools. If you haven't tried the Milwaukee M18 Fuel tool line yet you should at your first opportunity and you too will become a believer.
Gonna keep my air tools around for another 60 years. Cordless is great but you cant beat the old school air tools. They just hold up and work and you never need to charge them.
but You need charge air tank eaither whit fuel or electicity
& never have weak batteries that won’t keep charged.
@Joseph Quīnque I use air guns they are 110% reliable no battery shit
My 1/2" Milwaukee beat a 1" pneumatic air gun. You really need to give them a chance.
I've been using milwaukee cordless tools for several years now at my shop and they are bad ass ! my guys cont believe how strong those guns are.
tHESE GUYS AREN'T PLAYING ON MY TRUCK!!!
relax let the buffalo fart it's for video purpose only duhh !!
I just saw one of these at the farm store today and was wondering how it would perform. I had gotten a 1/2" impact 6mo ago and have been impressed with it. I was one of the old school cordless..ha..good luck with that until the last couple of years then I got my hand on my first Milwaukee .
My 1"air seems to have grown legs and walked off and was debating buying another but I seem to need one while out on the road more than when I'm on home time. With one of these I'd be willing to take the weight and mount my spare on a rim. Not only will it last longer and not fill with road debris, I know it would hold air b4 it was mounted on the side of the road. Plus I would have time to get to the tire shop of my choice and not sit on the side of the road for hours on end for an extorting bill.
There is no cost saving better than having the tools available out on the road and going cordless has made my life so much easier and willing to tackle some jobs in oddball places I normally wouldn't consider. Last week I was taking a truck out for a shakedown run, 2 air bags were leaking, 1 on each axle. Stopped by peterbilt got 4 bags, and all hardware. Home depot to get air line caps. (Cap 1 axle and use the othe as a Jack to make room for the bags) replaced all 4 in just over an hour including clean up in the parking lot at the reciever and still got a good sleep in. (Used the good ol PC to bobtail to ts for shower n dinner.)
As a side note..the heavier impacts will tend to break nuts free faster even with a lower torque because of the heavier anvils used. 5lb sledge vs 1lb....both will do the job....one just has to wor( harder and faster to do it in the same time or just take the time needed.
All I can say is damn... I hate pulling out the hose and air tools that really is a game changer as a mechanic..
I've been using the 2 year oldish half inch drive Milwaukee with friction ring on the anvil...holy hell the power that thing has, I don't miss the air line. I work as an automotive and light truck tech full time. Even the 3.8s impact is a touch NUTS!
@@nbrowser i agree milwaukee its coming with great impacts, my brother said one day that battery impacts was not good at all, but when he use my 2864 3/4 inch he was like oh shit this is powerful
I've got the 1/2 impact of theirs and a battery operated grease gun been pretty happy with them.
I do agree , i own the 3/4 2864 model and been very happy with it,,
@@nbrowser is the convenience that great compared to air tools? I know battery powered tools have come a long way. But it takes forever to charge a 5.0+ amp hour battery. They were using an 8.0. batteries are not cheap and often overlooked when purchasing tools. And they're also a consumable item. Batteries do die. They lose power and eventually fail to hold a charge. That's how these tool companies make their money now. I'm battery sales.
I'm not a mechanic, but if my shop has air, I would prefer air. I wouldn't go and instantly change all my air tools for battery either.
had mine for over 6 month and its still running strong !
Love my Milwaukee cordless impacts and ratchets.
👍
For a home garage, my dad was an ex-diesel tech, used only air tools, me having to use an air compressor from time to time to fix my car or some blades, air tools works best in my scenario. At my work, all I need is the tool itself, use the company's M18 batteries and presto.
After removing lug nuts on four semi trailer wheels and reinstalling them it was already cutting out due to over heating, (keep in mind, it had time to cool off in the shade while tires were getting swapped) so air guns aren't dead just yet.
bahopik everyone thinks that it works one day and ingersol is going to run and hide lol
Let’s see how this holds up after a year of shop truck road call duty.
My bet is one every two months.
@@Gcal1956 have the 3/4 for 3 years every day use, run like first day and still have 2 more years of warranty i wont worry about it
i am impressed...i was a truck mechanic for 25 yrs and i have seen wheels put on with 1 inch guns all the time and 1200 ft lbs...really pissed me off because I used a torque stick on every lug and most are 450-500 ft lbs...i have spent hours taking off lug in my life and I had some of the best air tools in the market...I would have given this tool a real test over the yrs between lugs and U-bolts and see if it could last long term....battery tools were just arriving in the market when i got out but obviously they have come a long way...i missed it, how much for this bad boy????
I thought this was a deboss video until the intro came in
Lol. Deboss did his vid first. But I like Greg's video better. Except I kind of felt sorry for the lug nut. That they probably stretched trying to get it to stop tightening with the air impact 😂
For sure lol
@@darenwinckler7027 Deboss is a liberal...;)
Thank you for your totally unbiased review, as indicated by the 100 or so links to Amazon to purchase Milwaukee tools. Certainly there was no financial gain to be had for your commercia... I mean, review.
You need to watch Project Farm's channel and take notes, dude.
project farm is the truth dude
I feel like air power tools will never be replaced in a body shop
Yeah electric is cheaper
@@ljguy300 Really? You call $1000 cheep? Sorry no, I would spend $300 to $400 on a air drive before buying this cordless impact.
@@bigdave46148 That cost doesnt include the massive compressor to run the air tool
@@DMAN22yeah You're right. For 4 to 5 hundred dollars, you get the compressor that can run the 1 inch impact and other air tools you own.
@@bigdave46148 $400 air driven + $500 for decent compressor = the $900 spent on this one tool.....Just saying.
Watching these videos makes me proud to be a Milwaukee share holder ☺
Unbelievable!! Well done Milwaukee!! To be able to break that yolk nut it loose. That takes some torque
They are between 700-1000 ftlbs , the 1/2in 2767 takes those off. Just did one last week
I'm not that impressed
@@kwmiked bullshit.. not any ones on good.. you'd be torching the shit out of it with something smaller or it's not on for shit
Milwaukee ones again
SRAD_AJ _ the Milwaukee high output 1/2 inch impact is rated for 1400 ft Lbs nut busting torque, so I could see it being possible.
Can't Believe you were able to crack the yoke nut, very impressive, I was not impressed with you stressing the treads on the lug nut studs.
You all just killed the value of those studs and nuts. Good job
So these random trucks have some odd stretched studs and lugs torqued to like 1000ft lbs
Turned 😂🤣 I’m dead 😵
Heh, well having worked as a mechanic for a plywood yard on the semi's; couple stretched bolts in about the least of your worries. Different world and 1000lbs is a bit normal. Maintenance was "ahem" sometimes reallllyy bad, the stuff is built for heavy mileage.
We used to put a 6 foot iron pipe on a 1 inch breaker bar and jump on the end to loosen some of the LUGs. This was back during the days of split rims, then you would rip tire off and hope the split didnt decide to go kablowie. First tire wasnt bad; the second one the split (and your possible imminent demise) was staring you in face.
I wouldn't be surprised to see that front wheel fly right off that truck while it's going down the road.
@@Aerogrow Very scary times. I have personally seen a split ring launch off of a rim at a velocity that would have killed anyone in it's path.
More like 450. Ft ibs...
Hey Greg nice video. The gun seems pretty impressive. I’d like to see you try it on something that my pneumatic 1” has a tough time with and that’s an outrigger ram piston nut/bolt (depending on the make) on a backhoe. I usually have to heat them up to break the locktite.
Travis
My Ingersoll Rand 7150 cordless 1/2 inch Drive impact has 1150 foot-pounds of reverse torque. It's a 20 volt I use it for automobiles. I agree that the cordless game is taking over air tools, only thing is air tools are much smaller and get into tighter spaces.
Try replacing the undercarriage on a dozer or excavator with it. Also the tire gun had a 8in anvil
Of coarse they used a prehistoric air impact that's probably never been oiled and runing on like 80-90 P.S.I of air.. and god knows how many restrictions in the lines
I've used the 1/2 in drive just to dick around on the master link bolts on a JD 750k dozer lil basterd actually backed 2 of the 4 off pretty sure this one might pull off an undercarriage.
Impressive impact though I was cringing watching you guys over torque those lug nuts on those poor studs. 😬😲
Definitely true on that especially on that aluminum rim
Right I used to work in a shop and if I was doing that I would get my ass chewed haha 😂
i wish one would have stripped would have been entertaining
Most cordless impact guns will only tighten to 100nm.
@@tra6ic741 probably did they just said edit lmao
Damn that's got some serious power behind that and by watching this video this makes me want to really go out and by one of these bad boys because I do have tuff problems breaking off hub nuts on vehicles that have never been removed in so long
Use a 1/2 with the 12ah batter it blows the 1” out of the water hands down
I hope I don't catch grown men working on my truck playing with their tools and using it as a test subject. Beyond that thanks for the video. I'm buying one
You would never know..
Great video!!! That definitely is impressive up against the air impact. I bought my first Milwaukee 1/4 inch driver it takes lug nuts off my tractor quick really surprised me I love it. My son has had one for years uses it all the time for buildin houses. Thanks for sharing be safe have fun
I bought the 1/2” gun, it hits as hard as the 1” gun.
*I just bought the Dewalt 899 1/2 impact on offerup with 6ah battery and fast charger for $200 and it's a beast impact but this Milwaukee is obviously more powerful so if the 899 starts to struggle the Milwaukee will be my next purchase.*
The 1" air impact is stronger but the cordless is still impressive. The anvil on the air is probably twice as big, you can hear the difference the air one makes a lower pitched noise so more mass, the milwaukee is relying on speed to achieve harder impact which would also wear down the components faster.
Also, by what I hear in the air impact gun, the speed control on the air impact seems to be turned down somewhat, compared to if the speed control was maxed out.
Electric motors have massive amounts of low speed torque.
Great for a home shop or portable mechanic for sure. Shop owners for cost and long haul reliability I think Air tools are the standard honestly. I’m all for the new line of battery driven hand tools, but air is king! :)
Good way to crack an aluminum wheel
I agree, I was waiting on it 😂😂 who knows might be
Amen ur right
🤣 I was waiting for that too. Driver comes back my wheel is cracked wonder what happened.
Dang that things got some ludicrous power! Watching this video brings back memories of when I had an entry level mechanic job at an excavation company. That shit was hard as hell. I took a 2 year college diesel program to start off at $11 an hour greasing dump trucks. I quit after only a year to go work construction. I think if youre short and stocky its not a bad career, but if your tall and skinny youll hurt your back too easy like I did.
7:35 is when the test starts. Enjoy!!!!!!
12:00 stretching the threads,better change that stud,or broken bolts down the road for sure!
I sure wouldn’t want that to be my truck you over tightened the living crap out of it those studs are junk. Great video though that’s one impressive tool
Im come here to write this 👍
Wow!!!! Good job Milwaukee!!!! You guys have raised the bar. No doubt about it!!! Made in AMERICA!!!!! YEAH!!!!!
What do you torque your lug nuts to?🤔 Oh you know about 1500 ft/lbs😂🤷♂️
About 100 ugga duggas.
Reccomend no more than 475ftlbs but some company's go as far as 550ftlbs on semi lugs
lance hobbs I've seen 600! Lol
@@wingwawootong986 now that's just asking for issues LOL
Lol
The transmission bolt was the real challenge and that monster laugh to unscrew it!
I was sold on the transmission yoke nut!
One of the coolest features of this gun is the way the battery clips in it’s designed with bumpers in it and it’s a little loose so it can vibrate but the battery never comes loose
Why wait to charge the batteries, I thought u said y'all have Alot of Milwaukee cordless tools? 🤔🤔
FYI, you will not strip the bolt or nut by overtightening the lug nut on the lug bolt. You actually stretch the lug bolt and it will sheer off once you pass a certain torque that exceeds the engineering of the bolt. I've seen it many times, even with 1/2" impact wrenches. Usually happens when the grease monkey has the wrench set incorrectly to "righty tighty" instead of "lefty loosey" when trying to remove the lug nuts.
Nice truck man love watching your videos that Cummins sounds amazing I like all your trucks you fix them up great 🔥
One of the best reviews I have run across on TH-cam, really good presentation, not only talking but a lot of action too, hate it when ur watching a vid and the reviewer is just running his mouth but doing nothing, and I'm thinkin' we didn't come to watch a vid to hear u run ur mouth that's not the point of watching a vid
Greg is killing it with the vids this week
I work in a foundry with very large and powerful machines. A bolt requiring a 3” socket is a common thing. That Milwaukee impact is no joke. Hit the threads with Kroil, let it set a few minutes, then the impact. She smokes and she screams, fights you every turn, but off it comes.
Damn dats impressive that thing has some serious power
The D ring actually comes in really handy I wouldn’t dump it especially if you plan on taking off a lot of tires on big trucks
The tyre shop guys that do the call-outs for the trucks will LOVE that thing!
Maybe dozer sprocket nuts?
This tool is awesome, I use it on timing covers and valve covers all the time!
10:00 for those who didn't wanna sit through the whole video
Thank goodness, I couldn't manage to sit through all of this.
Or 18:47
I'm in the union, currently working on a bridge on the pa turnpike and the iron workers use this when bolting everything together for the bridge
Bro replace the wheel stud wtf it is soo stretched out now its gonna break going down the road
Smi studs don't stretch. They either snap or or the thread gets fucked up.
@@Marcos0ne were you not watching? You can clearly see it’s stretched by looking at the bottom of the bolt
I have the 1/2 inch and its a beast. Only on my US school bus wheel nits it has no chance. Im relictant to buy the 1 inch and wait a year for the tech to improve even more.
Maaan... dont you EVER show me something this nice without an excuse to tell my wife why I need it!! Lol 😂😂 Now I have to brain storm! 👍🏾
Jolly Green Cummins SOUNDS LIKE MY EX, MY WIFE NOW IS AWESOME. SHE DOESN'T CARE ONE WAY OR THE OTHER:)
@@loveunderlaw lol don't give me any ideas man haha. My ole lady is cool. She's just a crazy old bat too haha. Makes the evening time interesting
@@BlueCollar_Motorsports I'D RATHER HAVE MY WIFE NOW THAN THE WINNING LOTTERY TICKET:) SOUNDS LIKE YOU & YOUR LADY HAVE THE SAME THING, I'M JUST GLAD WE DON'T SHARE OUR BEDS WITH A JODI ARIAS TYPE:(
Just buy it man. You are the man of your relationship. This thing is built for the gods for christ sake.
Even though I'm just a hobby mechanic so I have no revenue on tools, and I'm derinitely not financially well set - I live above the arctic circle. Most of our roads are either flowing lakes of magnesium chloride 5 months of the year and along the coast there's a lot of NaCl that makes its way into the air downpour the rest of the year. So when working on mostly 20 year old cars, if it's not rusted off it's rusted solid. I've been doing everything by hand tools up until 6 months ago. Because of a shoulder injury, Infigured it was time to get an impact gun (no space for large enough compressor). While for me, wicked expensive (about equiv. 850 USD around these parts), I took the advice of a friend "buy once, buy the" biggest" you can afford) - and got the 1/2" High torque Fuel/onekey from Milwaukee. Never looked back - this thing is amazing. And it works really well even when so cold outside it could freeze the balls of a moose. I was about to get the non onekey model for ~65 USD less - but ultimately decided against it, thinking the newer onekey model was probably a little refined in other aspects too. But boy, am I glad I did. Being able to program torque and speed curves (independently!), hqve 4 of them on the ugaduggah at a time, but as many as I want in the app and cycling that to the machine taking like 5 seconds with the app... Man. This thing isn't just stupidly powerful. It's impressively versatile. Only a few years ago, just about any really useful uggaduggah-gun meant a big compressor, hoses, an on-off trigger and a fwd/rev toggle. Now we have this. Its a glorious time to be alive, for all powertool-wielders.
Don’t know where my 1/4 electric ratchet went either lol. But I think someone at my last shop I worked at stole it. Oh well
Cordless is great for remote applications, stuck on the side of the road or in the field. I love my air tools and have no intention of trading them for a battery op tool. That being said, i'll be happy to add one to my arsenal for times when I can't use the air.
I do not believe these would out torque a quality airgun of equal spec though.
Plus Air gun will last for years beat the hell out of them as long as you keep with a little oil in the barrel Think of all the batteries you would have to purchase over 10 years and I don't think the cordless gun would last that long but in a pinch air is fine.
I love my Milwaukee m18 impact 💪🏻
i had my gun for over 5 months , and so far its still running like it was the first day of using it ,just get yourself a 12ah battery and your set =-)
I work at a Honda dealer and each time we take off the harmonic balancers we use a 1inch air impact and are compressor went out and there are four cordless impacts ones a newer Milwaukee(5 month) Matco(1 year old) and Snap on(2 month old) one and my 3 year old Dewalt (all 1/2 inch ) and none of them but dewalt removed it all of them where fully charged
I call bullshit
I use cordless Milwaukee impacts 1/4”, 3/8”, 1/2” and 3/4” for my 3500, 4500 and 5500 construction maintenance and I must say I’ve only used my 3/4 drive once…. I have trucks full of cordless Milwaukee and DeWalt tools I hardly use my air compressors any more
every video ive seen shows this impact doing a wheel or so. how is the battery going to hold up to a steer and 3 drive axles. how about a couple of trailer axles after that? i think this would be great for changing a tire in the field, but ill keep my air impact in the shop. i have run every 1/2 battery operated impact over the years in the oilfield, my air 1/2 still out performs them.
This is really incredible because I’ve done this kind of work and you really need tons of power to open these rusted nuts. Milwaukee is just amazing! I really can’t believe it! 😆