I've had the one-peice impact right angle attachment for about 5 years. I hardly ever use it anymore, but it does come in handy sometimes to get around a corner in a cramped location. It would have been a good design idea to have a place where a small handle could screw into the side of the head on it.
One sort-of competitor to this is that new Vessel cordless ratchet. Really small right angle driver. I'm intrigued by it. I have the Bosch brushed installation driver, and I love it. The best feature on it is the trigger control. I can drive screws so slowly and precisely. I feel safe using it with self-tapping wood screws on old plywood in my RV.
I have 1 that includes the flex wand. The 90deg is a life saver, sure you hope you don't need it all the time but the 1 time you do it's the best. I did break the first 1, the shaft at the 90broke, it wasn't under warranty but I felt it was useful enough to buy another
There's actually a ring of magnets around the bit holder. the recessed bit actually floats a little in and out, so that the you get some screw-retention directly from face of the right-angle adapter. You can use a #2 phillips to push a recessed bit out (that's why its cut out as a cross, and not just as a hole).
That’s the Milwaukee assembly driver and I use it all of the time with the different heads when installing high end appliances like sub zero anti-tip cleats or attaching the to the cabinetry and drilling new holes in dishwasher cabinets for supply and drain lines when you need to go at it from underneath the sink.
Right angle attachments are pretty useful, but the ones for removable chuck drills are much better than these hex ones. I have the Festool ones and they attach very nicely and don't take up much space (which is often an issue if you need to use a right angle chuck in the first place).
Hello again, Doc Thank you for another Great Video 👍 I have been considering getting something like this for a while now. I just haven't pulled the trigger yet. I have never seen one on the job site yet. If it works it could be very useful. Again thank you 👌
I've had several times I thought I needed a right angle drill. To put a hole in a low clearance spot. This looks like it would solve the clearance issue. This would drive a hex drill bit lickety split?
LOL. I've had that Dewalt forever and I've never known it split in half. So thank you!
I've had the one-peice impact right angle attachment for about 5 years. I hardly ever use it anymore, but it does come in handy sometimes to get around a corner in a cramped location. It would have been a good design idea to have a place where a small handle could screw into the side of the head on it.
One sort-of competitor to this is that new Vessel cordless ratchet. Really small right angle driver. I'm intrigued by it.
I have the Bosch brushed installation driver, and I love it. The best feature on it is the trigger control. I can drive screws so slowly and precisely. I feel safe using it with self-tapping wood screws on old plywood in my RV.
I have 1 that includes the flex wand. The 90deg is a life saver, sure you hope you don't need it all the time but the 1 time you do it's the best. I did break the first 1, the shaft at the 90broke, it wasn't under warranty but I felt it was useful enough to buy another
There's actually a ring of magnets around the bit holder. the recessed bit actually floats a little in and out, so that the you get some screw-retention directly from face of the right-angle adapter. You can use a #2 phillips to push a recessed bit out (that's why its cut out as a cross, and not just as a hole).
That’s the Milwaukee assembly driver and I use it all of the time with the different heads when installing high end appliances like sub zero anti-tip cleats or attaching the to the cabinetry and drilling new holes in dishwasher cabinets for supply and drain lines when you need to go at it from underneath the sink.
Right angle attachments are pretty useful, but the ones for removable chuck drills are much better than these hex ones. I have the Festool ones and they attach very nicely and don't take up much space (which is often an issue if you need to use a right angle chuck in the first place).
I can see where you could use that in a lot of different situations. Thanks Doc
Hello again, Doc
Thank you for another Great Video 👍 I have been considering getting something like this for a while now. I just haven't pulled the trigger yet. I have never seen one on the job site yet. If it works it could be very useful. Again thank you 👌
Interesting! When they work a right-angle driver is occasionally pretty handy.
this deep insert is good bc this head have a strong magnet that hold screws strongly and in place bc its so deep
Those are great!
Milwaukee has a all metal 90° that runs around 50.00 that won the "shoot out"
I think it was a great buy.
I've had several times I thought I needed a right angle drill. To put a hole in a low clearance spot. This looks like it would solve the clearance issue. This would drive a hex drill bit lickety split?
Tempting
It's an IMPACTING right angle...so.......m
Do you need this when you have the Milwaukee installation drill???
I’m missing the RA head. On my he Milwaukee.