I have that exact unit still sitting in its box I bought a month or so back, I just haven't got around to doing the job I bought it for yet, so have not unboxed it. I didnt realise it had the extra height adjustment, that is indeed a game changer. The amount of times I have struggled with clearance on mag drills isn't funny! It is also really cool to see the handle is reversible, as I am left handed and would probably prefer the handle on the left for general use!
I have this same mag drill. I haven't yet tapped anything with it yet but that's part of why i bought it. This one also has very little runout compared to the yellow ones they sell. Pretty nice for the money.
The terrible runout is due to the bearings. I bought a Vevor mag drill in December, which I tore apart because it had TERRIBLE runout. Almost an 1/8 inch of runout! So I tore it apart, thinking the quill shaft had to be bent, and that I would straighten it. But once I got it apart, which was very difficult, I had to drill out a square key that had been peened in place, I found that the shaft was perfect. (.001 total runout) So I ordered new (NSK brand) bearings that the shaft rides in, a small upper and a larger lower. I received the bearings last week and installed them yesterday. It looks way better to the naked eye, put the indicator on it, and it now has .007 total runout. PLENTY good enough for an annular cutter. So FYI: it's the cheap Chinese bearings causing the horrible runout.
Well you certainly did help me figure out why I needed that I don't play with taps but the fact that you can put a full size drill bit in that with a chuck that is an amazing feature I'm a day labor worker I do welding whenever they need an extra person now I've been spoiled with the auto-feed mag drills that they've got which happened to be Sluggers and they have the automatic reverse for tapping if that's which is pushed but I've taken the liberty of going in looking at this drill on the website and it's way less than one of those who really wants to spend $2,000 on a MAG drill I don't so this drill that you have showed off to the world will soon be in my toolbox through your link
The Dewalt has a reversible handle, for the price, cannot complain. I would be afraid to use it on a job that requires many holes, for example, a welding table.
Vevor sells a few different mag drills, some have the proprietary quick change bits. The one in this review has the industrial standard Weldon shank, so cutters for this one are very easy to find
I started to enjoy this review because I'm considering buying a Mag Drill but as soon as this knuckle head started drilling, I lost all respect for his "skills" once he started drilling at high speed instead of letting the drill bit do its job properly. Every Machinist knows that drilling has to be done at the lowest RPM possible to maintain the bit's sharpness and life span and once any smoke starts coming out, you have to backdown the speed. The smoke is the 'indicator' of what the proper speed is. Which simply means, this guy doesn't know much about metalurgy or drilling for that matter at all. And he's not using the proper coolant or tapping oil. Thumbs up to the drill, thumbs down to the "operator". What's really funny is that while he's making his mistakes, he's blaming the drill for not tapping through fast enough? Drilling is not about speed, it's about doing it effectively, you Duh?!?
😂 You have no idea what you’re talking about. Yes, he was drilling far too fast. But smoke means absolutely nothing in this setting. He’s drilling steel, not wood mate. When you’re using steel to cut steel, it gets hot…always…Regardless of how fast you’re going. When you add high sulfur dark cutting fluid to that equation there’s ALWAYS smoke.
I received mine this morning and made some holes this afternoon, 5/8 holes easily in 1/2 in thick mild steel. The only thing negative, I would like to have a stopper to stay the drill in upper position.
I have that exact unit still sitting in its box I bought a month or so back, I just haven't got around to doing the job I bought it for yet, so have not unboxed it. I didnt realise it had the extra height adjustment, that is indeed a game changer. The amount of times I have struggled with clearance on mag drills isn't funny! It is also really cool to see the handle is reversible, as I am left handed and would probably prefer the handle on the left for general use!
OMG you bought a new tool that you didn't pull it out of the box right away and try it out , that to me is crazy self control
Great video! Are there any Weldon shank drills that drill out the full hole, to countersink bolts for example?
I have this same mag drill. I haven't yet tapped anything with it yet but that's part of why i bought it. This one also has very little runout compared to the yellow ones they sell. Pretty nice for the money.
The terrible runout is due to the bearings. I bought a Vevor mag drill in December, which I tore apart because it had TERRIBLE runout. Almost an 1/8 inch of runout! So I tore it apart, thinking the quill shaft had to be bent, and that I would straighten it. But once I got it apart, which was very difficult, I had to drill out a square key that had been peened in place, I found that the shaft was perfect. (.001 total runout) So I ordered new (NSK brand) bearings that the shaft rides in, a small upper and a larger lower. I received the bearings last week and installed them yesterday. It looks way better to the naked eye, put the indicator on it, and it now has .007 total runout. PLENTY good enough for an annular cutter. So FYI: it's the cheap Chinese bearings causing the horrible runout.
As nice as brushless motors are, they had to make the bearings the weakest link. Bearing mods should probably be a thing.
Great demo. Thanks
Well you certainly did help me figure out why I needed that I don't play with taps but the fact that you can put a full size drill bit in that with a chuck that is an amazing feature I'm a day labor worker I do welding whenever they need an extra person now I've been spoiled with the auto-feed mag drills that they've got which happened to be Sluggers and they have the automatic reverse for tapping if that's which is pushed but I've taken the liberty of going in looking at this drill on the website and it's way less than one of those who really wants to spend $2,000 on a MAG drill I don't so this drill that you have showed off to the world will soon be in my toolbox through your link
There is a cutting paste that I think works better than cutting oil. (Less smoking)
The Dewalt has a reversible handle, for the price, cannot complain. I would be afraid to use it on a job that requires many holes, for example, a welding table.
Thanks for the review.
I'm sold how much does it cost
I'm reading the proprietary shank makes the bits impossible to find
Vevor sells a few different mag drills, some have the proprietary quick change bits. The one in this review has the industrial standard Weldon shank, so cutters for this one are very easy to find
Is this drill still in working since u posted this
I've used quite a bit and it's still working great!
Just used your link and discount code. Thanks
You would have known that the handle was reversible before receiving it cut out the bullshit.
I started to enjoy this review because I'm considering buying a Mag Drill but as soon as this knuckle head started drilling, I lost all respect for his "skills" once he started drilling at high speed instead of letting the drill bit do its job properly. Every Machinist knows that drilling has to be done at the lowest RPM possible to maintain the bit's sharpness and life span and once any smoke starts coming out, you have to backdown the speed. The smoke is the 'indicator' of what the proper speed is. Which simply means, this guy doesn't know much about metalurgy or drilling for that matter at all. And he's not using the proper coolant or tapping oil. Thumbs up to the drill, thumbs down to the "operator". What's really funny is that while he's making his mistakes, he's blaming the drill for not tapping through fast enough? Drilling is not about speed, it's about doing it effectively, you Duh?!?
😂 You have no idea what you’re talking about. Yes, he was drilling far too fast. But smoke means absolutely nothing in this setting. He’s drilling steel, not wood mate. When you’re using steel to cut steel, it gets hot…always…Regardless of how fast you’re going. When you add high sulfur dark cutting fluid to that equation there’s ALWAYS smoke.
I received mine this morning and made some holes this afternoon, 5/8 holes easily in 1/2 in thick mild steel.
The only thing negative, I would like to have a stopper to stay the drill in upper position.