I made a mistake you guys. This HILTI is not a new tool. I just went crazy for a little bit and thought my previous drill was SF 4H-A22. But I uploaded the first video of this tool on 2/2020
Yeah, I'd blame it on the rep...Hilti insist even today that it's a new model...But is a nice tool so two of them is not bad, altrough is wey to heavy - more so that 4Ah compact is abused by this tool, and you need to use some older 5.2Ah if you can find, that are even heavyer. With 8Ah is absurdly heavy.
Bro I just purchased mine today and I’m excited af to put it to use. Upgraded from the Milwaukee gen 3 fuel. Also, thanks for being one of like 2 channels to review Hilti. Love your videos.
What I notice from your tests here: That drill, in addition to being POWERFUL, sounds just incredibly, incredibly, incredibly quiet and smooth compared to many others out there!
Can you get the new Bosch GSB 18V-150 C for test? That would be interesting. According to GOTOOLS TV (Germany), pure power-wise, it pretty much leaves all top tier DeWalt, Makita, Milwaukee and Metabo drills in the dust.
The SF 6H-A22 is 80nm equal to the Stanley/craftsman. Their strongest drill is supposed to be the 4-speed SF 10W-A22 (120nm) but I can't find any VS videos, is it not available in America yet?
Keep the video's coming man thanks there great And you like 12volt I think you talked about them that you said you wasn't going to do them but what about 12volt Hercules 12volts??? Video and battlefield with other 12 volts
hehehehhh... yeeeaah......: Hilti vs Flex, Hilti vs Dewalt (WOOD), Hilti vs Dewalt (flexvolt advantage), Hilti vs Dewalt (powerdetect), Hilti vs Milwaukee 8AH, Hilti vs Milwaukee (WOOD), Hammerdrill Brawl, And it's been seen hanging on the wall in a big handful of other unrelated videos as well 😏 From what it looks like in other posts, I think he sent in an SF4 for repair(subcompact one-handed drill) and then got confused and thought that the SF6-H(two handed hammer drill) was new. He probably hasn't noticed that he has _two_ now just yet xD I can't wait to see what happens 😁
Hilti will outlast all the other combi's out there. They are built to last! I have a Hilti SDS that I got 2nd hand 35 years ago and it's still as sweet as when I got it off the contractor who upgraded to a bigger Hilti. Dave.
In Europe Hilti sell only to companies, with no exception. They have a 2 year unlimited waranty that covers any wear, unlike other brands that deny waranty for heavy industrial wear, and Hilti asure service for another 20 years with very fast repair and return waranty or tool replacement. Also altrough not cheap when ading batterys, charger and case, Hilti being made in China - even at the highest standard - are less expensive then Festool, Fein, Mafell, Rems, and with the new brushless models is in line or even cheaper then Metabo, Flex Europe and even Makita. Makita even has wey more expensive models in the so coled 40V max line. And even in the 18V line, Makita DDF/DHP 486 is more expensive then SF 6 / 6H-A22, and Hilti is wey better made. But Hilti is heavyer, wey too heavy, more so that you need to use the 8Ah pack or some older 5,2Ah, to not abuse the battery with more the 42 amps drain - and the 4Ah compact with only one row of 21700 cells is not a good idea for this tool, and that when Makita is already wey too heavy... The only Hilti that has both decent weight and also decent torque, on the low side but usable, is SF 2-A12 @ 4Ah compact with 21700 cells. Is spect 21 Nm soft, 34 hard, in real life reach not much more the 15 Nm in speed one, good enough, but that model altrough also pretty new, can benefit more from an upgrade for more torque, more so that it has those nice 4Ah packs that can sustain 40+ A drain, and 25A or so woud be enough for 25 Nm soft torque like Dewalt DCD 701 and new Makita DDF/DHP 487.
DEK in Czechia sells Hilti to anyone, including individual customers. Also if we compare comparable tool models, Hitli is not less expensive than Festool. Quite the opposite. But they don't have much overlap. Hilti is more about concrete and construction, Festool is more about precision woodworking.
@@marsdeimos4301 Czechia is an exception for both brands. Festool is even made in Czechia for a year or so, not in Germany anymore, and the newer Festool battery packs are made in China not in Poland anymore. In other countrys Festool is wey more expensive then Hilti, and I woud not use Festool drills even if given to me free, except maybe older T12 but with a newer Li-ion compact pack. T18 is wey to heavy even with 3Ah compact when is 1,5 Kg without chuck, so is stupid heavy with chuck for the provided torque, and even those 35 Nm soft torque are limited by electronic protection even in drill mode. And the new 4Ah compact packs are also stupid heavy in a fashion similar to Hilti - sure from impact protection, but still - stupid heavy. And 5.2 even more... DRC/PDC even more so are wey to heavy and enter in protection wey to fast, and TDC/TPC are even wey worse - protection mode enter even faster and the true reached torque is lower then DRC/PDC. And those new ones are very heavy and very noisy. And CXS is ubber crapp, can't drive flush all the time 4x30mm in chipboard in speed 1 where is very slow, only one in three, and not even talking about 4x50 or 4,5 x something. And the magnet from the angled head drop after some light use...And that when Bosch GSR 10,8-2-Li/12V-15 Heavy duty, FC and not FC, cand drive with no problem in speed 2. But I have a lot of Festool branded systainers, dozens..., even if those are also very expensive and also very crappy - not even comparable to DeWalt Tough. For location work I use more Bosch Lboxx first gen, DeWalt tough, other Makita and Bosch cases, and even some Frstool sometimes, but I rather use Festool systainers only for fix storage.
@@marsdeimos4301 SF 6/6H-A22 in my country is more then 150 USD - like is in USA, but still less then Hilti. SF 6H-A22 with no batterys and no charger but with case is ~ 325.7 Euro including 19% VAT - and, and ~ 283 Euro without the case, also with no battery and no charger but VAT included. The best price I foud, well lower then average for Festool TPC that is ubber crapp, basic with no angled head, no battery and no charger, but with systainer and VAT is ~350,5 Euro - and battery packs are also expensive, needs charger to, etc. With charger and one 4Ah compact and one 5.2 Ah is 810.3 Euro, and 4Ah compact with one row of 21700 cells is stupid for high drain tools like it's also the case for Hilti that is even more powerfull.
For being the third model down from the top on the Hilti line, SF 6/6H-A22 is more like overkill power wise, 65 Nm soft torque in speed 1, and 80 Nm hard torque ( on all drills hard torque is reached at hard stop in shock in speed 2 @ full RPM from the moment of inertia and kinetic energy that is in relation with the speed sqared, so in most cases is good to brake screws and destroy materials...). 65 Nm soft torque is the spec for top of the 18V line Makita, DDF/DHP 486. 481 is spect to 60 Nm soft and 458 to 58 Nm. Over SF 6 / 6H- A22 Hilti has SF 8M-A22 with 4 speed gear, and top of the line is SF 10W-A22 ATC. But the never ending problem with Hilti is the weight to power ratio, and SF6 is wey too heavy, even heavyer then Makita DDF/DHP458/481/486, and that even when using the Hilti 4Ah compact pack shown here, that uses only one row of 21700 cells, that is abused with wey more then 42A current so is not a good idea, and with the 8Ah pack the weight is absurdly high. The only Hilti that has decent weight and also decent torque is SF 2-A12 with 4Ah compact, in spect 21 Nm soft torque ( 34 hard), but reach not a lot more the 15Nm, still decent anywey. That model is also relatively new, but can benefit more of an upgrade for higher torque, and with those 4Ah packs can also sustain higher amps drain.
@@loochan325 hilti is ass. You’re just paying for the warranty, they are vastly overpriced for the power you get. They’re slow, so when I’m getting paid on the job site to get things done I’ll stick with red and yellow and blue lmao anything but hilti
@@P_steez I use mostly some select Bosch heavy duty, plus some good Makita models, some Fein, some Mafell, some Festool, some DeWalt, some Hilti, some Atlas Copco, but never crappy Milfucky fully own chinesium brand that brake in 6 months. Top of the 18V line Milfucky is lighter, but less reliable and has expensive parts so not worth the cost even if you can get the spare parts.
@@loochan325 I use a Dewalt hammer drill and Milwaukee’s 18v impact when framing and they’re two of the best drills on the market, vastly superior to the hilti and I have never once had a problem with their reliability. Hilti is frankly a brand I’m just completely disinterested in this point in time until they step it up
@@P_steez Hi Parker, I have this Hilti and the Gen 3 Milwaukee. The Hilti is a lot more powerful than the Milwauke, plus the Hilti build quality is far superior. The triggers play up on all my Milwaukee gear! Dave.
I made a mistake you guys. This HILTI is not a new tool. I just went crazy for a little bit and thought my previous drill was SF 4H-A22. But I uploaded the first video of this tool on 2/2020
Yeah, I'd blame it on the rep...Hilti insist even today that it's a new model...But is a nice tool so two of them is not bad, altrough is wey to heavy - more so that 4Ah compact is abused by this tool, and you need to use some older 5.2Ah if you can find, that are even heavyer. With 8Ah is absurdly heavy.
Bro I just purchased mine today and I’m excited af to put it to use. Upgraded from the Milwaukee gen 3 fuel. Also, thanks for being one of like 2 channels to review Hilti. Love your videos.
What I notice from your tests here: That drill, in addition to being POWERFUL, sounds just incredibly, incredibly, incredibly quiet and smooth compared to many others out there!
Appreciate the demo MCT 🙂✌️❤️
I thank you Mastering
Can you get the new Bosch GSB 18V-150 C for test?
That would be interesting. According to GOTOOLS TV (Germany), pure power-wise, it pretty much leaves all top tier DeWalt, Makita, Milwaukee and Metabo drills in the dust.
Hi Dave, that’s like the one I used in the seventies corded, back then it was smaller, sharp tool,
The SF 6H-A22 is 80nm equal to the Stanley/craftsman. Their strongest drill is supposed to be the 4-speed SF 10W-A22 (120nm) but I can't find any VS videos, is it not available in America yet?
Your information is beautiful and helpful I hope to be health and safety
Do it stop, or is it the ATC controll hitting in?
Hey Dave! Can you make a video on the dewalt Xr jigsaw you have?
Yes I can David
@@ManCaverTools thanks I am thinking of possibly getting that tool if I see its worth it! 👍
It is a great jigsaw
@@jaypowell0185 yes, I do believe that it is a nice tool! 🔧
Nice 👍👍👍.
Oh yeah mct with another banger video!! Yessir 👍👍👍👌👌😎
How does it compare to the flex?
Will you rate this tool over those other drill
That is one smooth performer. Pretty impressive. 👍
Keep the video's coming man thanks there great
And you like 12volt I think you talked about them that you said you wasn't going to do them but what about 12volt Hercules 12volts??? Video and battlefield with other 12 volts
How is this new? This has been out awhile and didn’t you have this already on the channel?
hehehehhh... yeeeaah......:
Hilti vs Flex,
Hilti vs Dewalt (WOOD),
Hilti vs Dewalt (flexvolt advantage),
Hilti vs Dewalt (powerdetect),
Hilti vs Milwaukee 8AH,
Hilti vs Milwaukee (WOOD),
Hammerdrill Brawl,
And it's been seen hanging on the wall in a big handful of other unrelated videos as well 😏
From what it looks like in other posts, I think he sent in an SF4 for repair(subcompact one-handed drill) and then got confused and thought that the SF6-H(two handed hammer drill) was new.
He probably hasn't noticed that he has _two_ now just yet xD
I can't wait to see what happens 😁
This is the 6H, the one I already have is the 4H
@@ManCaverTools No you definitely had this one before. You have several videos with it. You broke the chuck in one video.
I know of a task that will push that to the Max. I call it the Tools with SoAlz challenge.
That hilti looks good maybe I should start to review them 😎 seriously I have a lot of battery platform already but Hilti would be a nice edition🤙
The motor sounds good Dave 🤔
Very good, you are doing great job. Love when you put her and ming to the channel change. It will post it and pay off big
You have to do a Hilti versus flex. I think this would beat the flex.
Stay safe out there Man Caver Tools
I wouldn't call the 40v Makita old. Also you never need to break the tools in, they do that at the factory.
Did you buy that for the @Tools with SoAlz challenge😎🌞😎🌞😎
I'm hoping so
@@ToolswithSoAlz me too, I'd love to see that Hilti in your challenge😉😉😉
@@tedmcdonald3377 I have a feeling it would come up about 2 inches short.
@@ToolswithSoAlz 😂🤣😂🤣😂
Dave, I've got to know; when you are saying, "Ready? Go, " are you speaking to someone else, or yourself?
He’s talking to us.
Hilti looks cheap but I can’t say it’s not powerful enough to get the jobs done
You are tripping
Hilti will outlast all the other combi's out there. They are built to last! I have a Hilti SDS that I got 2nd hand 35 years ago and it's still as sweet as when I got it off the contractor who upgraded to a bigger Hilti.
Dave.
Show!!!!
I never thought Hilti worth the cost. They provide some at work and they are nice, but I would never buy one
In Europe Hilti sell only to companies, with no exception. They have a 2 year unlimited waranty that covers any wear, unlike other brands that deny waranty for heavy industrial wear, and Hilti asure service for another 20 years with very fast repair and return waranty or tool replacement. Also altrough not cheap when ading batterys, charger and case, Hilti being made in China - even at the highest standard - are less expensive then Festool, Fein, Mafell, Rems, and with the new brushless models is in line or even cheaper then Metabo, Flex Europe and even Makita. Makita even has wey more expensive models in the so coled 40V max line. And even in the 18V line, Makita DDF/DHP 486 is more expensive then SF 6 / 6H-A22, and Hilti is wey better made. But Hilti is heavyer, wey too heavy, more so that you need to use the 8Ah pack or some older 5,2Ah, to not abuse the battery with more the 42 amps drain - and the 4Ah compact with only one row of 21700 cells is not a good idea for this tool, and that when Makita is already wey too heavy... The only Hilti that has both decent weight and also decent torque, on the low side but usable, is SF 2-A12 @ 4Ah compact with 21700 cells. Is spect 21 Nm soft, 34 hard, in real life reach not much more the 15 Nm in speed one, good enough, but that model altrough also pretty new, can benefit more from an upgrade for more torque, more so that it has those nice 4Ah packs that can sustain 40+ A drain, and 25A or so woud be enough for 25 Nm soft torque like Dewalt DCD 701 and new Makita DDF/DHP 487.
DEK in Czechia sells Hilti to anyone, including individual customers.
Also if we compare comparable tool models, Hitli is not less expensive than Festool. Quite the opposite. But they don't have much overlap. Hilti is more about concrete and construction, Festool is more about precision woodworking.
@@marsdeimos4301 Czechia is an exception for both brands. Festool is even made in Czechia for a year or so, not in Germany anymore, and the newer Festool battery packs are made in China not in Poland anymore. In other countrys Festool is wey more expensive then Hilti, and I woud not use Festool drills even if given to me free, except maybe older T12 but with a newer Li-ion compact pack. T18 is wey to heavy even with 3Ah compact when is 1,5 Kg without chuck, so is stupid heavy with chuck for the provided torque, and even those 35 Nm soft torque are limited by electronic protection even in drill mode. And the new 4Ah compact packs are also stupid heavy in a fashion similar to Hilti - sure from impact protection, but still - stupid heavy. And 5.2 even more... DRC/PDC even more so are wey to heavy and enter in protection wey to fast, and TDC/TPC are even wey worse - protection mode enter even faster and the true reached torque is lower then DRC/PDC. And those new ones are very heavy and very noisy. And CXS is ubber crapp, can't drive flush all the time 4x30mm in chipboard in speed 1 where is very slow, only one in three, and not even talking about 4x50 or 4,5 x something. And the magnet from the angled head drop after some light use...And that when Bosch GSR 10,8-2-Li/12V-15 Heavy duty, FC and not FC, cand drive with no problem in speed 2. But I have a lot of Festool branded systainers, dozens..., even if those are also very expensive and also very crappy - not even comparable to DeWalt Tough. For location work I use more Bosch Lboxx first gen, DeWalt tough, other Makita and Bosch cases, and even some Frstool sometimes, but I rather use Festool systainers only for fix storage.
@@marsdeimos4301 SF 6/6H-A22 in my country is more then 150 USD - like is in USA, but still less then Hilti. SF 6H-A22 with no batterys and no charger but with case is ~ 325.7 Euro including 19% VAT - and, and ~ 283 Euro without the case, also with no battery and no charger but VAT included. The best price I foud, well lower then average for Festool TPC that is ubber crapp, basic with no angled head, no battery and no charger, but with systainer and VAT is ~350,5 Euro - and battery packs are also expensive, needs charger to, etc. With charger and one 4Ah compact and one 5.2 Ah is 810.3 Euro, and 4Ah compact with one row of 21700 cells is stupid for high drain tools like it's also the case for Hilti that is even more powerfull.
Hilti vs Ryobi
Please dont say "Time" evertime!!!
👍🏻🍩☕🍩☕☕🐶
Not gonna lie, the hilti is way underpowered
For being the third model down from the top on the Hilti line, SF 6/6H-A22 is more like overkill power wise, 65 Nm soft torque in speed 1, and 80 Nm hard torque ( on all drills hard torque is reached at hard stop in shock in speed 2 @ full RPM from the moment of inertia and kinetic energy that is in relation with the speed sqared, so in most cases is good to brake screws and destroy materials...). 65 Nm soft torque is the spec for top of the 18V line Makita, DDF/DHP 486. 481 is spect to 60 Nm soft and 458 to 58 Nm.
Over SF 6 / 6H- A22 Hilti has SF 8M-A22 with 4 speed gear, and top of the line is SF 10W-A22 ATC. But the never ending problem with Hilti is the weight to power ratio, and SF6 is wey too heavy, even heavyer then Makita DDF/DHP458/481/486, and that even when using the Hilti 4Ah compact pack shown here, that uses only one row of 21700 cells, that is abused with wey more then 42A current so is not a good idea, and with the 8Ah pack the weight is absurdly high. The only Hilti that has decent weight and also decent torque is SF 2-A12 with 4Ah compact, in spect 21 Nm soft torque ( 34 hard), but reach not a lot more the 15Nm, still decent anywey. That model is also relatively new, but can benefit more of an upgrade for higher torque, and with those 4Ah packs can also sustain higher amps drain.
@@loochan325 hilti is ass. You’re just paying for the warranty, they are vastly overpriced for the power you get. They’re slow, so when I’m getting paid on the job site to get things done I’ll stick with red and yellow and blue lmao anything but hilti
@@P_steez I use mostly some select Bosch heavy duty, plus some good Makita models, some Fein, some Mafell, some Festool, some DeWalt, some Hilti, some Atlas Copco, but never crappy Milfucky fully own chinesium brand that brake in 6 months. Top of the 18V line Milfucky is lighter, but less reliable and has expensive parts so not worth the cost even if you can get the spare parts.
@@loochan325 I use a Dewalt hammer drill and Milwaukee’s 18v impact when framing and they’re two of the best drills on the market, vastly superior to the hilti and I have never once had a problem with their reliability. Hilti is frankly a brand I’m just completely disinterested in this point in time until they step it up
@@P_steez Hi Parker, I have this Hilti and the Gen 3 Milwaukee. The Hilti is a lot more powerful than the Milwauke, plus the Hilti build quality is far superior. The triggers play up on all my Milwaukee gear!
Dave.
Silent video. Sound so....