
Running plumbing through a concrete floor slab, venting a bathroom extractor fan through a brick wall, installing waste pipes through foundation blockwork, or setting electrical...
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Running plumbing through a concrete floor slab, venting a bathroom extractor fan through a brick wall, installing waste pipes through foundation blockwork, or setting electrical...
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Running a new electrical circuit, data cable, or plumbing line through an existing building often means drilling through walls that are far thicker than they appear. A standard...
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Most rotary hammer bits are designed to drill through a single wall, a single slab, or a single structural member. But construction sometimes demands more: drilling through a...
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Drilling large, precise holes through concrete, reinforced masonry, or natural stone is not something you can do with an ordinary twist bit and a standard drill. These tough...
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A 25 mm (1 inch) hole in concrete is the gateway size for serious structural anchoring — M20 and M24 through-bolts, heavy-duty chemical anchor capsules, and the drill diameter for...
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At 35 mm in diameter and over 600 mm long, this is not a bit you reach for to mount a bracket or hang a picture. This is a heavy-duty SDS-max bit built for serious concrete...
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When a standard two-cutter SDS-max bit starts to dull in hard concrete, progress slows, the bit runs hot, and the operator compensates with more pressure — which accelerates wear...
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Drilling large-diameter holes through reinforced concrete, brick, or block is one of the most demanding tasks a rotary hammer faces. Standard twist drill bits struggle beyond...
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Drilling into concrete, brick, or stone is not the same as drilling into wood or drywall — it takes the right tool, the right bit, and a fair bit of patience. Whether you are...
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For contractors who install fixings in concrete and masonry day in and day out, 10 mm SDS-plus bits are a consumable that disappears from the tool bag at a surprising rate....
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For the professional who drills hundreds of 10 mm holes into concrete every week — the electrician fixing cable tray supports, the plumber mounting pipe clips, the builder...
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When you need a 45 mm hole through a reinforced concrete wall and a solid drill bit would take forever to grind through that much material, a core bit is the answer. Unlike a...
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Drilling into reinforced concrete is one of the most punishing things you can ask a drill bit to do. The bit has to cut through a matrix of cement, sand, and stone aggregate — and...
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When a rotary hammer bit encounters rebar embedded in concrete, the outcome depends almost entirely on the bit's head geometry. A standard 2-cutter bit strikes the steel with one...
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Not every hole drilled into concrete needs to penetrate 30 cm through a structural slab. A huge proportion of professional fixing work — mounting electrical back boxes, installing...
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Drill bits are consumables, not heirlooms. In a professional setting — on a construction site, in a busy fabrication shop, or across a maintenance team servicing multiple...
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For professional contractors whose daily work involves anchoring, fixing, and penetrating concrete, SDS-plus bits in the 16 mm range are essential. This diameter handles M12 and...
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