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A Hammer drill (as distinct from a rotary hammer drill) is a rotary drill with a hammering action. The hammering action provides a short, rapid hammer thrust to pulverize relatively brittle material and provide quicker drilling with less effort. A hammer drill is perfect for drilling holes in masonry or stone. It is also used to drill holes in concrete footings to pin concrete wall forms and to drill holes in concrete floors to pin wall framing.

A hammer drill can either be a drill (such as the one illustrated here), or it can be a replacement chuck that is installed on the power drill. When the drill is set to the "hammer drill" position it allows the chuck to move backward and forward over a short distance, allowing a spring to be compressed. When the spring is compressed, the chuck assembly is pushed as far back as it can go against a small eccentric flange. Any rotation of the chuck causes this flange to push back and reverse the direction of travel. The combined action of the spring, eccentric flange and rotation, push the chuck back away from the body of the drill at regular intervals. Under normal operation this sequence causes the whole assembly to "kick" with each turn, jack-hammering the drill bit into the material as it rotates. This helps to break up the masonry so that it can be removed by the drill bit's flutes. Because of this jack-hammering action, caution should be taken not to blow out the back side of the masonry/concrete where the hole is being drilled. This is especially true when drilling into a concrete roof deck; the jack-hammer action will "blow out" the bottom side of the concrete, leaving a golf ball size crater on the underside of the concrete.

Mechanical hand tools

Schlagbohrmaschine | Klopboor

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Hammer drill".

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