Armed Polite Society
Main Forums => The Roundtable => Topic started by: Grandpa Shooter on January 03, 2010, 08:46:48 PM
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My rotary hammer drill came with a small jar of grease with no markings on it. I am trying to get through a slab of cement and am using a lot of grease. I have used all of what it came with and need to buy more. A search of automotive suppliers, lumber and building supply companies and a general search on the net are leaving me empty handed.
Can any of you steer me right? It is a 1" heavy duty unit and the cement is eating me and it up. Help?
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Bosch hammer grease:
http://www.bosch.com.my/content/language1/html/6669.htm (Scroll down)
Makita:
http://cooltoolsandmore.info/makita-a90582-hammer-grease
Just search for "rotary hammer grease".
Of course, that's just grease that is specifically labeled for a rotary hammer. Since I don't have one of my own, I couldn't tell you what to use or what would be similar and would work.
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Wait, are you using it like a cutting oil? I just roto-hammer dry. Or are you just needing to lube your hammer that often? I admit I'm not sur what you mean here.
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Wait, are you using it like a cutting oil? I just roto-hammer dry. Or are you just needing to lube your hammer that often? I admit I'm not sur what you mean here.
Mine has a grease cup built into it and uses a thick yellowish grease like tallow. It lubes the hammer gears as well as the splined shaft. When using it continuously as we are to drill 1" holes to weaken the slab before breaking it up, it goes through the grease quickly.
Bosch hammer grease:
http://www.bosch.com.my/content/language1/html/6669.htm (Scroll down)
Makita:
http://cooltoolsandmore.info/makita-a90582-hammer-grease
Just search for "rotary hammer grease".
Of course, that's just grease that is specifically labeled for a rotary hammer. Since I don't have one of my own, I couldn't tell you what to use or what would be similar and would work.
Those are the two I found also, but did not see a link to any retailers. I specifically checked Auto Zone, Ace Hardware, Home Depot, Lowe's and found it in 55 gallon drums at industrial supply houses, but not in a small tub to scoop into my grease cup.
Thanks for trying to help.
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i've got a heavy duty bosch rotary demolition hammer(which can drill as well) and grease usage is not an issue. there is a rubber cup that slides up onto the bit to cover the innards-it's for kepping out rock dust which isn't the best lube for gears and such. mine's 20yrs old though, so tech may have advanced since that day. does seem that your drill must be getting pretty hot to liquefy the grease so much it will run out. you have to warm mine up a few minutes to break the hammer mechanism free of grease before you start on a cool day.
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i've got a heavy duty bosch rotary demolition hammer(which can drill as well) and grease usage is not an issue. there is a rubber cup that slides up onto the bit to cover the innards-it's for kepping out rock dust which isn't the best lube for gears and such. mine's 20yrs old though, so tech may have advanced since that day. does seem that your drill must be getting pretty hot to liquify the grease so much it will run out. you have to warm mine up a few minutes to break the hammer mechanism free of grease before you start on a cool day.
Yup, you got it. 50 year old Portland is dense stuff, the aggregate in it is as much a 1" diameter stone. I don't like waiting around, so it is likely I am pushing it some. I may just give up and drop a 1/4 stick in one of the holes. Just kidding folks, it wouldn't take a quarter stick anyway.
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if you blast indoors open the windows .... don't ask
and do it when the homeowners away heck i try to get em to leave or at least go outside before i bust up a cast iron tub
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Sweet lord.... I knew I couldn't have been the only one to properly use explosives to break things.... indoors. =D
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Wow, that's quite interesting. I'll have to check our Bosch roto-hammer at work, I didn't see a cup but I may have overlooked it. Oddly enough I'm still having trouble using my left thumb after Mr Rotohammer said "Oh hai" when I was trying to break a hole for 2 1/2" pipe through a block wall.
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surprised they're not using a molybdenium grease for that job. moly's tend to hold up better under extreme load and heat situations.
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Wow, that's quite interesting. I'll have to check our Bosch roto-hammer at work, I didn't see a cup but I may have overlooked it. Oddly enough I'm still having trouble using my left thumb after Mr Rotohammer said "Oh hai" when I was trying to break a hole for 2 1/2" pipe through a block wall.
i watched a guy on a jobsite lock the trigger on a big drill with a side handle that removed his teeth when the bit hung up
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i watched a guy on a jobsite lock the trigger on a big drill with a side handle that removed his teeth when the bit hung up
Yup, I know about that stuff. I have been bracing the hammer with my right knee. Well I was until the kick from the body of the tool bruised my knee so bad I can barely walk.
Went to Home Dumpit this AM and rented a large electric Hilti chisel. It is going through the cement but produces so much dust it fills up the whole room. Just what I need with bad lungs from the service, along with a bunch of other fun stuff.
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Just what I need with bad lungs from the service, along with a bunch of other fun stuff.
Sounds like you need a breathing mask. More money, but you can get forced air ones if your lung strength is reduced.
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i run a hose to a shop vac leave vac outside nozzle on ground near the destruction doesn't get it all but it helps or if theres a floor drain i run water to keep dust down
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Sounds like you need a breathing mask. More money, but you can get forced air ones if your lung strength is reduced.
Did one better than that. My son came over to help out and brought two special masks with little breather vents in them and then insisted he do most of the chiseling. I guess letting him live all these years is paying off after all.
For anyone who wants the inside scoop, I don't have the normal amount of cilia to sweep the crud up out of my lungs. I breath ok unless I am getting congested from particulates or pollution. Moving out of the Valley helped but I have been down here or in Texas since before Thanksgiving. This last week has been high on the pollution index. Got the chiseling done today so now its just plumbing, cement work, wiring, tile and finish carpentry to go. I'm busier now than I was before I retired. It's amazing how many friends you get after you retire.
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One of the things I hated about AZ was how much dust was always in the air. With very little rain to knock it (and pollution) down, the AQ is always terrible. I love how clean the air is in the PNW.
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One of the things I hated about AZ was how much dust was always in the air. With very little rain to knock it (and pollution) down, the AQ is always terrible. I love how clean the air is in the PNW.
Yeah, I was down there (Valley of the Gun) last almost 10 years ago. It was like spending a week in hell. Brown air, asphalt, concrete, heat, and constant noise. I can't believe people actually live in places like that :O
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Sweet lord.... I knew I couldn't have been the only one to properly use explosives to break things.... indoors. =D
I just HAVE to ask what led up to you using explosives to break stuff while indoors? What did you break? What were you using, and how much of it? =D
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I had the same problem with my Bosch 11247 BoschHammer.
Pull the six screws on the top cover and drain the oil (50cc is what it should be, mine had about 30cc).
I used auto gear oil 90wt but I think any gear oil will do.
You can then unhook the connecting rod and pull the piston out.
Clean it off and cover it with Hi-temp lithium wheel bearing grease (for disc brake axles). Usually an opaque tan color.
Then put about a heaping teaspoon of the grease inside the cylinder, smear grease around the cylinder walls. This grease acts as the buffer to the striker.
Reinstall piston.
Also, note your O ring gasket may have expanded as mine did. You can carefully clean the oil it off with solvent, cut the O-ring to proper size and then re-seal the ends with a drop of CA or crazy glue. If you leave the O-ring too long it will bind in the groove and leaks will occur.
Make sure to index the Drill/Hammer knob on the shift shaft collar when re-installing the top.
If it seems better but not strong enough, try adding a little more grease (took me 3 tries).
Hope this helps as no one else seems to mention common lubes we already have in the garage.
Cheers,
Kirb
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My favorite overall grease is Lucas Red and Tacky.... I don't know if it will melt enough to flow tho... It works fine with some high pressure/temp applications in firearms...
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Paging Captain Thread Necro ...
Really? An eleven year old thread about grease needs to be revived?
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Some of the names bring back memories.
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Paging Captain Thread Necro ...
Really? An eleven year old thread about grease needs to be revived?
Why not? At least it is pertinent to something useful and overall good advice, and by the way, I used the electric hammer again recently.
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My B&D hammer drill doesn't have any fixtures for lubricating it. Manual says it's adequately lubricated from the factory...
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I rub axle grease on my SDS plus bits if I am going to hammer with them.