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  2. Bore Through Tough Concrete and Brick With These Masonry ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/bore-tough-concrete-brick...

    Carbide-Tipped Rotary Hammer Masonry Drill Bit Set. For heavy-duty applications that require the power of a rotary hammer drill, this set of Bosch bits is a great choice.

  3. Drill bit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drill_bit

    Masonry bits typically are used with a hammer drill, which hammers the bit into the material being drilled as it rotates; the hammering breaks up the masonry at the drill bit tip, and the rotating flutes carry away the dust. Rotating the bit also brings the cutting edges onto a fresh portion of the hole bottom with every hammer blow.

  4. Annular cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annular_cutter

    A tungsten carbide tipped (TCT) and high-speed steel (HSS) annular cutter (also known as a "core drill" or "hole saw"). An annular cutter (also called a core drill, core cutter, broach cutter, trepanning drill, hole saw, or cup-type cutter) is a form of core drill used to create holes in metal.

  5. Drill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drill

    The rotary hammer (also known as a rotary hammer drill, roto hammer drill or masonry drill). Standard chucks and parallel-shank carbide-tipped drills have been largely superseded by SDS chucks and matching (spline shank) drills, that have been designed to better withstand and transmit the percussive forces. These bits are effective at ...

  6. Core drill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Core_drill

    Core drills are commonly water cooled, and the water also carries away the fine waste as a slurry. [1] For drilling masonry, carbide core drills can be used, but diamond is more successful when cutting through rebar. [2] The earliest core drills were those used by the ancient Egyptians, invented in 3000 BC. [3]

  7. Hammer drill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammer_drill

    Although each blow is of relatively low force, these thousands of blows per minute are more than adequate to break up concrete or brick, using the masonry drill bit's carbide wedge to pulverize it for the spiral flutes to whisk away. For this reason, a hammer drill drills much faster than a regular drill through concrete, brick, and thick lumber.

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