🔧 Scrape Your Way to Perfection!
The SDS-Plus Floor Scraper is a robust 10" scaling chisel designed for use with SDS-Plus rotary hammers. Made from durable chromium-vanadium steel, it excels in removing ceramic tiles, thinset, and other stubborn adhesives, making it an essential tool for any renovation project.
Blade Material | Alloy Steel, Chromium-Vanadium Steel |
Handle Material | Wood |
F**M
Sacar pega
Es muy bueno para sacar pega vieja del piso y de la pared
G**O
se desvarato en media hora de trabajo
no resistio al trabajo duro 35 minutos de trabajarlo se salieron los tornillos trate de apretarlos y a los 5 minutos se desbarato creo q deverian de adaptarles otro tipo de tornillos o chaparlos
D**K
Thin but strong, great to get under tile
Solid chisel! Nice and wide to pry up tiles. This chisel has the "SDS-Plus" style shaft = you need to have a rotary hammer that uses SDS-Plus style bits. I used it to pry up some vinyl tiles which was a bit overkill for the vinyl tiles. It was taking off the first layer of plywood too if I kept pushing.Not that something like this chisel would get damaged in transit, but still, it was packed nicely. The chisel has some oil residue on it which is typical. I put a small dab of grease (the grease came w/my rotary hammer) on the SDS-Plus end of the chisel just to be safe. It worked great and the chisel edge is still pristine. I'll provide an update once I get to put it through some more challenging tasks (e.g. tile floor removal, thinset removal, etc.)NOTE: If you have a "regular" hammer drill that you hand tighten the 3 grips down onto the bit, this will not work with that. This will not work with SDS-Max style rotary hammers either.And just to clear up some confusion if you are early in your tool journey:Impact Driver = designed to drive screws/bolts, the "impact" is not towards the work surface, it is a rotational impact. Think of the "impact" force as if you had a big socket wrench on a bolt head and instead of applying more torque using your hand/arm to rotate the wrench, you instead used your hammer to rapidly whack the outside end of the socket wrench to help it spin/tighten the bolt.Regular Drill = spins only, uses a 3-paw chuck to hold a wide variety of drill bits. If you're still putting your #2 phillips bit into your drill and using that to drive screws, go get an impact driver immediately :) (Kobalt brand from Lowes, Ridgid brand at Home Depot, Ryobi, maybe even harbor freight, any brand!)Hammer Drill = think of it like a regular drill that spins but also can be put in "hammer" mode so it vibrates/buzzes as it spins to help carbide tipped masonry bits work better. Works OK for the occasional small (1/2-inch diameter is usually the max) drilling in masonry.Rotary Hammer = think of it like a small jackhammer that rotates. Most can switch modes from drill only, drill and hammer, or hammer only. Note the "hammer" setting on the rotary hammer is like a mini-jackhammer, providing a hard impact towards the work surface whereas the "hammer" in hammer drill is just to give it a cool name...the "hammer" action in the hammer drill is minimal, more like a buzz/vibration.
S**N
Worked well
This is a very good floor scrapper but it would be nice if the handle was a little longer , other than that , super durable
B**Y
My first thought was too bad this is not for my big rotohammer
(Update: I found a most unusual use for this tool. I had put foam pieces in my foundation vents and would have had to destroy them to get them out. I was trying everything, but they only started to fall apart. Then I saw this tool and in carefully wedging it in one side and wiggling each of the foam plugs popped out. And there were a lot of them.I have used this in construction and it does well, unless there are screws or nails in the way. Then it bumps up against them and doesn't do much. For things like particleboard underlayment I found a much narrower, heftier, wedged hammerdrill bit worked better. However, for popping tiles this works very well.)But after giving it a good looking over, including disassembly, I came to the conclusion it is the appropriate size and toughness for the smaller units. It likely would not have enough heft if it had a heavy hammer pounding on it. That said, it is perfect for quick demolition and popping tiles off of sheetrock and backerboard and plywood.I like that the blade can be easily sharpened on the grinder, and should it become a complete disaster, it is easy to replace. Too many integrated tools that work under a lot of stress are one-piece, and any breakage means purchasing a whole new unit.I gave it a quick test run and I could have used this fitting many times tearing things apart. The remodel I just started yesterday I was in there tearing out things with a pry bar and hammer. I'm taking this with now. The result might not be pretty, but demolition rarely is. Good tool, and well made.
J**E
Glue goes off the floor so much easier with tools like this.
Upfront disclosure: I received this through the Amazon Vine Program for review.We have been replacing an old floor in one of the rooms of our house which had two layers of flooring on it, linoleum from the 1970's covering up the original vinyl composite flooring from the houses original build in 1948. That original VC flooring was glued down with mastic which is really a pain to remove. Steam it up and scrape it but that takes a lot of time and effort. Enter this tool. This securely pops into my SDS-plus hammer drill and allows me to quickly scrape off the flooring with a power tool. Steaming still helps loosen the material but it is so much less work to use the power tool with this attachment. Great tool, especially when removing adhesive from concrete. Highly recommended.
T**E
simple and effective
Basically, it's a blade bolted to an SDS-Plus attachment. It fits fine in my Dewalt tool and in my no-name off brand tool. What's particularly nice is that the blade can be unbolted for replacement when it gets beat up beyond repair. And it will get beat up. For sharpening, I ended up just using a file. The a a sharp blade works better than a wide chisel for most textures I've used it on. For some real obnoxious texturing a wide chisel was good for knocking down the worst parts and the blade was good for getting the scraping complete. The chisel was too brutal for the final scrapping bit.
S**Y
Worked for what I needed it for.
I ordered this to try to chip off some adhesive from old ceramic floor tiles. I thought this technique might be better than using a grinder and creating a dusty me. It took a few minutes to figure out the best "method" but I figured it out. There may be other ways to do this, but this did work to knock down the height in a few places so I can now install new tile.
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