I saw the interesting observation that rotation stop chiselling is hard on sds drills because it tends to be constant and prolonged labour compared to drill a hole, rest while you reposition, drill another hole, and usually only a few holes, couple of dozen maybe, being drilled.
For serious masonry work SDS is a game changer vs the hammer action on old drills or modern cordless combis.
Mine is Bosch blue corded. The £150 ish class. Nice and has swappable SDS and jacobs chucks so I only need to store one corded drill, not 2.
I like the newer designs that puts the motor near vertical to shorten the tool. That is a great feature that I would want if I was buying again.
The length of my drill with a big bit was a real constraint when drilling a wall understairs.
I couldn't drill as high up the wall as I would have liked because the stair limited me from behind.
I couln't use this pair up a ladder either without much faff and a standoff.
Interesting: this marcrist 28mm dry diamond core drill is impact rated. Many diamond cores aren't. On the one occasion I hit something hard within the wall and progress stopped in conventional drilling, turning on the impact blasted the core through the wall in maybe 10 seconds.