Rhyolith
Established Member
Got another interesting drill here.
I am pretty sure its made by a British company called "Rawl" who I think invented the Rawl Plug and were responsible for masonry drilling products. This is an early example of a hand powered hammer hill, guessing it its 1950-60s.
The Rapper by Rhyolith, on Flickr
The Rapper by Rhyolith, on Flickr
Turning the handle rotates the bit holder and causes that metal cub to ping back and forth, hitting the back of the bit holder spindle like a hammer. Tightening or loosening that wing nut increases or decreases the hammering force respectively, evidently increasing the hammering force comes at a price of it being harder to crank.
I have no bits that fit the holder (think they need to be specific to this drill), so have not been able to test it.
I am pretty sure its made by a British company called "Rawl" who I think invented the Rawl Plug and were responsible for masonry drilling products. This is an early example of a hand powered hammer hill, guessing it its 1950-60s.
The Rapper by Rhyolith, on Flickr
The Rapper by Rhyolith, on Flickr
Turning the handle rotates the bit holder and causes that metal cub to ping back and forth, hitting the back of the bit holder spindle like a hammer. Tightening or loosening that wing nut increases or decreases the hammering force respectively, evidently increasing the hammering force comes at a price of it being harder to crank.
I have no bits that fit the holder (think they need to be specific to this drill), so have not been able to test it.