Keyless Chucks

   / Keyless Chucks #21  
I have two at home. Both are 18V cordless. A Milwaukee and a Ryobi. At work I have a 20V Dewalt. All have keyless chucks and haven't had any problems with any of them.

I do have two corded drills at home with keyed chucks (both Black and Decker) but haven't used them in years. They have the 3/8" chuck and I use a lot of drill bits larger than that which is why they aren't used.
 
   / Keyless Chucks #22  
My Craftsman half inch hammer drill has the first and only keyless chuck I've ever personally owned. The drill hasn't seen a lot of use, but I've sure been happy with this keyless chuck so far. The fact that the manual has good, illustrated directions for removing and re-installing the chuck tends to make me wonder if they expect owners to not like it or have a problem with it.

When I was repairing mechanics' air tools, I had some air powered drills come in for me to remove the keyless chuck and put a keyed one on. Apparently the mechanics who owned them didn't know how to remove the chuck and they may have not known how to use it properly.
 
   / Keyless Chucks #23  
I have the DeWalt 3/8" corded DWD115 8 amp. Works great and is powerful.
 
   / Keyless Chucks #24  
I have a couple of 1/2" Keyed drills, a Makita and a Milwaukee angle drill. It seams like it's the bits that are the problem, some drill bits are softer than others and just like to slip. For them I'll just tighten them as tight as I can with leverage on the key.
 
   / Keyless Chucks #25  
After much bragging about keyless chucks by my friends I finally went down and bought a 3/8" church for and old drill I had laying around. I would never buy another one unless somebody shower me theirs and demonstrated how great it is. It is always slipping after I start drilling hard. And I do tighten the chuck as hard as I can, and I'm a big guy. At least with a keyed chuck you can turn it tight as you can.
 
   / Keyless Chucks #26  
After much bragging about keyless chucks by my friends I finally went down and bought a 3/8" church for and old drill I had laying around. I would never buy another one unless somebody shower me theirs and demonstrated how great it is. It is always slipping after I start drilling hard. And I do tighten the chuck as hard as I can, and I'm a big guy. At least with a keyed chuck you can turn it tight as you can.

What brand of chuck? Model number?
 
   / Keyless Chucks #28  
I can't read on the chuck what kind it is, but it seems like it is a Jacobs 3/8" chuck. I can read a little on the plastic part but not enough to get precise info. The next time I'm in the store I'll check it out.

or even a picture would narrow it down.
 
   / Keyless Chucks #29  

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   / Keyless Chucks #30  
Here you go. It didn't work very well right from the get-go.

I'm pretty sure that's the old style that just worked ok. the new style ratchets down on the bit, you can hear it click tighter as you put more force into it. My Milwaukee will crank down tight enough on my worst slipping bit that it will wrench out of your hand when getting stuck while drilling. It also helps that my drill locks the motor when twisting the chuck. I bet the drill setup you have means you need to put a hand on the plastic piece and the other hand on the small knurled metal piece to tighten it to the max.
 

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