Milwaukee 49-22-1560 1/4-Inch Chuck Attachment

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The Milwaukee 1/4-Inch Chuck Attachment is an ideal replacement chuck and allows the same flexibility in drilling and driving capabilities as a driver drill or corded drill with a 3-jawed chuck. This replacement 1/4-inch chuck comes as standard equipment with Milwaukee 2.4-volt single and 2-speed cordless screwdrivers.
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Technical Details

- Durable 1/4-inch replacement chuck attachment
- Allows similar flexibility in drilling and driving capabilities as a driver drill or corded drill with 3-jawed chuck
- Comes as standard equipment on Milwaukee 2.4-volt cordless screwdrivers
- Designed for professional-grade durability; 3-jawed adjustable chuck
- Weighs 6.4 ounces shipped
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Customer Buzz
 "Milwaukee 49-22-1560 Chuck" 2009-05-21
By P. Johnson (Pengilly, MN USA)
Handy item. Hex drive drill bits are pricy to use, snap one and it is junk. With this 'lil chuck you can use standard shank bits in a hex driver, do a pilot hole, pop out the chuck, pop in a driver bit.

Customer Buzz
 "Very nice drill accessory" 2009-04-10
By J. Sanders
Just the thing for using in a half inch drill for smaller bit sizes rather than having two drills and works nicely in a driver also.

Customer Buzz
 "great product" 2008-12-24
By Helen J. Marcin (largo, florida)
shopped all the local stores trying to find a chuck attachment that met my needs. this chuck is great and so easy to remove and add and is solid.

Customer Buzz
 "Keyless vs Keyed (jacob's) Chuck" 2008-11-24
By Dale N. Scott
Having used both keyed and keyless chucks for many years I can tell you from my experience that an old-fashion Jacob's (keyed) chuck is the most secure. The main drawbacks are: a)Time lost changing bits, b)Keeping the chuck key handy. A GOOD quality keyless chuck will do a descent job of gripping the bit and eliminates the need for a key (Makita makes one). 1/4" hex-shank bits are great for rapid change and will not spin out in any chuck (and eliminate the need for a chuck in a tool (like an impact driver drill) equipped with a quick change collar. The obvious drawback to hex-shank bits is that they will not fit securely in a drill bit sharpener and must be dressed manually (which requires skill, practice and a knowledge of bit dynamics) or replaced (costly & wasteful). I hope potential buyers find this information useful. My 3 star rating is not a reflection on the quality of the product but addresses the convenience enjoyed by using a keyless chuck.

Customer Buzz
 "Exactly what I needed." 2008-11-04
By Erik H. Reppen (Chicago)
I originally bought this with the intention of giving my Yankee-style spiral ratcheting screwdrivers a drilling option. It works okay with my original Yankee from '50s (it's a touch wobbly) but it works great with my modern Schroeder spiral ratcheting driver, which has much tighter, more stable action (Schroeder FYI, is a German precision parts company).



Now it also gets used with my Milwaukee 12-volt sub-compact driver/drill so I can use higher quality drill bits with a wider variety of sizes which makes a world of difference and vastly expands the role of this amazing little power tool.



The keyed chuck and light weight make it a lot more practical of an option than the heavy Makita 1/2" keyless version that relies on drilling at high speeds for a few seconds to lock the bit in. This made it hard to get the bits secure in the Makita with a relatively low-RPM driver, which struck me as kind of a dumb oversight on Makita's part. The Makita was also a bit top-heavy to work well with the Yankees even it did keep the bits secure after using a faster drill to secure the bit.



I still don't get the big deal with keyless chucks. Too many of them don't work very well and I don't want to risk an expensive bit on a loose chuck.



Anyway, Milwaukee couldn't have offered a better adapter for my needs and it was well worth ~20 bucks.


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