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Your cart is empty.Satisfied consumer
Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2025
Awesome auger! I use it on the farm to bust ice on top of water tanks for animals! And you still have it for other uses such as planting gardens and bulbs!
Customer
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 3, 2025
Good, does what it’s designed to do
Steven Eckert
Reviewed in Canada on February 23, 2025
Works well, good length.Strong product. I have mostly clay in my yard, which is why I chose to go this route and it did a good job.
ms. katharine e. dubois
Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2025
I bought one to try for ice fishing based on the description that it was an ice auger. The auger I received was useless for this purpose. Maybe it would be useful for planting flower bulbs in loose earth, but my example was not capable of drilling holes in ice.After trying to drill the first hole and barely being able to penetrate the surface of the ice, I gave up and realized this is a flower bulb planter relabeled as an ice auger. Don't waste your money.
Michelle
Reviewed in Canada on January 24, 2025
I'm glad we tested this out in a frozen water trough before relying on it out at the lake ice fishing...definitely NOT made for augering ice.
3RMan
Reviewed in the United States on January 16, 2025
This tool works well and it substantially reduced the time it took to make holes for 6 posts.
Jonathan
Reviewed in the United States on August 5, 2024
Used this to assist in digging holes for fence post. Made it easy to break up dirt. Useless against rocks though. Also used it to dig around an old tree stump and an in ground basketball post. My only complaint is the bit holder. I am not sure if it's my drill or the bit but it started to slip after so many uses. Got my moneys worth though.
Kat S.
Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2024
Made planting fun, it powers right through dirt of all types, leaving nicely ground pile around the hole, even very wet soil. I have some rocks, 1 to 2 inches in size in some areas I dug and it pulled them up with no damage.
Gavin
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2024
It came loose from my dads drill when trying to make holes in ice. Here is where the 3 stars are coming in handy. The very top that goes in the dirt, snow, ice, or whatever your using for, isn't sharp at all!
Customer
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 21, 2024
Very fast service nice company to do business with solid tool
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on October 26, 2024
Works great. Good quality. Cut through rocky clay with no issue where others would just break.
Marion
Reviewed in Canada on October 10, 2024
works wonderfully for digging out very deep roots
rani
Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2023
I didn’t even know you could buy stuff like this for a home drill until a couple of months ago. My dad supplied me with two that looked dubious, more like cement or paint mixers than augers, but he insisted they’d work. I cranked them tightly into my trusty drill, had at it on the red clay of my previously unlandscaped yard, and… major fail. They bounced off the soil, didn’t manage to penetrate it.But that made me think there were legitimate versions out there, which led to an online search, which led right here. I purchased a few different sizes and types, not sure what I’d really need; this was the first one I tried, and quite honestly, I don’t need to try anything else!Of note: my battery powered 20V regular drill did not really grip this thing all that well, and it didn’t feel safe using it with that. I had to upgrade to a hammer drill, still battery powered, and then we got somewhere. The hammer drill chuck still loosened a touch with use, but I could retighten it easily. I had to put it on hammer mode, not on drill mode, to make it work properly; that’s the key difference.This auger is sharp, and it throws and pulverizes even the red clay so nicely that it was no problem after using it to mix in my compost/manure blend to amend the soil. I contrast this with the eleven hand-dug holes I had done prior to the arrival of my new drill, and… night and day.First day with this thing, I used it to plant sixteen peony bulbs without breaking a sweat. In red clay dirt that has never been gardened and has no topsoil, but was just tilled for the first six inches. I didn’t just drill a 4 inch hole; I widened it with the auger as well, because I was trying to give the roots a fighting chance against the clay. It was child’s play with this thing and the hammer drill (use the 90 degree handle, btw, or the torque it puts out could injure your wrist, believe me).Then I had six more roses to plant the next day. Much bigger holes, bare-root plants… I wanted about 12 inches across and 8 inches deep. And this time, I was tired from the day before (the manual digging part, not the use of the tool), and I didn’t want to have to till on the slope again, because that was a pain. So, I decided to try the auger without tilling first, straight into hard/rocky red clay. I just made a first hole with this auger, then started making more around that to get my rough width, and then went back for more depth. I don’t mix the compost in with this; it throws the dirt up and around and would waste it. For that, a fork or a hand tiller is perfect; this auger breaks up the soil so much, as I said, that mixing is really satisfying afterward. I use the hand tiller to drag in and break up clay around the edge of the hole, as well as to get a bit deeper as I’m mixing, but all the hard work is done by the auger first.Six holes of that size, plus another eight peonies, done in about two hours and twenty minutes, including planting, watering, and mulch! Considering I was still sore from digging all those holes the day before, this was a godsend.I think the specific traits that make this auger worth getting, if you have hard red clay soil especially, are the following: pointy tip instead of blunt to help you center and get started, sharp/thin edged starter blades (but they still threw up the rocks, no problem), and the generous 4 inch diameter with 16 inch length.I was bummed that all the augers I was seeing for drills were so short/not very wide, but when I think of what this was like to use with that hammer drill, I realize any bigger a diameter would be risky with that tool, and longer length just gives it more risk of breaking along the shaft from all that torque. This is a great find, and I’m no longer dreading planting all the shrubs I’ve accumulated for the brand new landscape, around 250 feet in length and on a slope, all red clay. I think my hand digging days are done; if nothing else, I’d start with this little guy, go as far as I can, and then augment with shovel or post-digger and the hand tiller.Safety notes: WEAR EYE PROTECTION. WEAR LONG BOOTS. Seriously. This thing throws up rocks and dirt like they’re meant to fly. I had to remind myself to keep my mouth closed while I worked, so I didn’t have to taste clay. Also, USE THE 90 DEGREE HANDLE WITH THE HAMMER DRILL. That’s why it’s there; holding the drill with one hand to operate it with something like this risks a really bad wrist sprain or even a fracture from the torque, and there goes your gardening season. USE VARIABLE PRESSURE ON THE TRIGGER. It is hard not to just go full speed, but I think it gives you better control and throws the dirt less far away if you need it for mixing back in.Anyway, this thing is wonderful, and if mine punks out eventually, with all I’m asking of it, I’d get another of the same. The paint on the chuck end started peeling immediately, so I was bummed at first, but with how well it digs, I really don’t care now!!! Hopefully it won’t rust, but even if it does a bit, I’ll deal with it. The business end doesn’t have any significant paint flaking or chipping despite all the rocks I encountered, so I’m not sure why the hex end flaked almost immediately when I tried it in a chuck… again, small issue that wasn’t even worth knocking off a star, when I look at how well this thing worked for me.Of note, I’m a disabled woman with not the best hand strength or endurance, and with some unpleasant carpal tunnel syndrome in my dominant hand. This thing made it possible for all the things I bought on my nursery bender to go into the ground before I dropped from exhaustion. Still have another 150 feet of slope to landscape, and I’m okay with that now!
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