Description
Knock out concrete, brick, and masonry repairs with the OX Pro Concrete Chisel. The 3/4″ cutting edge on a 12″ shaft gives you the reach for slab work, the control for tight-corner demo, and the impact resistance for handheld breaker work without a rotary hammer.
Model: OX-P092501 · Cutting Edge: 3/4″ (19 mm) · Length: 12″ (300 mm) · Vendor: OX
Why This Chisel?
- Hardened, tempered steel: built for repeated hammer impact — the cutting edge holds up where bargain chisels mushroom and split
- 3/4″ cutting edge: the standard utility size for chasing mortar joints, breaking up small slab sections, and chipping out flatwork repairs
- 12″ shaft: long enough to keep your striking hand clear of the work, short enough for control in tight spaces
- Safety guard: protects the striking hand and reduces splinter risk — an OX Pro standard, not an aftermarket add-on
- Backed by OX: manufacturer warranty per OX Tools’ standard policy
Best For
- Concrete demolition: breaking up small slab sections, footings, and edge work where a 60-lb breaker is overkill
- Brick & mortar removal: chasing out failed joints for repointing, removing damaged bricks for spot replacement
- Stone splitting: shaping fieldstone, splitting dimensional stone, dressing rough faces on natural stone steps and walls
- Tile demo: popping ceramic and stone tile off concrete or backerboard
- Form & flashing prep: chipping out concrete from form ties, cutting reglets in masonry walls for flashing
Specifications
- Cutting Edge Width: 3/4″ (19 mm)
- Overall Length: 12″ (300 mm)
- Material: Hardened, tempered steel
- Safety Guard: Included
- Use: Concrete, brick, block, mortar, dimensional stone
- Strike With: Mash hammer, lump hammer, or club hammer (NOT a finish hammer)
Care & Use
- Wear safety glasses with side shields and chemical-resistant gloves — concrete dust is silica
- Strike only with a mash/club hammer — finish hammers can chip and the striking face won’t hold up
- Inspect the cutting edge before each use — mushroomed strike face means it’s time to dress or retire the chisel
- If the strike face starts to mushroom, dress the burr off with a grinder or replace — flying steel chips are a real injury risk
- Never use the chisel as a pry bar — the steel is hardened and brittle in lateral loading
