spclark said:
CatShooter said:
I am thinking of getting a 12 volt 200 rpm motor on ebay and a 12 volt power source and building something - cuz I don't need the high torque of a driver, and I am tired of buying a new one every 4 months.
Uh, yeah I can see where that'd get kinda tiresome. Had that Milwaukee for about 30 years now, new cord every ten years....
Point your browser at this:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/100-RPM-115-VOLT-AC-1-10-HP-GEARMOTOR-MERKLE-KORFF-5-1219-/380922196537?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item58b0bb7239
- 110 VAC & a good price. Just needs an adapter to fit the shaft to your case holder-of choice.
That motor is tooooo awkward to hand hold. Tooooo noisy (it'll drown out the TV), and who needs 1/10 of a horsepower to spin a case.
I am thinking more along something like this.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/6V-DC-200RPM-High-Torque-Electric-Gear-Box-Motor-/361171264110?
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amlevin said:
CatShooter said:
Light and long lasting batteries are mutually exclusive. Why not take a nice light cordless that fits your needs then modify it. Replace the battery with a power cord that runs to a Power supply. A simple transformer that provides the proper voltage, a bridge rectifier capable of handling the current, and that's all you need. Will need to be larger than a "Wall Wart" but there are plenty of inexpensive options available online.
Can also be as simple as a small motorcycle battery (If your cordless is in the 6v or 12v range) with a charger attached so it can catch up during "pauses for the cause".
I know about the battery limits, but I would at least like them to supply the use that they were designed to supply...
... these are soooo cheap that they loose their capacity to be recharged to 100% after maybe 20 or 30 hours - when it was new, I could do 400 or so cases before it needed to be recharged, now it is maybe 50 or 60-ish
When the second driver died, I took it apart to see if it could be converted with a outside power source, and the way it was designed, was a mess. It had 3 planetary drives stacked in a row (which was where all the noise comes from), and when I opened the body, I had eleventeen million little gears come out, all loaded with gooey grease.
Putting Humpty Dumpty back together again would have been a walk in the park, compared to this sucka
So, I am gonna buy one of these...
http://www.ebay.com/itm/6V-DC-200RPM-High-Torque-Electric-Gear-Box-Motor-/361171264110?
... and fit it in the body of a dead power driver, and hard wire it to a wall wart, and use the on/off switch in the driver... I think it will work out OK.