Forrest747 wrote:Well it is Christmas day and the living room is a sea of wrapping paper carnage. The kids are happy with xboxes and kindle fires. Wife is happy with Brad Paisley and Lady A tickets and dad has a new hand power planer.
Well I was working out in the garge, playing with my new toy and did some dremel work and i noticed it had not working just right. seemed to be binding. do i attempt to see if something has jammed in the brush and armature or will Santa be extra nice to me and get a new dremel. I have had this one about 10 years. Wish it could of lasted a few more. i have been using it alot with this build.
ssrjim wrote:The harbor freight version is a one day tool
that maybe true but after three projects you've spent the money you would have spent on a real tool and got nothing to show for it... there's nothing more expensive that a cheap tool..asianflava wrote:ssrjim wrote:The harbor freight version is a one day tool
If the HF version (of anything) lasts long enough for me to finish the project, then I think it was worth it.
afreegreek wrote:that maybe true but after three projects you've spent the money you would have spent on a real tool and got nothing to show for it... there's nothing more expensive that a cheap tool..asianflava wrote:ssrjim wrote:The harbor freight version is a one day tool
If the HF version (of anything) lasts long enough for me to finish the project, then I think it was worth it.
I buy good tools and use them to put bread on the table.. sure they cost a little more but I've still got them and they still work well.. some with over 30 years of use with nothing more than a set of new brushes..
Shadow Catcher wrote:Not knowing the Dremel, but if it has sleeve bearings rather than ball bearings you may be able to extend its life with some oil/grease. It seems like most/many power tools are built with out quality bearings limiting their life.
afreegreek wrote:that maybe true but after three projects you've spent the money you would have spent on a real tool and got nothing to show for it... there's nothing more expensive that a cheap tool..asianflava wrote:ssrjim wrote:The harbor freight version is a one day tool
If the HF version (of anything) lasts long enough for me to finish the project, then I think it was worth it.
I buy good tools and use them to put bread on the table.. sure they cost a little more but I've still got them and they still work well.. some with over 30 years of use with nothing more than a set of new brushes..
Return to Teardrop Construction Tips & Techniques
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests