Good God man... this is beyond a restoration. It almost looks like you rusted up one really good. Took it apart. Then took apart a new one. Pretended it was the rusted one. Then put the new one back together again.
Very nice job! To avoid that "dry effect" on the chuck (which will probably will turn back into rust I'm afraid) you can also get a darkening effect by simply heating the outside of the chuck (you can put a pin inside the chuck and use a drill to heat it uniformly with a torch while making it spin) and bathing in dark oil (burned/exausted engine oil could work just fine and you can ask it for free to your auto mechanic).. in this way you will also get protection against rust in the future.. if you have a lathe but not a knurling tool you can get a sort of knurling effect on the chuck by first clearing the surface of the latter and then marking it with two crossed thread by exploiting the threading function of the lathe with an appropriate threading step (narrow enough and without exeeding with the deep.. make some test on a scrap piece first). Thank you again for the nice video! G
He's done that a lot before. Using the heat and oil version. What he used in the video is the chemical version to achieve the same result (it was not paint). It will not rust.
@@alvinlebon9368 Hi, Thank you, yes I know blueing tecniques very well, and that's why my suggestion.. cold blueing, which is commonly used for rifles and other guns require the blued metal to be constantly oiled. The blueing technique used in these videos I suppose is based on nitric and hydrocloridric acids.. which used alone are not good for a "cold" blueing process.. indeed their application alone will imply the creation of red oxide and the rise of rust.. these pieces are then to be boiled in hot water to turn red oxide in black oxide, and so on and so forth.. otherwise you should at least perfectly clean your parts with a basic solution so to inhibit acids, so to stop their oxidying action and for better safety and then apply a protective coat of oil so to prevent further oxidation.. long story short: for a youtube video it is fine to show a "cool" blueing effect.. but the viewer trying to replicate this will be disappointed by the results just the day after, when the piece will turn into rust (you can try yourself).. in addition these tecniques involve very dangerous acids if not handled with the right precautions.. while heating and bathe in oil is a far more simple, honest and safe procedure, affordable also for non chemist :)
@@alvinlebon9368 indeed, I won't take credit for this, but in his most recent videos you can notice that he started restoring metal parts using the heat&oil technique :) ..rust comes from the oxidation of metal.. if you heat metal you create kind of a "dilatation" within metal molecules.. you can think of them as many little, invisible "holes" within your metal part.. when bathing in oil, you are filling those holes with oil.. and the thermic shock will trap that oil in those holes, thus preventing rust.. the darker is the oil, and the darker will be the final surface color.. in addition, this will also constitute kind of a light "thermic treatement" of the surface of your parts, thus making it "harder" and then givong them also a little more protection against scratches ;)
Ótimo trabalho ... como é complicado a mão de obra para conserta essas parafusadora, deus do céu o conhecimento de desmontar e montar tudo no seu devido lugar não é fácil .... Parabéns ao técnico!!! 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Good work with the drill! I was hoping.. and would love to see a tutorial on repairing some brushless motor mosfets, controllers.. especially diagnosing and replacing faulty or destroyed hall sensors.
great attention to detail..I feel like if you could 3d print the plastic parts and cast them in high-grade aluminum this tool would never wear out .. although that proably would very cost prohibitive
I'm curious, is it not important to lubricate the posts where the small planetary gears ride? I've noticed that in most of your videos that you put them on dry, then grease afterwards. Does the grease eventually soak in or do they not require anything?
Probably one of the better restorations I've seen on these YT channels. Thumbs Up!
Good God man... this is beyond a restoration. It almost looks like you rusted up one really good. Took it apart. Then took apart a new one. Pretended it was the rusted one. Then put the new one back together again.
Как же люблю смотреть как из рабочего инструмента делают рабочий инструмент.
Енот-полоскун любой рабочий инструмент "восстановит")
Ни одного подшипника не поменял...
@@user-xp3zt1gt8o видимо, подшипники всё же сохранили родную смазку и не имели люфт.
Great Job on rebuilding that M18 Milwaukee Hammer Drill. looks great.. works....
Very nice job! To avoid that "dry effect" on the chuck (which will probably will turn back into rust I'm afraid) you can also get a darkening effect by simply heating the outside of the chuck (you can put a pin inside the chuck and use a drill to heat it uniformly with a torch while making it spin) and bathing in dark oil (burned/exausted engine oil could work just fine and you can ask it for free to your auto mechanic).. in this way you will also get protection against rust in the future.. if you have a lathe but not a knurling tool you can get a sort of knurling effect on the chuck by first clearing the surface of the latter and then marking it with two crossed thread by exploiting the threading function of the lathe with an appropriate threading step (narrow enough and without exeeding with the deep.. make some test on a scrap piece first). Thank you again for the nice video! G
He's done that a lot before. Using the heat and oil version. What he used in the video is the chemical version to achieve the same result (it was not paint). It will not rust.
@@alvinlebon9368 Hi, Thank you, yes I know blueing tecniques very well, and that's why my suggestion.. cold blueing, which is commonly used for rifles and other guns require the blued metal to be constantly oiled. The blueing technique used in these videos I suppose is based on nitric and hydrocloridric acids.. which used alone are not good for a "cold" blueing process.. indeed their application alone will imply the creation of red oxide and the rise of rust.. these pieces are then to be boiled in hot water to turn red oxide in black oxide, and so on and so forth.. otherwise you should at least perfectly clean your parts with a basic solution so to inhibit acids, so to stop their oxidying action and for better safety and then apply a protective coat of oil so to prevent further oxidation.. long story short: for a youtube video it is fine to show a "cool" blueing effect.. but the viewer trying to replicate this will be disappointed by the results just the day after, when the piece will turn into rust (you can try yourself).. in addition these tecniques involve very dangerous acids if not handled with the right precautions.. while heating and bathe in oil is a far more simple, honest and safe procedure, affordable also for non chemist :)
@@alvinlebon9368 indeed, I won't take credit for this, but in his most recent videos you can notice that he started restoring metal parts using the heat&oil technique :) ..rust comes from the oxidation of metal.. if you heat metal you create kind of a "dilatation" within metal molecules.. you can think of them as many little, invisible "holes" within your metal part.. when bathing in oil, you are filling those holes with oil.. and the thermic shock will trap that oil in those holes, thus preventing rust.. the darker is the oil, and the darker will be the final surface color.. in addition, this will also constitute kind of a light "thermic treatement" of the surface of your parts, thus making it "harder" and then givong them also a little more protection against scratches ;)
Another masterpiece! Such a pleasure to watch! Thank you 💕
Muy buen video, gracias por compartir sus experiencias y su tiempo en su elaboración, muy interesante y aprendemos, saludos desde México
Very good video.👍👍👍👍👍
Just awesome. Thank you.
You have done ✔️ a excellent work. I like the thought - Restore than replace.
Excelente reparación, saludos desde 🇵🇪
Now that is impressive...!! Great work!
Amazing! great restoration again
Ótimo trabalho ... como é complicado a mão de obra para conserta essas parafusadora, deus do céu o conhecimento de desmontar e montar tudo no seu devido lugar não é fácil .... Parabéns ao técnico!!! 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Great repair and restoration.
now that's what you call restoration 🎉🎉🎉
Ficou nova outra vez parabéns vc fes uma ótima restauração
_thank you for sharing this video, your work is very detailed and thorough, very nice... greetings from Indonesia_
Gostei muito bom parabéns
Watching like & share.
You are best engineer
Awesome job you did restoring that cordless hammer drill..//
Abs. perfect, super awesome work, bravo, bravo ,bravo, full respect from old BG.
Good thing it was bubble wrapped. You wouldn't want it to get damaged.
Great projects
Well done great job!!!..
very well repaired & restored,Hadi Kazmi.
Awesome job you did restoring that cordless hammer drill. It looks much better and it works like a charm as well. Great work.
amazing restoration. the cordless tools is the future now!
Had your work cut out for this one.kudos to you for taking on the challenge.just keep doing what your doing and carry on.😎😎😎👍👍👍
Mükembel bir kanalsınız severek izliyoruz
Very nice work, good result
Good job mister well done
Good work with the drill! I was hoping.. and would love to see a tutorial on repairing some brushless motor mosfets, controllers.. especially diagnosing and replacing faulty or destroyed hall sensors.
Check out the post apocalyptic inventor
@@juanindustries4243 I follow him, but he hasn't been repairing any brushless power tools yet.
Exelente restauracion saludos desde panamà🇵🇦🙋♂️👍👌💪
This is real restoration !!!!!!
Very cool, well done.😊
NICE WORK. 👍👍👍
great~!!!
восстановительные работы дороже чем купить новый шурик
Great restoraion friend, have a nice day !!!. 👍👍👍
great attention to detail..I feel like if you could 3d print the plastic parts and cast them in high-grade aluminum this tool would never wear out .. although that proably would very cost prohibitive
Nice restoration video 👍👍👍
Show de bóla parabéns 👍👍💯🇧🇷🇧🇷
Great man ......
cám ơn bạn chia sẽ rã toàn bộ máy khoan ra , thiết kế cứng cáp chấc cú quá hàng thương hiệu có khác
Muy profesional gracias por tus videos es de mucha ayuda
Good job!
Wow
Very very gooooood
Good as new !
wow 0:17 i cant belive your reparing this, super impressive
Very nice job,,👍👍👍
Belíssimo restauro
meus parabens amigo ficou excelente
Какой молодец, сам сломал и сам сделал
Он получил это, возможно, с eBay.
До чего же приятно смотреть без повально принятого сегодня "музыкального сопровождения", а попросту - раздражающего шума.
THANKIOU
very good master!! happy new year 2023!! cheers!
I always use a long handle 10mm Allen key to undo the chuck clamp the short end in the chuck and a sharp hit on the long end usually does the trick!
Good luck my dear friend good
Отличная работа!
Хорошая работа ❤ 😊
Лайк
COMO EU SEMPRE DIGO, QUEM APRENDE NUNCA FICA SEM NADA, POIS O CONHECIMENTO ABRE TODO O TIPO DE PORTAS, PARABÉNS PELO CONTEÚDO.
Awesome restoration. I'm curious what happened to the light however.
Красавчик!
Gostei muito bem detalhado
your videos are good
When you were testing, why you used Hammer drill mode on wood? It should be used on brick wall or concrete.
Excelente
Omg that little drill have so many parts
Excelente!!
if the chuck will tighten, you can just stick a ratchet in it and tighten it down to remove it and put it on, you're welcome
Good restoration, was the outer casing new?, you didn't show it at the start.
You kill the Bit to drill 😂😂
Mantap betul maszeh 😁
great jobs
Good 👍
Hammer drills are best
Hay lắm em
Много времени потрачено, но результат отличный!
Super tare 🍯🍯👍👍🍯🍯👍
where do you get that casing
Luckily the shipping packaging had a generous quantity of bubble wrap to avoid any damage to the content
@repair what do you use to clean the circuit board with?what liquid you using?
Probably isopropyl alcohol.
What spray you use to paint the chuck?and what chemical you use after that?
So where did those plastic housing parts come from? That's what I want to know.
I'm curious, is it not important to lubricate the posts where the small planetary gears ride? I've noticed that in most of your videos that you put them on dry, then grease afterwards. Does the grease eventually soak in or do they not require anything?
It's not a real restore. Unless plastic rusts now or aluminum oxidizes red instead of white. Don't be fooled by this bs.
@@antagonizerr yes
EXELENTE
Where did u get a new case from?
Muy bien
Nice work, but you forgot to grease the 2nd planetary gear set.
Good broo
Одну шестерню на редукторе вверх ногами поставил.
WOW.
Nice vid, what tool is being used at 7 minute mark? It makes a punching sound.
Luar biasa kerja anda, apakah barang bekas itu di jual?? Salam dari INDONESIA🇲🇨
It is a bit dishonest to call what you pulled out of that box a drill, but it is now. Looks good
where do the rest of the drill comes from?
Why do the planetary gears gears still look so good🧐
Very Very nice Job...Are you from buddy?
That's a Lamborghini 😊😊😊