Sir you solder the commutator motor getting over heating solder loose please next time connected the wire motor perfectly and nice restoration sir thank you so much for the sharing this video sir 😊😊❤
congratulations my friend You are doing a very good job I understand what you are doing because I have been doing this for many years. Have fun making nice videos. If it's easy for you I would like the details of the electric screwdriver that you screw the screws in is very nice but I can't figure out what it is. best regards spyros from london thanks!!!👍
I'm not so sure how long that repaired motor will last... the g-forces on that solder joint when the motor is spinning at high speed would tend to try to rip the joint apart again, and I suspect the soft solder will hold for a while, but will eventually give way under the strain. Expect it to fail again in a few months under normal use. The motors are originally built with the wire wrapped around something to keep it secure (a post or a tag of some kind, often squeezed tight and sometimes then blobbed with solder as well. I've never actually done this particular repair but the engineer in me is screaming at the thing saying "Noooooo its not going to hold for very long!" If anyone has any actual data about how long such a joint holds under reasonable use then please come forward, but at the moment, I am skeptical.
Kardeşim ellerine sağlık. Yanlış anlamayın lütfen bendede aynı sorun var ve pilleri değiştiriyorum. Siz 7s kullanmışsınız ben 6 s kullanacağım 4.2x6=25.2 volt. Merak ettiğim orjinal şarj cihazıylamı şarj edeceksiniz. Harika video için teşekkür ederim. Türkiyede böyle video bulamadım 6 adet 18650 pili seri bağlayıp bms devresi takmadan direk kendi kartına bağladım şu an kendi cihazıyla şarj etmeyi deniyorum. Sonuç iyi olursa bms kartı takmama gerek olmayacak. Randıman vermezse 6s bms takıp öyle deneyeceğim.
Grandpa responds: "Back in my day, we didn’t have fancy recycle shops. We had common sense and took care of our tools. They don’t make things like they used to. I remember when a tool would last you a lifetime. You’d buy a jigsaw, and it’d be there for you through thick and thin, not like this modern junk that falls apart if you look at it wrong. Back in my day, when something broke, you didn’t just toss it. You rolled up your sleeves and fixed it. Tools were made to be repaired, not replaced. You had real craftsmanship, not this cheap plastic nonsense they churn out now. And another thing, back then, you didn't need a degree to understand how your tools worked. You knew how to take them apart and put them back together because they were built with the user in mind. Nowadays, everything’s so complicated with all these electronic parts and special batteries. It's like they're designed to fail just to keep you buying more. I remember fixing my old Black & Decker jigsaw. That thing was a beast! Built like a tank and ran like one too. None of this lightweight, battery-operated stuff. You plugged it in, and it just worked. For decades! If something went wrong, you grabbed a wrench, not a RU-vid tutorial. These kids today don’t know the first thing about real tools. They just buy new ones whenever something goes wrong. It’s a throwaway culture, and it drives me nuts. Nobody has any pride in their work anymore. Everything’s disposable, including people’s skills. In conclusion, good job, Gear Show, for trying to keep the old ways alive. Maybe there's a sliver of hope for this generation, but they’ve got a long way to go before they understand what real quality is. Back in my day, we didn’t just use tools, we respected them. And they respected us back."