Hi, just got into your interesting world of fine works using one of these. So not a good choice to start with me thinks. Need some extra bits. Being well into this type of machinery can you tell me if I can fit a 1/4 chuck to this rotary tool. Or can you advise me of which rotary tool offers me 1/4 chuck options, thanks Bee
Sorry, I didn't get notified of your comment. This tool will not accept 1/4" bits.. Only 1/8" & I think 3/32" Collets are included, if I remember right. If you can use Air Tools, a die grinder will accept 1/4" tooling.. an electric drill will work in a pinch. I picked up a Black & Decker hand held router type tool at a thrift store that cuts holes in Drywall - it accepts 1/4" bits but it has a pretty high RPM.. Hope this helps.. Thanks for commenting!
@@beewon1553 Thanks Beewon, I,ve tried it out using the 1/8 bits and found it pretty good, haven't tried the Dremmel but can't see how it warrants the higher price. I've also been told that Draper make good tools, thanks again regards John
Haha, welcome to it my friend. You'll never go back now. Back in the day, you had that one battery drill...but kept the cord on all of your other tools because the battery versions lacked power. Somewhere along the way, battery tools caught up. You will be replacing all of your tools, one by one, with battery versions now. It happens, at some point, to al of us. Enjoy the rde!
Welcome to hydraulics. The grease in the bushing was sealing the air under the spindle. The more you push down, the more air pressure you build. So it just pushes back up. Running it will probably heat up the grease sufficiently to allow some of that air to escape.
Bro, you didnt show how to remove the black inner liner of the glove compartment. All the other videos, people just cut it with a razor to expose the lock, but theres gotta be a way to pop the inner liner off.
Hey there, there's no need to cut the black plastic. The Glove Box is two pieces.. 1. the beige/tan front fascia.. 2. the black plastic shell, which is basically the glove box shell.. The repair of the broken latch required removing the front "cover" to remove the whole latch assy... I've seen people cut the plastic to put the release rod back in place, but my rod wasn't off. The latch itself was broken in two and required full access to it.. Thanks for watching & commenting!
That's the bad thing about Chinese brands; they come and go, but often pop back up with a diff name..The first I heard of this brand was in a Menards Email.. Would love to know about Battery interchangeability.
I bought the Air Adjustment Valve at Harbor Freight, but it will move if you bump it.. kinda touchy. There used to be better ones, but the last one I bought for a Die Grinder was many years ago. I haven't searched lately.
I wish I did too.. It was a little weird the way the fill hole was angled. I put a brick under one wheel to tilt it back and used a long spout funnel. I added the whole contents of the oil bottle (18 oz, I think it was). A little bit of oil ran back out even with it tilted.. A lot woulda run back out if the engine was level on the ground.
$150 for a used glove box? I replaced my entire instrument cluster from Pick-N-Pull for $37. I pulled one from an '05 for my '03. I'm here to see how to put the small arm back in place, the one on the right side of the box. Mine is not locked in place and it rattles. The plastic or metal pieces inside of dress shirts are called _collar stays_ if that helps.
I wish there was a Pick-N-Pull near me. The closest is around 200 miles. The $150. price is from online... I haven't been into that Arm Assy. Maybe it has a Spring missing, but I don't think there's a Spring on it. I think it just slides into a groove.. Can't say for sure, but there should be a Nub on the end of the Arm that slides into a groove.
Sorry, but I've never had to do that. The dealer did that for me when they had to get to the airbag module under a recall, but they did it in a short amount of time. My first thought was to take the side of the dash off by the passenger door and remove the hinge bolts underneath in order to get a large enough area to trigger the latch release mechanism.
ya I thought of the same, what about propping the whole thing vertically almost hanging from the wall in a way. That's what I would do because mixers are like set it and forget it kind of devices.
I've gotten used to the setup. It sets at about a 15 degree angle. I saw someone had theirs in a custom rack at about 75 degree angle. It looked pretty comfortable... Thanks for watching.
ya for the size the reach would get obnoxious after awhile. Building something shouldn't be out of the question, wood is cheap and would only take a saw and some nails or screws.