Hay que reconocer que el chiste del título es muy bueno , la máxima aspiración de un cepillo eléctrico , es convertirse en un aerogenerador , jajaja , gracias por compartir tanta creatividad , un saludo cordial y por supuesto un gran like desde Narón , Galicia ( España ) 😜 🤓
@@SavvasPapasavva I was using a little humour, alluding to the fact that makers often work in small wokshops with glues, varnishes and thinners, to jokingly explain your antics, while coverng the fact that I didn't understand what you were doing. I'm guessing you were vibrating your windmill to make any heavy spot fall to the bottom. As for suburban, I'm surprised by your stereotyping.
When did I use solvents in the video? I think you are missing the point - I get a lot of comments like the one you shared which unfortunately I read as snide, and actually offensive to the people who do rely on being intoxicated to get through life - the suburban folk.
Before I added the locking nut the oscillating movement actually made the machine screw rotate. Motors which create rotational movement actually work by using oscillating magnetic fields. You should probably also look at this too, and try figure out how the rotation direction changed: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-bmSZkthEkyo.html - Clue: there isn't a tiny motor in the wooden shaft.
"Well, heaven knows what it is or where it came from, just get rid of it! But save the cheese first." My ex had the speed control stop working. I stripped it out , keeping the motor and adding some weight with some solder and converted crudley to 12v with a cigar lighter plug. She could use it at home on the battery charger or in the car.