illusion wrote:And for the sake of my concience, please be careful when using your Dremel. Take it slow and DON'T TAKE SHORTCUTS!
Regarding Dremel's and locks/metal cutting... has anyone else experienced the same trouble as I did?
When I took up locks as a hobby I already had a cheap dremel copycat two years old and with the rotary part slightly untrue (wobbly). I did me good work at the beginning but one day after cutting brass and hacksaw blades it went nuts and would only work on highest speed regardless which setting I chose (had a click-slider for 6 speeds=. I figured it had gone the way of all machinery and got a real Dremel.
That Dremel showed exactly the same behaviour after a week. Returned it to the shop, got my replacement and went ahead. The new one went high-speed about 10 days later. I figured something is wrong and the people in the shop would crucify me if I brought another one with the same fault. So I disassembled it and noticed that the plastic piece with the speed selection slider has lots of room between the rest of housing. I figured metal dust could get in there and short-circuit it to highspeed one way or the other so I used a fine brush to clean it out nicely. Worked wonders, it was back to normal function again. I have to do this once in a while, and I wonder if any one else has this problem as well and found a permanent solution?
Due to financial limitations the light at the end of tunnel has been turned off until further notice.