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1950's Dremel Model 2

Placeholder17

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 25, 2024
Messages
93
Location
Maryland
I picked this up probably 2 years ago but didn't realize until I got home that it that the missing collet nut was highly unusual (3/8" - 36) and I I couldn't replace it. It has sat abandoned on the shelf until I came across a random damaged rotary tool at a flea market whose collet nut looked just about right.
I had to drill and tap the nut deeper, but it worked great in the end and this thing is operational again.

This bore of the shaft of this Dremel is too short for the modern collets. You have to grind or cut off about 1/8" from the back of the standard collet.

I tried fully disassembling it, but the rotor can't come out because it is behind the brush ports which hit the rotor windings. The ports are tightly press-fit in and going nowhere. Fortunately, the rear bushing has a large oil port under a screw leading to felt which is easily oiled. The front bushing has a tiny 3/32" oil hole which is so small that any oil would just glob all over the end cap and attract dust (which is exactly the state in which I found it). However, the front end cap did come off and revealed a quite large felt reservoir ring which I could oil. To remove the front cover, you have to remove a tiny set screw clamping the machine collet shaft to the rotor shaft (tight slip-fit), clamp the collet shaft in a vise, and yank hard on the tool body. The nuts for the long screws running through the body and holding on the front cap are under the rear dust filter and cap.

It runs great and there is no play in the bushings, but it's still pretty low powered.
 

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OP
P

Placeholder17

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Joined
Feb 25, 2024
Messages
93
Location
Maryland
More photos
 

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four.cycle

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 19, 2015
Messages
29,239
Location
Tacoma, Washington
not sure how I managed to create a folder full of files but then neglected to add it to the list.... go figure, huh? :dunno:

Dremel / Dremel Mfg. Co., Racine, WI / https://www.dremel.com/us/en / est. 1932, acquired by Emerson Electric Co., Racine, WI, acquired by Robert Bosch Tool Corp. / https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/threads/1950s-dremel-model-2.556416/ /

Aa search here (by title) for "Dremel" returns no fewer than ten pages of threads. In one of the threads, it is suggested by a member that one check ebay listings for parts for early model Dremel tools. YMMV
 

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driftpin

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Joined
Dec 22, 2016
Messages
11,304
Location
Miami-Dade/Broward Co. Florida
A good fix on yours. Glad you got it operating.

IN about 1963, I was spending time racing my slot cars as a kid. I also liked to customize them, and repair them when they broke. I wanted a Dremel Moto Tool to use, but my parents bought me a die-cast aluminum housing Sears Roebuck L'il Crafty instead. It was a small die-grinder, and I still have it. It did first-line work for me for many years until I bought a newer Dremel. I think I've owned a couple-more since then.

The go-to business for kids w/slot cars was Auto World in PA. The owner started it working from the kitchen table, and it became a world-wide success, He made enough $$$$ to afford to own/operate his own Can-Am team in the 1960's. The paint-job on his car hinted at the source of his $$$$.

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