pcrov
Well-known member
Thanks for coming to my TED talk.
And reverse angle grinders.
Could be a bit messy:that is actually not a bad idea. grinders could easily run in either direction.
Older lathe chucks would unscrew.Then we would have to run our lathes in reverse.![]()
all things that could be gotten around. i could be wrong but most wire wheels cutting wheels and grinding discs have no specific direction, flap wheels yes.Could be a bit messy:
- some discs are direction specific
- attachment bolt thread would no longer be self tightening
- forgetting which direction it was set to, although you'd feel the startup kick
Rohm makes keyless chucks that handle reverse directions nowadays, and probably has for the past few decades, although the chucks may be a bit more limited in available types.Older lathe chucks would unscrew.
Albrecht/rohm keyless chucks in drill presses and milling machines won’t hold in reverse unless you use the pin spanners to tighten them defeating the keyless part.
Many drill presses don’t turn in reverse.
Wide use of Left handed drills would be a very bad idea, especially for the very few cases they are helpful like drilling out broken bolts
Most quality angle grinders use directional spiral cut gears that won’t work well in reverse.Do left handed people use power tools in their left hand?
In that case, ergonomically ideally, seems they should use left handed drill bits. And reverse angle grinders.
Link? I am not talking about hand drill chucks, I am talking about albrecht style chucks that rohm makes a lot of as well and always have the noteRohm makes keyless chucks that handle reverse directions nowadays, and probably has for the past few decades, although the chucks may be a bit more limited in available types.

It’s not the entire lineup.
The advantage is a hole doesn't care which way the drill spins but a busted bolt does. So you have the same utility as a right-handed bit plus the ability to extract.Drill bits are 99.999...% used to drill holes. What's the advantage of a LH bit for the 99.999% use case?
Geez, lookit Mister Fancy Pants over here who doesn't work on, drive, ride, or farm with rusty crusty old machinery.Drill bits are 99.999...% used to drill holes. What's the advantage of a LH bit for the 99.999% use case?
https://www.reddit.com/r/WTF/comments/e60b2othat is actually not a bad idea. grinders could easily run in either direction.
i have had countless situations where that could have made the job easier and for sure safer. grinding into corners and odd places. how about not wanting to throw sparks towards delicate place or areas one wants to keep "cleaner". how about those times you just don't feel like throwing sparks at yourself?

There are also drilling jogs that use multiple bits, and each bit runs counter direction yo the next one in line.The advantage is a hole doesn't care which way the drill spins but a busted bolt does. So you have the same utility as a right-handed bit plus the ability to extract.
And it'd be right there, already in your drawer when you need it.
Sure that stuck left-handed screw would require a trip to the store, but those are much less common.