Jennifer
New member
Hello,
I have an old (23-25 years) Milwaukee 1/2" Magnum Hammer Drill, model 5370-1. I haven't used it in years, but got it out the other day and noticed it seemed to have oil on the body (unknown origin, but not spilled on the drill for sure). I cleaned that up and proceeded to use the drill to mix a fairly liquid unmodified tile mortar at a slow speed. The drill started smoking like crazy.
(I know that is probably not the best use of the drill, but my cordless drills don't work well enough to mix for 5 min, slake, then mix again for another 3, etc. It does not seem to smoke as much out of the mortar and run at a faster speed).
Anyway, my boyfriend immediately says "it's a piece of junk, throw it out", (which is his usual response for any of my tools that might need maintenance). I'm not of that mindset and would like any ideas on what might be going on, if I can do something to save the drill, or if it is hopeless?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated as I'm more familiar with using tools than fixing them.
I have an old (23-25 years) Milwaukee 1/2" Magnum Hammer Drill, model 5370-1. I haven't used it in years, but got it out the other day and noticed it seemed to have oil on the body (unknown origin, but not spilled on the drill for sure). I cleaned that up and proceeded to use the drill to mix a fairly liquid unmodified tile mortar at a slow speed. The drill started smoking like crazy.
(I know that is probably not the best use of the drill, but my cordless drills don't work well enough to mix for 5 min, slake, then mix again for another 3, etc. It does not seem to smoke as much out of the mortar and run at a faster speed).
Anyway, my boyfriend immediately says "it's a piece of junk, throw it out", (which is his usual response for any of my tools that might need maintenance). I'm not of that mindset and would like any ideas on what might be going on, if I can do something to save the drill, or if it is hopeless?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated as I'm more familiar with using tools than fixing them.