cosmopedro
Well-known member
Hello, all! I have what I consider to be a stupid question, as I feel like after 40+ years of tool ownership/maintenance/repair I should know this, but still...
I have a 20+ year old Makita 14.4V NiMH drill/driver with a 1/2" keyless chuck, that's on it's second set of batteries. The first set of two lasted about 17 of those years, and I replaced them with aftermarket FleaBay clones which have their own set of issues.
Problem is, whether I'm using the original batteries - which still hold a charge, just not as long - or the new batteries, I find the drill/driver itself to just not have the 'oomph' it used to have. The torque seems lower, and the torque curve seems to drop off faster.
Is this an age thing (like me - at 60 years old, my torque curve seems to drop off faster) or a maintenance thing? I mean, the tool's on it's original brushes, so could replacement brushes solve this? And, what exactly would I look for in the brushes? I've always thought as long as there was enough brush material for the springs to ensure good contact they were good...
OR, is it really just time to put this old friend (20+ years of home building, home projects, etc. between my hand and this old drill) out to semi-retirement pasture and get on board the Lithium Ion train?
As you might guess, I don't deal well with letting old tools go... I'd rather spend more than the cost of new tools to keep the old ones working, so this is traumatic for me...
HELP!
I have a 20+ year old Makita 14.4V NiMH drill/driver with a 1/2" keyless chuck, that's on it's second set of batteries. The first set of two lasted about 17 of those years, and I replaced them with aftermarket FleaBay clones which have their own set of issues.
Problem is, whether I'm using the original batteries - which still hold a charge, just not as long - or the new batteries, I find the drill/driver itself to just not have the 'oomph' it used to have. The torque seems lower, and the torque curve seems to drop off faster.
Is this an age thing (like me - at 60 years old, my torque curve seems to drop off faster) or a maintenance thing? I mean, the tool's on it's original brushes, so could replacement brushes solve this? And, what exactly would I look for in the brushes? I've always thought as long as there was enough brush material for the springs to ensure good contact they were good...
OR, is it really just time to put this old friend (20+ years of home building, home projects, etc. between my hand and this old drill) out to semi-retirement pasture and get on board the Lithium Ion train?
As you might guess, I don't deal well with letting old tools go... I'd rather spend more than the cost of new tools to keep the old ones working, so this is traumatic for me...
HELP!
