BDFan1981
Well-known member
Is it true that on variable-speed drills with a dial to lock in the desired speed, the drill runs at whatever speed is so "dialed" in the moment I pull the trigger? Thus, if I adjust the speed to the fullest, then the drill will likely run at full speed as soon as I pull the trigger (as if being a single-speed drill), no? On electronically-controlled VS drills this becomes a huge problem on machines without a dial on the trigger.
I have a Black & Decker 7190 Type 1 3/8" variable speed reversible drill that I bought as a Christmas present in 1994, good for up to 1200 RPM. B&D/DeWalt does/did make numerous similar drills, but few with the dial-in speed feature. One drill even has numbers on the dial to cater to specific bit sizes.
But what I want to ask you all is whether or not regardless of where I "dial" the speed, shouldn't the drill motor start out slow (10 RPM) and get to the point where I dialed it (say up to 300 RPM)?
~Ben
I have a Black & Decker 7190 Type 1 3/8" variable speed reversible drill that I bought as a Christmas present in 1994, good for up to 1200 RPM. B&D/DeWalt does/did make numerous similar drills, but few with the dial-in speed feature. One drill even has numbers on the dial to cater to specific bit sizes.
But what I want to ask you all is whether or not regardless of where I "dial" the speed, shouldn't the drill motor start out slow (10 RPM) and get to the point where I dialed it (say up to 300 RPM)?
~Ben
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