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-   -   Makita RIP (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/323869-makita-rip.html)

The Medway Handyman May 28th 11 07:57 PM

Makita RIP
 
My 14.4v Making Combi died yesterday. Sob!

We have been together over for 4 years, every day, drilling thousands of
holes.

I wish now I hadn't dropped him from a ladder last year, or left him in
the rain before that. He didn't deserve that.

Sadly missed, he went as he would have wanted to, drilling a hole.

I wondered if it might be the brushes? If you pull the trigger nothing
happens, but if you twist the chuck it starts?

Can I resurrect Mr Makita?



--
Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk

Paul - xxx[_2_] May 28th 11 08:41 PM

Makita RIP
 
The Medway Handyman wrote:

My 14.4v Making Combi died yesterday. Sob!

We have been together over for 4 years, every day, drilling thousands
of holes.

I wish now I hadn't dropped him from a ladder last year, or left him
in the rain before that. He didn't deserve that.

Sadly missed, he went as he would have wanted to, drilling a hole.

I wondered if it might be the brushes? If you pull the trigger
nothing happens, but if you twist the chuck it starts?

Can I resurrect Mr Makita?


You could try spraying some contact cleaner in through the motor
cooling slots and running it .. but be aware it might create a flame or
three to start with! Spray the trigger switch too if you can get close
enough to it.

We used to do this often with electric motors working in dusty or very
dry environments.

If you fancy opening it up, bearing in mind you've little to lose,
check the trigger and it's contacts. One I fixed recently had a
plastic part of the trigger broken, not allowing the trigger to press
the metal strip switch together. Quick repair with epoxy and job's a
good 'un .. ;)

--
Paul - xxx

Frank Erskine May 28th 11 09:01 PM

Makita RIP
 
On 28 May 2011 19:41:03 GMT, "Paul - xxx"
wrote:

The Medway Handyman wrote:

My 14.4v Making Combi died yesterday. Sob!

We have been together over for 4 years, every day, drilling thousands
of holes.

I wish now I hadn't dropped him from a ladder last year, or left him
in the rain before that. He didn't deserve that.

Sadly missed, he went as he would have wanted to, drilling a hole.

I wondered if it might be the brushes? If you pull the trigger
nothing happens, but if you twist the chuck it starts?

Can I resurrect Mr Makita?


You could try spraying some contact cleaner in through the motor
cooling slots and running it ..


But NOT WD-40... :-)

--
Frank Erskine

Chris Wilson[_3_] May 28th 11 10:52 PM

Makita RIP
 
Frank Erskine wrote in
:

You could try spraying some contact cleaner in through the motor
cooling slots and running it ..


But NOT WD-40... :-)


This may be a silly question but why not? WD40 is the first thing I'd reach
for.

--

All the best,

Chris

Peter Parry May 28th 11 11:07 PM

Makita RIP
 
On Sat, 28 May 2011 19:57:29 +0100, The Medway Handyman
wrote:

I wondered if it might be the brushes?


At that age and level of use that would be the most probable cause of
the type of failure you have observed.


Grimly Curmudgeon May 29th 11 01:46 AM

Makita RIP
 
We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the
drugs began to take hold. I remember The Medway Handyman
saying something like:

I wondered if it might be the brushes? If you pull the trigger nothing
happens, but if you twist the chuck it starts?

Can I resurrect Mr Makita?


Brushes are cheap enough to find out if that's the cause.
Just take out the old ones for a look, you'll soon see if they're short.

Paul - xxx[_2_] May 29th 11 02:18 PM

Makita RIP
 
Chris Wilson wrote:

Frank Erskine wrote in
:

You could try spraying some contact cleaner in through the motor
cooling slots and running it ..


But NOT WD-40... :-)


This may be a silly question but why not? WD40 is the first thing I'd
reach for.


'cos WD40 is a basically a water dispersant. Although it's also a
cleaner, it's more likely to create a paste of elecrical/carbon
deposits and feck the motor good and proper rather than dispersing
them. Contact Cleaner cleans off carbon deposits from the brushes/comm
quite easily, but is a solvent with a low flash-point so might
'flame-out' a little .. ;)

--
Paul - xxx

Roger Mills[_2_] May 29th 11 03:07 PM

Makita RIP
 
On 28/05/2011 19:57, The Medway Handyman wrote:
My 14.4v Making Combi died yesterday. Sob!

We have been together over for 4 years, every day, drilling thousands of
holes.

I wish now I hadn't dropped him from a ladder last year, or left him in
the rain before that. He didn't deserve that.

Sadly missed, he went as he would have wanted to, drilling a hole.

I wondered if it might be the brushes? If you pull the trigger nothing
happens, but if you twist the chuck it starts?

Can I resurrect Mr Makita?



Well, it *could* be worn brushes - or a dirty commutator. But it's more
likely to be a duff winding. If it stops with a brush facing that
winding, it won't re-start. Move it round to a different position, and
it's ok. That sounds like your symptoms to me.
--
Cheers,
Roger
____________
Please reply to Newsgroup. Whilst email address is valid, it is seldom
checked.

Jim K[_3_] May 29th 11 04:26 PM

Makita RIP
 
On May 29, 3:07 pm, Roger Mills wrote:
On 28/05/2011 19:57, The Medway Handyman wrote:

My 14.4v Making Combi died yesterday. Sob!


We have been together over for 4 years, every day, drilling thousands of
holes.


I wish now I hadn't dropped him from a ladder last year, or left him in
the rain before that. He didn't deserve that.


Sadly missed, he went as he would have wanted to, drilling a hole.


I wondered if it might be the brushes? If you pull the trigger nothing
happens, but if you twist the chuck it starts?


Can I resurrect Mr Makita?


Well, it *could* be worn brushes - or a dirty commutator. But it's more
likely to be a duff winding. If it stops with a brush facing that
winding, it won't re-start. Move it round to a different position, and
it's ok. That sounds like your symptoms to me.
--
Cheers,
Roger
____________
Please reply to Newsgroup. Whilst email address is valid, it is seldom
checked.


years ago I ressurected a dying/dead BnD strimmer using the old 12v
toy train "service" trick of raking out the ****e (carbon poss
softened by WD40...) from between the segments of it's commutator with
a pin. Did an entire overgrown garden with it after ;))

Jim K

Chris Wilson[_3_] May 29th 11 08:30 PM

Makita RIP
 
"Paul - xxx" wrote in news:94evcnFg3uU1
@mid.individual.net:


'cos WD40 is a basically a water dispersant. Although it's also a
cleaner, it's more likely to create a paste of elecrical/carbon
deposits


Well I live and learn, thanks for the tip.

--

All the best,

Chris


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