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#1
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replying to Stephan, Dick wrote:
CTC rotary tool just as good as the Dremel 300. Used Dremel 3000 only twice and it died on me in mid work. To have it repaired would cost as much as buying another rotary tool. A piece of garbage. Just borrowed a CTC rotary tool for $40.00 CDN and works just as good. Go figure. replying to , Diesel wrote: -- for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/woodwo...el-182462-.htm |
#2
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On Sun, 15 Sep 2019 03:14:02 +0000, Dick
m wrote: replying to Stephan, Dick wrote: CTC rotary tool just as good as the Dremel 300. Used Dremel 3000 only twice and it died on me in mid work. To have it repaired would cost as much as buying another rotary tool. A piece of garbage. Just borrowed a CTC rotary tool for $40.00 CDN and works just as good. Go figure. replying to , Diesel wrote: All of them are poor substitutes for a die grinder. |
#3
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On 9/15/2019 1:53 AM, J. Clarke wrote: On Sun, 15 Sep 2019 03:14:02
+0000, Dick m wrote: replying to Stephan, Dick wrote: CTC rotary tool just as good as the Dremel 300. Used Dremel 3000 only twice and it died on me in mid work. To have it repaired would cost as much as buying another rotary tool. A piece of garbage. Just borrowed a CTC rotary tool for $40.00 CDN and works just as good. Go figure. replying to , Diesel wrote: All of them are poor substitutes for a die grinder. No. A rotary tool (a decent one) is better suited for many jobs than a die grinder. I own both. In fact more than a couple of both. Unfortunately in my experience Dremel tools are not decent rotary tools. They make some great accessories and supplies, but the tool itself is marginal on a good day. This tool (link below) is far superior to a Dremel rotary tool, and its below the level of snotty quality required for some shops who use this "style" of tool professionally every single day. https://www.harborfreight.com/flexib...ver-40432.html I have two of those Harbor Freight tool. They work amazingly well. I even used them as spindles on a small dual spindle CNC machine experiment years ago. They ran for upto a couple hours at a time doing complex carving. The only problem I ever had was wearing out brushes in the drive motors after a few weeks of running them all day, and brushes are cheap and dead easy to replace. The one and only thing the all in one plastic body and plastic bearing mount Dremel style tools do is allow you to get into a tight out of position spaces without taking the time to setup a stand for the motor of a better flex shaft tool. If you take a few minutes to setup a space to hang your motor. The flex shaft rotary hand piece is still better because it is small, won't melt under prolonged use, and is easier to hold and control. I also have several additional higher quality hand pieces from Foredom. They swap easily onto the Harbor Freight flex shafts. I keep different tools I use all the time in each one. DO NOT get sucked in by cheaper (or worse more expensive) Dremel or Craftsman flex shaft tools with the tool holder built into the flex shaft. They are no better than the all in one tool. Rotozip is really no better except that it costs more typically and has a little more horsepower than the typical Dremel. It excels at only the one job it was made for. Butchering a fuzzy hole in drywall to push an electrical box through. A small trim router would do the exact same job only better. That being said... a die grinder is a fine tool for hogging steel in many cases. |
#4
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On Sun, 15 Sep 2019 07:32:59 -0700, Bob La Londe
wrote: On 9/15/2019 1:53 AM, J. Clarke wrote: On Sun, 15 Sep 2019 03:14:02 +0000, Dick m wrote: replying to Stephan, Dick wrote: CTC rotary tool just as good as the Dremel 300. Used Dremel 3000 only twice and it died on me in mid work. To have it repaired would cost as much as buying another rotary tool. A piece of garbage. Just borrowed a CTC rotary tool for $40.00 CDN and works just as good. Go figure. replying to , Diesel wrote: All of them are poor substitutes for a die grinder. No. A rotary tool (a decent one) is better suited for many jobs than a die grinder. I own both. In fact more than a couple of both. Unfortunately in my experience Dremel tools are not decent rotary tools. They make some great accessories and supplies, but the tool itself is marginal on a good day. This tool (link below) is far superior to a Dremel rotary tool, and its below the level of snotty quality required for some shops who use this "style" of tool professionally every single day. https://www.harborfreight.com/flexib...ver-40432.html I have two of those Harbor Freight tool. They work amazingly well. I even used them as spindles on a small dual spindle CNC machine experiment years ago. They ran for upto a couple hours at a time doing complex carving. The only problem I ever had was wearing out brushes in the drive motors after a few weeks of running them all day, and brushes are cheap and dead easy to replace. Interesting. I looked at one of these when Home Depot had their tool+2 batteries for $99 deal a couple of months back but passed on it because I didn't have an immediate need. https://www.homedepot.com/p/RYOBI-18...P460/308176530 I don't use this sort of thing often but there are some jobs that a rotary tool is hard to beat. That said, I'm really shocked at the poor quality of the Dremel tools. The one and only thing the all in one plastic body and plastic bearing mount Dremel style tools do is allow you to get into a tight out of position spaces without taking the time to setup a stand for the motor of a better flex shaft tool. If you take a few minutes to setup a space to hang your motor. The flex shaft rotary hand piece is still better because it is small, won't melt under prolonged use, and is easier to hold and control. I also have several additional higher quality hand pieces from Foredom. They swap easily onto the Harbor Freight flex shafts. I keep different tools I use all the time in each one. DO NOT get sucked in by cheaper (or worse more expensive) Dremel or Craftsman flex shaft tools with the tool holder built into the flex shaft. They are no better than the all in one tool. Rotozip is really no better except that it costs more typically and has a little more horsepower than the typical Dremel. It excels at only the one job it was made for. Butchering a fuzzy hole in drywall to push an electrical box through. A small trim router would do the exact same job only better. I don't think I'd want to use my trim router on drywall. I've found that RotoZips are way overkill anyway. A reciprocating saw blade on a handle and a utility knife work better, IMO. That being said... a die grinder is a fine tool for hogging steel in many cases. |
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