This is actually how I found your channel deano…. I like buying cheap broken tools that I’d actually use for work on eBay and rolling the dice on repairing them…. Picked up a few older corded workhorse tools for next to nothing and so far the fixes have all been cheap and easy…… always makita.
Dean you never disappoint, toss screws/bits aside like they're trash, pick through the pile, put her all back together like your taking a nap, You blow me away with your skills Sir.
I actualky think this would make a great Sunday afternoon tv show on RTE. Tool Repair Hour. The way you ezplain all the parts as you repair. I reckon men from abiut 40+ would love watching this on a Sunday afternoon. I mean there's plenty of house rebuild shows and such
🤦🏼🙄 dean what an absolute amateur fancy leaving the hammer out for the love of god 😂 I’m glad to see even a pro like yourself can sometimes miss parts. All the best and as always I look forward to whatever’s next on the bench.
Brilliant and fast, good eye,good brain, just One thing,Organise ur Strip down into segments, ie, parts of motor only etc , Then u might not 4get ur hammer,Clean Organised Bench is Key,But u Some dude,Keep Making Videos 'Brilliant' 👍
This one's clearly let the magic smoke escape. Electric and electronic gadgets run on magic smoke, which needs to be tightly sealed inside the unit. If any of it escape, it's curtains 😂
I've got a terrible addiction to for spares or repairs drills drills and more drills I'm a stone mason my son's have put me out to grass and the evidence does support their decision bloody middle age kids but all was not lost I discovered this sometimes I pay as much as £10 a week on eBay . DeWalt core drills must be avoided at all costs
Totally agree on the DeWalt core drill. I had a labourer burn one out fresh out the box when he tried to do a 40mm hole.....might have been the idiot labourer now that I think about it 😂
Can you recommend the best value grease for each purpose. I would like to have grease on hand for tool repairs, but i don't know what would be best to buy. The small 30ml Makita ones are quite expensive.
So what's the practical operating difference between this type of rotary hammer (where the armature is 90 degrees to the gearbox) v. Ones where the armature is inline with the gearbox like the Bosch (bulldog)? Let's say everything is the same with the power, will one perform better? What if I would use it for chipping along with drilling? Homeowner who does intense house projects?
In one of the recent videos he mentioned that the L-shaped ones like this one are better than the straight ones. As a DIYer you'll probably be fine with a straight one, I'm on my second Bosch, first one might still be fixable. Probably depends on the materials you want to work on. I've mostly worked with brick, only little concrete and hard stone, you might want something more powerful for harder materials. Smaller hammers are perfectly fine for drilling small holes that would still take forever with a regular old hammer drill and chasing electrics in brick or block walls. If you're trying to knock doors through solid walls you might want something bigger. My family now owns the small Bosch SDS+, a really cheap DIY store SDS-Max (around 6.5 kg) and a beefy 15 kg SDS-hex demolition hammer. I use the Bosch for most tasks and the demolition hammer was a godsend for breaking concrete stairs and floors. The SDS-Max gets fairly little use but would get more if I had to make lots of big holes in walls (windows, etc.).
You can. Just swap out the armature, field, controller, switch and the plug to their respective 220v version, but that IMO don't make much economical sense.
You can yes but for someone in his line of work or any tradesmen the juice is not worth the squeeze each time. Much better to just buy a good quality 230V to 115V transformer.
As far as I know, he typically prioritises repairs tools bought from the shop he works at, but the good news is he has loads of videos on paslode repairs. You'll be sure to find a few with your model, you can probably figure it out that way
What I cannot understand is why you never grease the drill bits for these rotary drills before you insert them in the chuck. It specifically says so in the manual. It will eventually damage the drill
@@deandohertygreaser Sincere apologies. I wonder if DIYers and tradesmen do. It's important. Like oiling air tools before using them each time or when using them . Correct greasing and oiling prevents severe damages.
Would you recommend for a rebuild Bosch grease part number 1615430016 for £89 per litre or part number 1615430017 for £37 per litre, I can’t work out the difference
@@waynetaylor2784literally the exact reason 😂. The secondary winding has a grounded center tap so a shock to ground is only 55v which is barely a tingle.
I started watching UA-cam because there weren't many adverts, apparently not any more, nice film but I'm not watching a clip of this length again with 6 advert breaks.
Dean I gotta say you sure do have a couple really sweet hammers! I saw the Kenetic customs hammer you used here and had to freeze frame the video frame by frame to see the name so I can go online to find them! I also had to do the same with the one you recently got at your job shop, that one is really nice too. You have me searching for these 'expensive' hammers that i don't really need....but really do want! The Martinez hammers over here are similarly customizesable, but are $300+ USD so thats not gonna happen! I have had regular steel Estwing 20oz hammers & roofers hatchet for decades, but these custom hammers are kinda sweet....."how good was I this year Santa"?🤔👌🏻👍🏻🛠️🔧🔩🦺
One of the greatest pleasures in life (for me anyway) is watching a master of his craft at work.
This is actually how I found your channel deano…. I like buying cheap broken tools that I’d actually use for work on eBay and rolling the dice on repairing them…. Picked up a few older corded workhorse tools for next to nothing and so far the fixes have all been cheap and easy…… always makita.
Dean you never disappoint, toss screws/bits aside like they're trash, pick through the pile, put her all back together like your taking a nap, You blow me away with your skills Sir.
What a joy viewing this, what a professional you are.
I love how it went from „i hope i will get away with new armature and new brushe” into „i might do complete cleaning and restoration to this” ❤❤❤😂😂😊😊
He likes doing things right that's why I watch his videos.
It always makes me nervous when you take a screw out & just toss it aside. Great job, as always.
Long job but the end result is excellent. To let you know, satisfaction is an inspiration.
Amazingly complex bits of kit and your knowledge is that too. The streams are very addictive. Keep up the great work.
Cheers Dean for sharing your knowledge. Absolute bargain.
I actualky think this would make a great Sunday afternoon tv show on RTE. Tool Repair Hour. The way you ezplain all the parts as you repair. I reckon men from abiut 40+ would love watching this on a Sunday afternoon. I mean there's plenty of house rebuild shows and such
Thanks Dean, very informative, appreciate you taking the time.
Great video. Got to love Makita tools. Well build and cheap to keep running.
Should have kept the "Oh for f***ks sake" reaction in, when you clocked the hammer pin still lying on the table! 😂😂
Actually recently got 2 of these FCTs up and running again from a spare C model. Great machines.
Love it Dean. I got one exact same. And needs some attention. Thanks for sharing.
I'm doing good thank you for asking glad to see more machine repairs
It may only be a small detail but dean knows his brushes.
As good as new well done Dean
Brilliant mate
Saludos y gracias por tu respuesta y videos bendiciones para ti ❤❤😊😊😮😮🎉🎉
Best damn tool fixer on UA-cam
You have to give high quality tools a good rest to cool down as well. It looks well used though.
Hi Dean, The left out piston was done on purpose (Lol) to teach us newbies not to forget love the videos mate keep up the great work.
Hahahahaha, nice job Dean. 100 parts in a pile to a Running HR 2310 hammer drill.
🤦🏼🙄 dean what an absolute amateur fancy leaving the hammer out for the love of god 😂 I’m glad to see even a pro like yourself can sometimes miss parts. All the best and as always I look forward to whatever’s next on the bench.
Brilliant and fast, good eye,good brain, just One thing,Organise ur Strip down into segments, ie, parts of motor only etc , Then u might not 4get ur hammer,Clean Organised Bench is Key,But u Some dude,Keep Making Videos 'Brilliant' 👍
You think he needs your advice ??????
"It should be somewhere....up here" hahahaha I really love that phrase !! 🤣🤣
Great job Dean! Thanks!!!!
Love to see these videos
Great one 👍
Try the fold 10mm at a time technique to get a fair bit out of tubes that look empty. It is very satisfying.😊
Super
nice full teardown again!
Hi Dean, Happy new year, As you have to change the armature on the can you not change the voltage to 220V.
loving the content brother
That was great.
What software is Dean using for the diagrams?
It's probably just me but can you show some more of the cleaning/washing please
I'll try, but that is the real boaring part. It makes the videos very long
@deandohertygreaser as I said its probably just me but I like that part as well.
❤ genius ❤
Seeing so many parts gives me anxiety 😬
Forgetting 1 part out of the 20,000 parts it was broken down to? WAY better then I'd do!!!! 😂
Nice new underground
Like brand new 👌
58:59 exactly what I was waiting for 😂
how on earth does someone end up doing this for a living, don't remember seeing Makita repair nvqs in college 🤣
by simply walking into
Hope you have a good spooky paint mixer repair lined up for Halloween 😱
Nice
👍👍
Did you work for a boss or is this your own business? Nice video dean!
👍👍👍
In my particular Navy rating, we called that "smoke checking" the motor. 😂
This one's clearly let the magic smoke escape. Electric and electronic gadgets run on magic smoke, which needs to be tightly sealed inside the unit. If any of it escape, it's curtains 😂
@@Ragnar8504 😂
I've got a terrible addiction to for spares or repairs drills drills and more drills I'm a stone mason my son's have put me out to grass and the evidence does support their decision bloody middle age kids but all was not lost I discovered this sometimes I pay as much as £10 a week on eBay . DeWalt core drills must be avoided at all costs
Totally agree on the DeWalt core drill. I had a labourer burn one out fresh out the box when he tried to do a 40mm hole.....might have been the idiot labourer now that I think about it 😂
Whats worse than forgetting to assemble a part. Is dropping a small part that you dropped on the floor accidentally and cant find it.
Can you recommend the best value grease for each purpose. I would like to have grease on hand for tool repairs, but i don't know what would be best to buy. The small 30ml Makita ones are quite expensive.
Would it not be possible Dean t convert 110v into a 240v.. curious
yes, you can. But you would also need to change the field and the controller also.
@@deandohertygreaser👍
Whats your opinion on the HR2810. Any good?
So what's the practical operating difference between this type of rotary hammer (where the armature is 90 degrees to the gearbox) v. Ones where the armature is inline with the gearbox like the Bosch (bulldog)? Let's say everything is the same with the power, will one perform better? What if I would use it for chipping along with drilling? Homeowner who does intense house projects?
In one of the recent videos he mentioned that the L-shaped ones like this one are better than the straight ones. As a DIYer you'll probably be fine with a straight one, I'm on my second Bosch, first one might still be fixable. Probably depends on the materials you want to work on. I've mostly worked with brick, only little concrete and hard stone, you might want something more powerful for harder materials. Smaller hammers are perfectly fine for drilling small holes that would still take forever with a regular old hammer drill and chasing electrics in brick or block walls. If you're trying to knock doors through solid walls you might want something bigger. My family now owns the small Bosch SDS+, a really cheap DIY store SDS-Max (around 6.5 kg) and a beefy 15 kg SDS-hex demolition hammer. I use the Bosch for most tasks and the demolition hammer was a godsend for breaking concrete stairs and floors. The SDS-Max gets fairly little use but would get more if I had to make lots of big holes in walls (windows, etc.).
@Ragnar8504 thanks a ton. I must have missed that dispite watching tons of these.
What is that software and how do I get it 😍
I did wonder about this being a 110V site work unit. Can they be converted to 240V by changing some parts?
I assume will be changing the motor and PCU.
Answered on another comment:
"yes, you can. But you would also need to change the field and the controller also."
Can't you convert it into a 220v machine? If the casing is similar enough?
You can. Just swap out the armature, field, controller, switch and the plug to their respective 220v version, but that IMO don't make much economical sense.
You can yes but for someone in his line of work or any tradesmen the juice is not worth the squeeze each time. Much better to just buy a good quality 230V to 115V transformer.
@@KarenTookTheKids364 Yes add another device to take care of.
@@atsimas Transformers last forever and well cheaper then converting the machine.
I've got a paslode I bought on ebay in 2021. Can I drop it in for you to look at it? No idea if it works.
As far as I know, he typically prioritises repairs tools bought from the shop he works at, but the good news is he has loads of videos on paslode repairs. You'll be sure to find a few with your model, you can probably figure it out that way
What I cannot understand is why you never grease the drill bits for these rotary drills before you insert them in the chuck. It specifically says so in the manual. It will eventually damage the drill
Because I greased the tool holder itself when reassembling it
@@deandohertygreaser Sincere apologies. I wonder if DIYers and tradesmen do. It's important. Like oiling air tools before using them each time or when using them . Correct greasing and oiling prevents severe damages.
After doing it a couple of times you'll have it off by heart :)
Would you recommend for a rebuild Bosch grease part number 1615430016 for £89 per litre or part number 1615430017 for £37 per litre, I can’t work out the difference
Why does Ireland have 240 and 110 Volts?.
110v is a safety requirement on building sites
Thats ridiculous doesn't make sense@Adrian-l1l7e
@@waynetaylor2784literally the exact reason 😂.
The secondary winding has a grounded center tap so a shock to ground is only 55v which is barely a tingle.
Thats easily the most evil teardown and putting back, so many things to go wrong
Occasional mistakes are just a part of life. lol😊
Same opinion below
9:41 You really expect a 110v machine to burn the coil? Underpowered!
10-14€ for oil seal? :D :D :D :D (1,00-2,50€ max you tought)
A lot of fingering there buddy!!!
I started watching UA-cam because there weren't many adverts, apparently not any more, nice film but I'm not watching a clip of this length again with 6 advert breaks.
I watch YT on my kindle....adverts are only at the start,and sometimes not at all
@victor58010 are you stupid?
Dean I gotta say you sure do have a couple really sweet hammers! I saw the Kenetic customs hammer you used here and had to freeze frame the video frame by frame to see the name so I can go online to find them! I also had to do the same with the one you recently got at your job shop, that one is really nice too. You have me searching for these 'expensive' hammers that i don't really need....but really do want! The Martinez hammers over here are similarly customizesable, but are $300+ USD so thats not gonna happen! I have had regular steel Estwing 20oz hammers & roofers hatchet for decades, but these custom hammers are kinda sweet....."how good was I this year Santa"?🤔👌🏻👍🏻🛠️🔧🔩🦺
Lookin real good! Now, can you do that assembly in the dark!!😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂