Home » Audio » Craftsmen » Hand drill has a stuck chuck
Hand drill has a stuck chuck [message #29806] Sun, 15 October 2006 12:05 Go to next message
lon is currently offline  lon
Messages: 760
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
Years a go I got a used Craftsman reversible power drill.

The chuck 'teeth' are worn down from using it as a hole saw
and I normally remove the chuck to put a drill guide on it.

These days I can't get the chuck out to repair or replace
the head.

The usual tapping of the chuck key on the opposite side
with a mallet doesn't work anymore. It's stuck.


My directions for the drill guide say that the owners manual
for a reversible drill has the answer to this, but I have
none.

Any clues on this besides the chuck key tapping trick?

Perhaps I had the forward/reverse switch set incorrectly.

In any case I can't fix it without maybe going to Sears.

Re: Hand drill has a stuck chuck [message #29809 is a reply to message #29806] Mon, 16 October 2006 13:40 Go to previous messageGo to next message
gfederys is currently offline  gfederys
Messages: 46
Registered: May 2009
Baron
Open the chuck as wide as it'll go and look down inside. Some of the older drills had a set screw you had to remove first before the tapping trick will work. If no set screw, clamp it tightly in a vise, really whack chuck key with dead blow hammer, look up "Power Tools, New" in a search engine.

Re: Hand drill has a stuck chuck [message #29814 is a reply to message #29809] Tue, 17 October 2006 10:58 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lon is currently offline  lon
Messages: 760
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
One thing I don't have being an apartment dweller is a
good size vice.


I'll see if I can find the screw.

So if I'm tapping left and holding the drill in my
left hand with the chuck facing out, does the
reversible setting make any difference?



Re: Hand drill has a stuck chuck [message #29815 is a reply to message #29814] Tue, 17 October 2006 11:24 Go to previous messageGo to next message
gfederys is currently offline  gfederys
Messages: 46
Registered: May 2009
Baron
If you're behind the drill, like you're drilling something, the drill motor screws into the chuck, (turns to the right). So you want to put the chuck key on the right side of the chuck, (you're still behind it) and rap it fast and hard, in a downward motion, with a dead shot hammer. If it comes off, put a spot of anti-seize grease on the threads before assembling in case you want to take it apart again. I have several drill guides and 2 different size chucks and take the chuck off of my Makita all the time. P/S, I too live in a condo and have built Lowther Fidelio's this past summer. Boy the neighbor's complain, don't they?

Re: Hand drill has a stuck chuck [message #29817 is a reply to message #29815] Tue, 17 October 2006 13:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lon is currently offline  lon
Messages: 760
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
I never hear from the neighbors which is all to the good.

But they must wonder what's going in in my extra room.

The place is old, the extra room carpet was shot when I got here
and there's not even a pad underneath.


But it's up on the second floor and my collection of tools
is very small. I keep the vacuum handy.


What I'd like to see happen here is a revial of the
Do It Yourself Shop. That's a place where people can come to
use tools they have no room for or can't afdford to buy
outright.

We had such a place when I was a kid-- around 1960.

I'm actively engaged in this and think it's a good project
for many towns with abandoned buildings of appropriate size.
The goal is to have the municipality purchase a space and
make it a green development project retrofitted and used
as a demonstration of alternate energy systems-- plus
whatever revenue comes in from renting time on the machines.


In this case the abandoned space is a failed supermarket close
to city center.

Re: Hand drill has a stuck chuck [message #29818 is a reply to message #29817] Wed, 18 October 2006 07:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
gfederys is currently offline  gfederys
Messages: 46
Registered: May 2009
Baron
Sounds like we live in the same place. I do have a 40' terrace which helps a lot. In my "spare room" I've got a small drill press and router table I drag outside. A good friend lives a couple miles away and has a tablesaw in his garage and gives me free range there. I too think the "Rent-A-Toolshop" is a good idea. There were several gas stations in Detroit years ago that charged fee's for a hoist and heavier tools. Those are all gone now. The only issue I can see is unskilled people and insurance. I don't have any idea how you'd get around someone making a bad move and loosing a digit. A clever lawyer would find a way to come back after the workshop. Too bad. Maybe do a Workshop Coop. You know, get a group of guy's with the same mindset, skillset, and respect for each other's property.

Re: Hand drill has a stuck chuck [message #29819 is a reply to message #29818] Wed, 18 October 2006 12:27 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lon is currently offline  lon
Messages: 760
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
Well, it's like the old joke says: I've been doing this for
years and I still have all eight fingers.

All properties have to have insurance: hospitals, senior centers
and businesses where machinery is used. It can't be insurmountable.


I think the interest just went away or the place wasn't
big enough or something. I have no recollection if the
Do It Yourself Shop was a chain or a stand alone business. I
was a kid. We went there for the soda machine and the
name do it yourself shop sounded like all one word to me.


I see the idea not much different from a Senior Center: a
place to go and do stuff. The senior center here was made from
an old supermarket and it's one of the best projects in town:
reuse of a private property purchased by the city, architecturally
interesting (not a dump) and performs a function.

Re: Hand drill has a stuck chuck [message #29822 is a reply to message #29818] Sun, 22 October 2006 14:01 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lon is currently offline  lon
Messages: 760
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
I'm back here to give the answer to the stuck chuck on
a craftsman drill problem.

I went to the store.

They guy had the chuck removed in a bout 2 minutes.

Thew trick was not in using the chuck key.

What he did was use the short end of a large diameter
allen wrench in the mouth of the chuck and tighten it down.

Then a tap with a hammer got it loose.

No vise needed, no sweat. Maybe this is in the
instruction manual with new drills. I didn't have
the book.

:-/



eh? [message #29925 is a reply to message #29815] Sat, 27 October 2007 18:09 Go to previous message
PakProtector is currently offline  PakProtector
Messages: 935
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
I seem to remember hauling them in Lurch. Finished and improved CAF maybe...:)
cheers,
Dogulas

Previous Topic: Interconnects
Next Topic: Newbee Tools
Goto Forum:
  


Current Time: Wed Dec 11 17:41:57 CST 2024

Sponsoring Organizations

DIY Audio Projects
DIY Audio Projects
OddWatt Audio
OddWatt Audio
Pi Speakers
Pi Speakers
Prosound Shootout
Prosound Shootout
Miller Audio
Miller Audio
Tubes For Amps
TubesForAmps.com

Lone Star Audiofest