Hi. I bought an ARO pneumatic right angle drill at a garage sale in a bucket of rusty stuff. There was a needle scaler in there which worked great. But, this drill will not turn. The chuck turned freely. So, I decided to see if the drill could be repaired. After disassembling it partially, the planetary gear reduction socket was exposed. This is as far as it would disassemble while still being capable of being tested. I tried turning the regulator screw and removing the exhaust port, and it still would not spin. I then removed the planetary gear and then the air motor. The motor spun freely. When the valve was pressed, air flowed strongly out the motor input hole. It also freely flows out the exhaust, but the motor does not turn. I spun the motor shaft, and it turns freely in the bearings. I checked all the passages for obstructions and did not find any. It seems that the rotor is just not spinning. Do the air vanes have to come out a little bit to catch the air flow? Web searches did not seem to turn up any clue. Otherwise, the vanes tuck right into the rotor body, and it seems that there is nothing to get the thing started. Once it starts spinning a little bit, it seems that centrifugal force would bring them out more and the spinning would pick up. Can the motor be tested by putting toothpicks in the bottom of the vane slots to push the vanes out a little bit to test whether new vanes are needed. I am not really familiar with the internal workings of this kind of tool so am a little lost.
Also, it seems that there a lot of "needs repair" pneumatic drills on Ebay, but they don't seem to be selling. Could this be because they are difficult to repair? I saw one that sold for 0.99. Their new prices are pretty high, in the $100 plus range. They seem to be useful for making aircraft out of aluminum. Aren't web searches great? All kinds of information just waiting to be grabbed, but apparently not the useful ones.
Also, it seems that there a lot of "needs repair" pneumatic drills on Ebay, but they don't seem to be selling. Could this be because they are difficult to repair? I saw one that sold for 0.99. Their new prices are pretty high, in the $100 plus range. They seem to be useful for making aircraft out of aluminum. Aren't web searches great? All kinds of information just waiting to be grabbed, but apparently not the useful ones.