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<blockquote data-quote="Criminal" data-source="post: 2081339" data-attributes="member: 52795"><p>If your work involves cutting the case, drilling precise holes, polishing, grinding etc then you need a <u>rotary tool</u>... drill has very specific use. Dremel is a versatile rotary tool, meant for precise (and small) work. </p><p></p><p>And as far as regular drills are concerned... an <u>impact drill</u> will damage your case because it uses a light weight hammering action. Impact drill is good for woodworking and moderately useful for masonry (hanging picture frames at best). If you need to drill light-duty holes and drive screws with clutch control (so that you don't shear off screw heads) then you need a <u>drill/driver</u>. Anything cordless will have have electronic brakes - means quick stop. </p><p></p><p>And if you want to install heavy-duty stuff on walls (geysers etc) then you need a <u>hammer drill</u>. Hammer drills are not precise... so you can't put an adaptor on it and use it for precise work. Besides this, they are heavy and bulky. You can't put them inside your case. Hammer drill has many uses in demolition work. </p><p></p><p>I don't think you can stop the impact action on small impact drills or drill/drivers. But a hammer drill can work in different modes: rotation only, rotation+hammer, hammer only.</p><p></p><p>I have Dremel 8200 kit, B&D drill/driver kit, Dewalt drill for woodworking and a big ass Makita hammer drill. </p><p></p><p>You need a rotary tool... get a Dremel or replica, based on your budget. A drill will let you only - drill. Of course, with some adaptors you can turn it into a grinding/sanding or cutting machine but it'll be a shoddy job.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Criminal, post: 2081339, member: 52795"] If your work involves cutting the case, drilling precise holes, polishing, grinding etc then you need a [U]rotary tool[/U]... drill has very specific use. Dremel is a versatile rotary tool, meant for precise (and small) work. And as far as regular drills are concerned... an [U]impact drill[/U] will damage your case because it uses a light weight hammering action. Impact drill is good for woodworking and moderately useful for masonry (hanging picture frames at best). If you need to drill light-duty holes and drive screws with clutch control (so that you don't shear off screw heads) then you need a [U]drill/driver[/U]. Anything cordless will have have electronic brakes - means quick stop. And if you want to install heavy-duty stuff on walls (geysers etc) then you need a [U]hammer drill[/U]. Hammer drills are not precise... so you can't put an adaptor on it and use it for precise work. Besides this, they are heavy and bulky. You can't put them inside your case. Hammer drill has many uses in demolition work. I don't think you can stop the impact action on small impact drills or drill/drivers. But a hammer drill can work in different modes: rotation only, rotation+hammer, hammer only. I have Dremel 8200 kit, B&D drill/driver kit, Dewalt drill for woodworking and a big ass Makita hammer drill. You need a rotary tool... get a Dremel or replica, based on your budget. A drill will let you only - drill. Of course, with some adaptors you can turn it into a grinding/sanding or cutting machine but it'll be a shoddy job. [/QUOTE]
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