Drill Resurrection With New Batteries for Cheap

by russ_hensel in Workshop > Repair

27597 Views, 48 Favorites, 0 Comments

Drill Resurrection With New Batteries for Cheap

DSC02678.JPG
DSC02654.JPG
DSC02655.JPG
There have been some instructables published on how to rebuild your portable drill batteries with the goal of resurrecting an old drill, and perhaps doing it for less than an standard replacement battery.  Usually this involves buying cells and wiring them into the old case.  I have done this, but with a twist, I harvested the cells from a new Harbor Freight drill and did the job for under 20 dollars ( plus labor ).  I was going to write this up, but then decided an easier way was to modify the drill and use the batteries as is.  I will show you how I did it in this instructable.

Tool and Supplies

DSC02687.JPG

Test the Old Drill

DSC02666.JPG
If the old drill is dead there is no point in continuing, so test it.  One way to do this is to power it up with your new battery using jumper wires.  You can skip this step if you are sure your old drill is good,  in the worst case you will just wreck you new drill.  You may need to take apart the old drill ( as in the next step ) or not.

Dissect the Old Drill

DSC02662.JPG
DSC02659.JPG

You just need to take apart the old drill enough to get at the leads for the old battery contacts, perhaps you can do this without any disassembly. In my case I removed the the screws that are transverse to the drill bit and the two sides came apart. Add wire extensions, ideally red for positive and black for negative. Solder. You can then put the drill back together. ( in my case a bit too much of the drill came apart, but I just put the parts back ) You may want to test again through the new leads.

Dissect the Harbor Freight Drill

DSC02653.JPG
DSC02657.JPG
DSC02658.JPG

All you need from the drill is the power connector at the base of the handle. I put the drill in a vise and used a hack saw. The handle is pretty much empty here but you may cut the wires which is ok. Cut above the screws holding the two sides of the bottom of the handle together. I wanted to get as close to these screws as possible so I used a power sander to get closer and smooth the cut. You could use a different sander, a file, or whatever for this step. Try to think of a use for the rest of the drill, it has a nice motor, charger, gear reduction train, chuck.  Post it as another instructable? Some have used drill motors for low powered vehicles. 

Attach the Battery Connector

DSC02662.JPG
DSC02663.JPG
DSC02665.JPG
DSC02668.JPG
DSC02670.JPG
DSC02672.JPG
DSC02675.JPG
DSC02673.JPG
DSC02676.JPG
DSC02678.JPG

I planned to just use some countersunk bolts, you need countersunk to keep the connector smooth where the battery slides in. A fly in the ointment was the bolt at the rear of the drill. It would not come through the top of the handle. To fix this I fastened ( a bit of glue and some screws ) a block of wood inside the hollow part of the handle. Then I put a countersunk screw from the connector into the block. Also connect up the leads. The pictures should make it pretty clear. It is a bit hard to remove the battery as the release is under the flange of the original handle, you may want to cut this away.

Start Drilling

DrinkDrill.png

You can buy more batteries for the drill from Harbor Freight, but often buying the whole drill is just as cheap. As always with Harbor Freight watch out for sales and coupons.

Remember if you Drink don't Drill see: http://home.earthlink.net/~foghornj/drinkand.html