Restoring Old Soviet Hand Drill

by Waldemar Sha in Workshop > Tools

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Restoring Old Soviet Hand Drill

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I bought this drill for 50UAH (about $2) on a flea market. It's an old soviet made hand drill...

So I restored it...

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Wanna see how?

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I took the handle off first. Cause it was easy.

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Then I took the chuck off. It had a lot going on inside... but I endured everything.

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Then things went a bit more complicated since in order to disassembly the rest of the thing I had to removethose two particular pins and I had nothing suitable to apply to this situation. So I took a broken drill bit and grinded it into a tool of perfect configuration to do the job.

I took everything apart.

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I degreaced all parts using acetone.

And a tooth brush.

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Paintstripper helped me to strip some paint.

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And a wire brush helped me to remove all the junk from the details.

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And even smaller wire brush helped me to remove the junk even further... in places iconceivable for such large and clumsy brush as previous one.

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The long handle (that's how I decided to call it) was sanded down to a nice condition...

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And that thing that was holding... THE SMALL HANDLE captured in its ever rotating purgatory... was comromised by the means of angle grinder to relese the little wooden thing.

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The little wooden thing was sanded down then.

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I used felt buffing wheel with some chrome oxide polishing paste to buff the parts I wanted to get buffed, and you can see how the drill would looked like would I haven't proceed further with painting. I was kind of cool, and I kind of regreat a bit that I just didn't gave it a clear coat at that point. But I wanted to restore the thing to its initial look, like for authenticity... kind of.

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Anyway, as a next step I prepared the parts I had to paint by masking all the bits I didn't want to paint.

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And I cleaned everything with acetone later to remove all the greace from handeling.

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FIrstly I used a couple of coats of primer.

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And then I painted parts black and red... just the way they were designed by some particular soviet engineer whose name is a complete mistery for everyone.

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The handles (both the long one and the little wooden one) were treated with a couple of coats of linseed oil of aproximatelly the same time period of production (it still works).

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I'm too lazy to explain this...

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And the chuck was reassembled.

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To e honest it took me more than a year to finish this projects. It sometimes happens, and I elieve a good portion of you can understand that this happens... I'm not so hopefull about the humanity and myself mostly as to about understand WHY this happens... but who cares, I finished it eventually... and it looks good...

But the last page of this instructable is the next one...

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so this is it for now, thank you for your attention, and have a nice restoration!