this post was submitted on 26 Aug 2024
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I mean, yes and no. A lot of that is modern tools are going to be more carefully engineered to operate as close to failure as possible, as to advertise more power with a cheaper device. Thry have small wires and encoder sensors that can be prone to failure.
Yes, the driving electronics are also sensitive, however magnetic transients are less of a deal on the scale of a cordless drill. When dealing with huge motors, those can be significant multi-kilovolt spikes that make solid state components Very Very Mad.
But the brushless motors in a drill also do not have brushes that wear down rapidly in a very dirty/dusty contaminated environment like older power tools would. So it's a bit of a 50/50.
Hahaha, now I'm picturing an IC with an angry face just before it farts out Magic Smoke.
Yea, I've had a couple new impact drivers needing the controller replaced, I assume they're a package.
While my 25 year old, abused impact of the same brand keeps chugging along, eating 2x as much battery for the same job.
Well, that's basically how they behave too lol. Solid state power components are generally not very tolerant and require careful surge suppression and filtering to not have them blow up frequently.
I bet if you took that 25 year old driver apart, sanded off the commutator rotor, and put new brushes in it you'd suddenly find it'd have more power and use less battery. (And thats something you can do with older tools!)
When brushed motors get old and oxidation/dirt builds up the resistance across the brushes to the rotor coils grows and you'll lose motor efficiency.