Someone sold it for cheap due to the fact that it’s 30 years old. I was pleasantly surprised to learn that it’s in pretty good condition considering.

In the picture I am in the process of scrubbing away the worst rust bits. Turned out to be mostly surface stuff. Scrubbed what I could, and got a nice thick coat of Hammerite

The brakes should be replaced soon, but it’s not urgent. Same goes for the bed, but that’s not urgent either.

Lights worked fine, but used the old 7 pin connector. I replaced it with a proper 13 pin ISO 11446 connector so I can plug it into my car without an adapter.

  • shameless@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    As a guy who knows nothing about drills, I’ve had a Ryobi one for about 8 years and last year I think it overheated as a bunch of smoke came out of it, it had a very nasty electric burning smell come out of it. It still seems to work well and I’ve used it for a bunch of jobs since but it still makes that electric burning smell.

    Is my drill screwed up now? What does this mean? I’ve considered buying a new one but this one still seems relatively okay.

    • tomcatt360@lemmy.zip
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      1 month ago

      Use it until it stops working, my friend! Use the grace period to save up for a better model, as you clearly use this tool often enough to merit and upgrade