you see I was in quite a jam I had broken my Badger paint mixer (the mixer part noth the motor and case that the mixer attached to) but then I remembered that the shaft of the Mixer blade would fit into into my dremel too so I used the dremel and a cutting disc and cut off the broken coupler and then took the cutting disc out (after I shut off the power tool) and inserted the Mixer blade and now it works just fine. Im glad I have 2 Mini Mites [:D]
cool! what RPM you mixin at? gotta pic of the mixing end of that apparatus? I never though of using my dremel… but I’d like to see if I can scratchbuild me a mixer…
sounds like a great idea, but what about flinging paint across the room ? also, do you have problems with bubbles from mixing too fast?
no no problems at all and the only way I would fling paint across the room would be to have the mixer halfway out of a jar of new paint.
tho9900: I have no idea what RPM Im using if I want the paint mixed without airbubbles I go to Low and if I want to get it thoughoughly mixed I go to High and illtry to get a pic of the whole thing today who knows I may have just invented the next best thing in rotary paint mixers [8P]
sorry about the blurry pics but I was using a digital handicam
I tested out something, so for the benefit of the readers: don’t put something flexible such as a plastic sprue piece in the Dremel. Anything flexible spinning that fast can turn into a weed eater. I knew what I was doing with that experiment & took precautions when I tried that out, so no harm was done.
I do have a Dremel that I sometimes use as a paint mixer though. I stick one of those fat & long toothpicks in it with the flat end down / pointed end in the Dremel chuck. That’s also dangerous, but I’d rather a piece of wood with its likelyhood of just breaking off and falling instead of turning into a weed eater or slinging chunks of glass jar rims from some sort of metal stick hitting it. I do that with a multi-speed Dremel at its lowest setting. It says in the manual that this first notch is in the range of 5,000 to 8,000 rpm.
I took a piece of metal coathanger. Cut the coathanger along a straight edge and just on the other side of where it bends. Then trim it down, so you have an “L” shape on the wire. It fits great in the dremel and the bend is enough to mix paint with splattering it all over the place. Just remember to use it on the lowest speed. I’ve been mixing all kinds of paint this way and it works great!
mine is running straight and true you just have to use the right collet for the Job since if the collet is too small it will weed whack the same is if its too big.