Ll

Leuf

08/12/2006 8:40 PM

Milwaukee drill chuck removal

This is not the first chuck I've replaced, but last time there was a
spindle lock which made life easier. The screw is out but I'm having
no joy with smacking the allan wrench, but I haven't gone to the
bigger hammer yet.

On this older milwaukee drill there is a hex portion of the shaft
below the chuck. I can't tell whether this is part of the chuck and
should come off, or is it part of the shaft and I could put a wrench
on it to lock the spindle. I can't read the model number, the closest
manual I could find on the milwaukee site just gave the typical
instructions with no mention of the hex section. It looks like if
that weren't there the new chuck would end up too close to the body of
the drill, so I kinda suspect it doesn't come off.


-Leuf


This topic has 1 replies

Ll

Leuf

in reply to Leuf on 08/12/2006 8:40 PM

09/12/2006 2:28 PM

On Fri, 08 Dec 2006 20:40:09 -0500, Leuf <[email protected]>
wrote:

>This is not the first chuck I've replaced, but last time there was a
>spindle lock which made life easier. The screw is out but I'm having
>no joy with smacking the allan wrench, but I haven't gone to the
>bigger hammer yet.
>
>On this older milwaukee drill there is a hex portion of the shaft
>below the chuck. I can't tell whether this is part of the chuck and
>should come off, or is it part of the shaft and I could put a wrench
>on it to lock the spindle. I can't read the model number, the closest
>manual I could find on the milwaukee site just gave the typical
>instructions with no mention of the hex section. It looks like if
>that weren't there the new chuck would end up too close to the body of
>the drill, so I kinda suspect it doesn't come off.

Got it. And yes the hex part is part of the shaft. But no I didn't
need to use it, or the bigger hammer for that matter. The WD-40
overnight helped, I think.


-Leuf


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