When you take off the cover you find all of the basic parts of the screwdriver lined up from one end to the other. You will find:
Ridges on the inside of the case and two long pins hold all these parts together.
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The parts inside are pretty simple. We'll look at the switch and how it sends electricity to the motor in the next section.
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The two metal loops at the bottom of the
switch are on either side of a contact that leads to the motor. With
the switch in its neutral position, nothing touches the contact. But
when you move the switch to one side or the other, one loop touches the
contact, completing the circuit.

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The two loops at the bottom of the switch slide to touch a metal contact.
![]() ©2007 HowStuffWorks The batteries and handle |
![]() ©2007 HowStuffWorks The electric motor |
On the end of the motor is a small 6-tooth gear. This gear fits into the center of the planetary gear system, as shown here:
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This gear system is the heart of any electric
screwdriver. An electric motor by itself is a pretty weak device. You
can grab the axle and stop a small motor's rotation very easily. But if
you gear the motor way down, it can have enough strength to drive a
screw into a piece of wood effortlessly. In this screwdriver the dual
planetary gear system has a 56:1 reduction ratio. With this reduction
ratio, the motor will turn 56 times for the chuck to turn once. This
means that the chuck moves very slowly relative to the motor, but that
the chuck has a great deal of torque (it takes 56 times more strength
to stop the motor from spinning because of the gear ratio).
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Here's
where that number comes from. The center gear has to turn about three
times to turn its three neighboring gears once. These gears have to
turn about two and a half times to travel around the outer ring once,
for a total of about 7.5 turns. The outer ring is stationary -- other
gears just move around inside it.
The gear set has two
identical layers, one on the top and one on the bottom (you can't see
the bottom layer in the pictures -- it's hidden behind the top). The
top layer of the gear system mounts to a little table that has a second
6-tooth gear under it. Because of the movement of the top layer, this
gear moves once for every 7.5 rotations of the motor. It takes 7.5
turns of the bottom 6-tooth gear for the bottom gears to travel around
the ring once, for a total gear ratio of about 56.25:1. The bottom
gears attach to a piece of metal that turns the chuck once for every 56
rotations of the motor.