Does anyone have any experience running their millmaster (or similar) on the recommended
1050W mixing drill? The available connections are a "12.7 mm (1/2") keyed drive shaft" and a "3 flat triangular shank drive shaft designed to fit a 3/8 th drill chuck". Also, what is the small metal match sized 'key' supplied with the mill for?
Any help would be greatly appreciated, I'm not very technically minded with these things!
The drill you link to is the one you want (sort of) it used to be available in two varieties, the one currently available and another with a 13mm chuck. Unfortunately they have discontinued the chuck version, which would just connect to the three sided drive shaft on the mill.
You need a "mixing" drill with a planetary gearbox, a normal drill that is speed controlled by the trigger will not have enough torque (power) to run the mill at low speed, if indeed it will even run slowly enough.
You could faff around trying to connect the ozito using connectors etc, however a quick google came up with, for an extra $10
DETROIT 1050W 13mm D-Handle Mixer Drill DMX13
It still has trigger speed control for fine tuning, but because of its gearbox it will turn a lot slower and with a great deal more power than a conventional drill.
The mill will have to be mounted to a board, your option after this is to hold the drill, and the mill whilst milling, and using your third and fourth hands pour in the grain whilst the mill is running (give it a try it might just work for you)
Alternatively mount the drill to the mill board, put the whole thing on top of a bucket, turn it on and pour the grain.
I've attached my solution, the brackets, bolts etc are all off the shelf bunnings, the mounting bolts are inserted where the original drill handles went, the hardest part of the whole thing was finding the correct bolts (size and thread type) and cutting them to length.
fwiw: these mills are designed to be hand crankable, so it follows that you can't really mill too slowly, you can however mill too fast resulting in a whole host of problems, various recommendations (Dr google) suggest 300rpm up to 500rpm, 300rpm is 5 rev's per second, put a texter mark on the chuck, and count really quickly, a second is a surprisingly long period of time. Yeah it's a bit imprecise but it will at least get you into the ball park.