Festool C12 EC-TEC 사용자 설명서

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Another feature of the C12 gearbox is the integral 
shaft-lock to assist in bit changing. The motor can 
rotate the drill chuck, but the drill chuck cannot 
rotate the motor. With the shaft-lock, you can 
tighten the chuck as hard as you want, and the 
gearbox will hold fast. 
Conclusion 
I'm not big on drawing conclusions for others to 
follow. I am more comfortable writing fact-based 
information.  So instead, I will use this space to 
provide some of the opinion-based information I 
came across during my examination. It might be 
a hodge-podge of ideas, but I guess that's what 
opinions are supposed to be.  
I first saw a cutaway model of the C12 at the 
AWFS trade show in Las Vegas this summer (see 
the cutaway picture on page 2). I was so 
fascinated with the idea that a 3-phase motor was 
being used in a battery operated tool that I 
volunteered to write this technical review and 
give it to Festool without taking a fee for my 
work.  
With technology this cutting-edge, I knew there 
would be a lot of people that were not yet 
familiar with it (including myself). Besides, I was 
dying for a chance to tear this drill apart to see 
how it worked (I am a card-carrying member of 
tool-junkies anonymous).  
While it wasn't very scientific, one of the first 
things I did when the drill arrived was to try to 
drive a 4-inch screw into a block of wood; except 
I wanted to see what would happen at ultra-
ultra-low speed—about 1 revolution per second. 
I carefully held the trigger in a fixed position so 
the bit was spinning at a constant speed, and 
then started the screw into the wood. I can't even 
begin to tell you just how blown away I was 
when the drill kept plodding along until the 
entire 4-inch screw was sunk into the wood. I 
tried the same thing with one of my other drills, 
and it stalled after just 1 inch.  
Oh by the way, I wasn’t doing this in low-gear 
like you would expect. The drill was in high-
gear!  The motor appears to deliver a constant 
torque at any speed or load. However, without 
seeing the schematic of the motor's electronic 
controller I cannot state this as fact, so I am 
leaving it as just my opinion.  
My excitement just kept escalating from there on. 
So the next thing I did was build a dynamometer 
so I could compare the power of this 12-volt drill 
against several 14 and 18-volt drills I bought at 
my local home center.  
Unfortunately, when the three most popular 
drills on the market (names withheld) started 
smoking under my dynamometer's load, I 
decided it would not be wise to publish this data, 
lest I wanted a lawsuit. However, I found it very 
curious that the only drills with torque curves 
higher than the C12 were also the ones that 
allowed their motors to self-destruct.  
I could have legitimately published the rest of 
the data, and throw out outlying data because 
the drills destroyed themselves to achieve their 
results. Instead, I decided to throw out the entire 
test, because trying to explain the outliers might 
have sounded like I was playing games with the 
data; and I refuse to publish anything that 
sounds misleading. 
Finally, there are a lot of intangibles about this 
drill that don’t fit neatly into a technical review. 
Here are some other quick observations: 
► 
The motor is extremely smooth and quiet; 
noticeably so over other cordless drills. 
► 
The drill is perfectly balanced, with the center 
of balance right over the trigger—you can 
balance the drill on your index finger. 
► 
Even with the largest optional batteries, the 
drill is still very light.  
► 
Changing batteries is very easy because the 
batteries slide in from the front, and the latches 
don't need to support the weight of the battery 
like most other drills.