Hi everybody, this is my very first post so please, be patient.
I've a very recently bought Dremel 3000 which suddenly stopped working a couple of days ago, so suddenly I thought I had blown a fuse in the house mains.
I searched the proof of purchase like crazy, the thing is not even a month old and it was it's third use, but you got it... I didn't find it. The store, obviously, is not willing to change or repair it unless I can show the proof of purchase, they offered though to "send it to Dremel repair on me", something I already feel expensive...
I'm not completely noob in electronics (why should I be here otherwise!) and after an entire day of desperate search for the proof of purchase I decided to open it up: how complex could be this thing?
In reality I discovered it's really, really simple, so simple I can't understand what's wrong with it.
One thing to note is that my Dremel is actually capable to restart spinning by striking it on the body, but it doesn't keep running, I believe motor vibrations do break the contact.
I've completely disassembled the thing (not a complex task at all) and I've checked every connection I was able to expose and so far I've identified only one thing which seems suspicious: of the four contacts going to the motor from the potentiometer block one seems not connected, but I'm unable to disassemble the potentiometer block, or at least I'm not sure if it can be done without breaking it. The goal is to further inspect the thing to check if there's any loose connection in there.
I've attached the picture of the potentiometer block I'm talking about, the suspicious connection is the top left one.
Anybody willing to help me on this? I promise I'll pay you a beer when you'll be in Rome