At Frets.com, Frank Ford shows the modified Black&Decker cordless screwdriver that Taylor uses to string up guitars with the Taylor stringing method. Taylor modified the screwdriver to make it turn faster, and Frank showed some pictures of the inside modifications.
http://www.frets.com/FRETSPages/Luthier/Tools/SuperDriver/superdriver.htmlAs a curious tinkerer, I wanted to try the same. Walmart sells the B&D Alkaline Cordless Screwdriver for $8.88 where I live ($9.99 at K-Mart), so I figured there was little risk in trying it on the current Black&Decker model.
For those of you who like to tinker in your workshop, it’s a fairly easy modification.
Here is a picture of the top.

And the bottom.

Ready for surgery.

Using a small screwdriver , the retaining clip lifts right out.

The head slides away from the body.

I am an engineer, but I’m not a mechanical engineer, so please forgive any misnomers of the parts of the drive mechanism.
Part of the mechanism stays with the body of the tool and part is retained in the head by an internal clip.

The modification is on the part that stays with the body. There is a sun gear (that you cannot see yet) that is on the motor shaft. It rotates at high speed. The sun gear drives three gray planetary gears. On top of the planetary gears is the white, triangular piece that has a sun gear at the center. The sun gear on this triangular piece drives a second set of planetary gears in the head.


Here I have removed the white triangular piece. Now you can clearly see the three planetary gears on the body and the sun gear in the center that drives them. The sun gear actually just sits on the motor shaft, which is ‘D’ shaped to drive the sun gear. (I’m telling you this so you don’t worry if the sun gear falls off.)

The modification consists of replacing the three planetary gears on the body with a solid piece. By doing that, the sun gear on the triangular white piece rotates at the same high speed as the sun gear on the motor shaft.
I made the solid piece from ¼-inch thick aluminum, finished to 3/16 inch thick, 1-1/8 inches in diameter. The three holes for the white triangular piece are 5/32-inch diameter. To make the center, 6-point star hole for the sun gear, I drilled a 1/8-inch diameter hole, then filed the star teeth by hand with a small triangular file. It’s not a precise match, but it works.

To reassemble, the new mod piece fits on the body sun gear, and then the white triangular piece sits on top of that. The three planetary gears are no longer needed or desired.


Slide the head back on and reinsert the retaining clip.
The stock tool turned at about 130 rpm, which I timed by counting revolutions of a masking tape flag placed on the drive end. The modified tool rotates faster than I can count the revolutions.
A pretty cool tool for $10 and about 2 hours of tinkering.