Doctor Uses Electric Drill
A electric drill with slow rotation speed is composed of a shell, a drill bit holder, a drive unit and an electric motor for driving said drill bit holder via said drive unit. Said drive unit is an N-stage gear-type speed reducer, which features hat the mutually engaged big and small gears in each stage are coaxial.
1. The medical electric drill machine should be battery operated.
2. The drill should be capable of autoclaving and should be quoted with the autoclavable box.
3. Should have high torque for drilling in small bones. Rpm min 900, with minicoupling 3000approx.
4. It should be Light, handy and versatile Variable speed with oscillating drilling.
5. Durable and powerful batteries Easy to use, highly functional attachments or power adapter Microprocessor controlled universal battery charger
6. Various attachments should be quick coupling.
7. The catch of the drill bits should be friction lock.
8. There should be attachment for the saw blade fixing.
9. Should be upgradeable to electric console attachment.
10. There should be oscillating drill mode for soft tissue protection.
A medical electric drill is used in medical treatment, for example a British doctor uses for an emergency surgery on a woman in the Ukraine.
The woman, Marian Dolishny, was fully conscious when Dr. Henry Marsh used a 9.6 volt rechargeable drill from manufacturer Bosch to drill into her skull. Thankfully she was at least given a local anesthetic, but it must have been quite a sensation to have an off the shelf drill bit chewing into her noggin.
Dr. Marsh is a frequent visitor to Ukraine, where he charitably performs no-charge surgeries. On this particular occasion, he didn’t have the official tools required for this sort of surgery, but, as he mentions in the documentary, his use of the electric drill “shows how with improvisation you can achieve a lot.”
