Home Made Cordless Drill Corn Cob Cutter

2-minute read
Jump to comments
cordless drill corn cob cutter

Consider this another entry into our โ€œyou used that to do what?โ€ section. This week we saw an article about 80-year-old Wilber Sanger, who lives in Pennsylvania and is a retired carpenter. Last week he had an epiphany while using a manual corn cob cutter. Typically, it is a manual process for a non-commercial user to remove the kernels of corn from the cob. With Wilburโ€™s stroke of genius, the task just got simplerโ€”about 500 RPMs simpler. How? By using a lag bolt to make a cordless drill corn cob cutter!

The Lag Bolt Solution

The carpenter (we donโ€™t think there is such a thing as an ex-carpenter) cut the head off a 3/8 x 4-inch lag bolt and inserted it into the chuck of his favorite DeWalt cordless drill. He then adding a washer to protect the front of the tool and also give the corn something to rest against.

He then drilled the bolt into the corn cob.

At this point, heโ€™s got a corn cob thatโ€™s ready to spin into a manual hand-held cutter. Wilber preferred the flexible variety that handles various corn cob sizes. It doesnโ€™t matter what you useโ€”the cordless drill corn cob cutter breaks new ground in DIY ingenuity!

Corn Cob Cutter Options

You have lots of options when choosing a manual corn cob cutter to work with your cordless drill. Look for some variation on the following models:

Cordless Drill Corn Cob Cutter Cost

The build cost ended up just short of two dollarsโ€”$1.54. We recommend splurging by using stainless steel for the bolt and washer.

We think itโ€™s pretty cool. Plus, you have to admit, this has got to save a LOT of time. If you have a cool tool idea, please feel free to send it to us at info@protoolreviews.com. Who knows โ€“ย you may get it posted online!

Related articles

0 0 votes
Article Rating
guest

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x