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Dremel 575 Right Angle Attachment for Rotary Tool- Angle Drill Attachment , Black

  • Based on 3,707 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Wednesday, May 1
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Style: Right Angle Attachment


Features

  • Enhances the versatility of your Dremel rotary tool by allowing you to get into hard-to-reach areas. Whether you're drilling, grinding or cutting, all sorts of hard-to-reach areas become instantly accessible with the Dremel 575 Right Angle Attachment
  • Get the right angle to tackle the hard-to-reach places, the 575 Right Angle attachment adjusts in 12 easy-to-change directions
  • The fixed 90, angled head of the attachment keeps the tool sturdy as well as provides visibility to your workpiece or surface
  • Ball bearing and spiral bevel gears give long lasting durability along with smooth and cool operation
  • Attaches to your Dremel rotary tool in a few simple steps to allow you to jump into your projects quickly
  • The compact and durable design adds minimal weight to your Dremel rotary tool ensuring a similar feel when using
  • Compatible with Dremel tool models 100, 200, 3000, 4000, 4300, 8220, 8240, 8250 and 8260
  • Quick connect system easily attaches to your rotary tool in place of the housing cap without the need of tools
  • Coupling system allows you to orient the right angle attachment on your tool in 12 different directions
  • Ball bearing and spiral bevel gears give long lasting durability along with smooth and cool operation
  • Compact design allows you to get into hand-to-reach places
  • Compact design allows you to get into hand-to-reach places

Description

Make the most of your Dremel rotary tools by using our innovative & extensive line of rotary accessories and attachments. Whatever your project, we’ve got the perfect solution for you. Dremel attachments fit onto your rotary tool to give it a dedicated function. Whether you’re looking to carve, engrave, cut or grind, there is a Dremel attachment to get the job done. Whether you're drilling, grinding or cutting, all sorts of hard-to-reach areas become instantly accessible with the Dremel 575 Right Angle Attachment. The quick connect system makes it easy to attach the 575 to the Dremel rotary tool, and the coupling system allows you to rotate the right angle drill attachment on the tool to achieve a perfect grip. Ball bearings and bevel gears provide smooth and cool operation. Compatible with most Dremel corded and cordless rotary tools and backed by a 1-year limited warranty. From the Manufacturer Whether you're drilling, grinding or cutting, all sorts of hard- to-reach areas become instantly accessible with the Dremel 575 Right Angle Attachment. The quick connect system makes it easy to attach the 575 to the Dremel rotary tool, and the coupling system allows you to rotate the right angle drill attachment on the tool to achieve a perfect grip. Ball bearings and bevel gears provide smooth and cool operation. The right angle attachment will handle a full 30,000 RPM and works on Dremel 4300, 4200, 4000, 400, 3000, 300, 398, 395, 200, 285, 100, 275, 8220, 8200, 8100, 800. Compatible with the 4200 when used with the 4200 Attachment Adapter found in your Dremel 4200 kit.

Brand: Dremel


Voltage: 120 Volts


Power Source: Hand Powered


Color: Black


Special Feature: Cordless, Compact


Brand: ‎Dremel


Voltage: ‎120 Volts


Power Source: ‎Hand Powered


Color: ‎Black


Special Feature: ‎Cordless, Compact


Included Components: ‎Dremel - Attachment Right Angle (575)


Maximum Rotational Speed: ‎30000 RPM


Style: ‎Right Angle Attachment


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎1 x 2 x 3 inches


Manufacturer: ‎Dremel


Part Number: ‎575


Item Weight: ‎4.2 ounces


Product Dimensions: ‎1 x 2 x 3 inches


Country of Origin: ‎USA


Item model number: ‎575


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Size: ‎No Size


Material: ‎Plastic


Item Package Quantity: ‎1


Measurement System: ‎Metric


Special Features: ‎Cordless, Compact


Batteries Included?: ‎No


Batteries Required?: ‎No


Warranty Description: ‎1 year


National Stock Number: ‎5130-01-528-4566


Date First Available: February 17, 2007


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Wednesday, May 1

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Great addition to the toolbox
Style: Right Angle Attachment
Works well, easy to attach. Makes certain cuts much easier!
Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2024 by Eric

  • No Problems
Style: Right Angle Attachment
Works perfectly on the Dremel equipment it was meant for. Non-Dremel users have no reason to complain if chancing it on non-intended brand tools.
Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2023 by Paul Koz.

  • Dremel Quality, Always Great
Style: Right Angle Attachment
A great addition to the Dremel tool, for the small grinding, buffing, and hard-to-reach tight areas on welding projects.
Reviewed in the United States on September 18, 2023 by Farmhand Fabrication

  • Works well has a metal on metal sound
Style: Tool Kit w/ Cable
I purchased this for my Dremel for those tight areas to cut or whatever might come up. But the only issue I have is that there is a metal sound coming from the attachment. Does anyone else have this issue if so what did you do to resolve it?
Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2023 by brian b.

  • Another Excellent Dremel Attachment
Style: Right Angle Attachment
This attachment solves the issues with working at odd angles and restricted work spaces, for the most part. A must have for Dremel DIYers. Don't lose the adapter nut.
Reviewed in the United States on January 22, 2024 by Mr. T

  • ok
Style: Right Angle Attachment
ok
Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2024 by joel m. ranara

  • LISTEN UP! You can make this thing work wonders
Style: Right Angle Attachment
As it is, this is a nice adapter. What I wanted, though, was something a little more interesting. I wanted a way to mount the Dremel tool on their inexpensive little 220-01 Rotary Tool Work Station drill press, so I could lower the arm and e.g. have a cutting disk cut off a dowel. Or lower the arm and have a cutting bit spinning horizontally slice a piece of wood. I'm sure you've pondered how to do this, and found that there is no way to mount the Dremel that way. This is where the right angle adapter comes in. How? Look down into the well where the Dremel tool is normally inserted. You will have to remove the head with the big plastic nut that normally holds the Dremel in the Work Station. That can be done by gently breaking off just the edges of the melted down attachment "pins" until you can pull off the whole head, big nut and all. I found that prying with a tiny screwdriver, alternating with using it as a chisel, can do the job. Don't smash or drill out or crack these square "pins", just free them, so you can pull down on the head and remove it. That will leave just a platform with a round hole in the bottom of the drill press holder. Set the head and big nut aside for now. Now place the Dremel tool in, without its end cap, just as if you were going to tighten the (now gone) big nut. Dismantle the right angle adapter so its tube that screws onto the Dremel is in your hand. Use THAT to tighten the Dremel into the drill press, instead of the big nut. When it's good and secure, carefully replace the rest of the right angle adapter over the protruding tube at the desired angle, and finger-tighten the assembly. You now have the desired system. Put a cutting bit on the tip (be careful to follow instructions and lock the right angle adapter with a cross-member, so as not to force the gearing as you tighten the chuck/collet). Now as you bring the arm of the drill press down, the bit is horizontal and you can use it to cut. You can also bring down a cutting disk to slice materials up to half its diameter. Or bring down a sanding cylinder on a work piece in a controlled way. The cute part is that this is reversible. All you have to do is remove the right angle adapter and put the regular head back on, pushing the little square plastic "pins" back into their square holes. Your Dremel can then be mounted just as before. You don't need to glue the pins in place, as the big nut will pull things together against the drill press platform just as "securely" as before you removed the head. It's funny that the "head" with the big nut doesn't really add any strength or rigidity, so the drill press can be interchangeably used with the right angle attachment, or using the big nut conventionally, but with the "head" off. Just don't expect herculean strength and stability from this (all plastic) assembly; be realistic, it's for small pieces, probably not for slicing steel I-Beams or concrete blocks. You now have two orientations in which the arm can bring the Dremel tool down. It's made the tool much more versatile for me. Have fun! p.s. I wish I knew a way to add photos here. Hopefully the explanation is clear enough. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 17, 2013 by Fernand Ray

  • Works but is limited by straight cut gears and other design issues, plus assembly Q/A misses
Style: Right Angle Attachment
Summary: ----------------- If you only need this right angle attachment for relatively light duty tasks that don't require a lot of torque or last for long periods of continuous use and you can tolerate the noise, this may work fine for you. Otherwise, it won't and there's no simple way to make it do so. Detailed Review: ----------------------- I'll preface this review with two statements: - This will not make your rotary tool into a right angle die grinder, no matter how powerful your rotary tool may be. This attachment is not designed to accomplish that. - I'm currently undecided on whether to return this Dremel right angle attachment. It works but has issues due to design tradeoffs and assembly mistakes. I'll start with the positives. This right angle attachment should fit any rotary tool with the standard Dremel threads on the front of the housing. It fits fine on my recently manufactured Dremel and Milwaukee M12 rotary tools. It does allow access into tighter spaces, especially when used with the Dremel EZ-Lock mandrel and cutoff wheels for cutting. Once you get it set up to work with your particular rotary tool, it is easier to use again with that same rotary tool in the future. The gears, input/output shafts and bearings all seem to be reasonably good quality metal. Now let's start with the negatives. The first thing you'll notice when trying to use this right angle attachment is that it's a royal pain to get mounted in the proper orientation on your rotary tool. The easiest way to do this is simply just not caring which way the right angle attachment faces when you first install it. Once it's tightened down onto the rotary tool housing you can then completely unscrew the ring around the right angle attachment so that the attachment can come off. Pull the attachment body off and realign it in the orientation you want as you slide it back into the part that is still attached to the rotary tool body. If it will only go partway back on, that is because the square shaft that slides into the adapter that you put on the rotary tool in place of the collet isn't lined up with the adapter. This is easy to address by slowly turning the output shaft on the right angle attachment as you try to slide the right angle attachment back in. Once you have the right angle attachment slid completely back in, tighten the knurled ring to lock it in place. Yes, it's a pain to do this the first time, but once this is done you shouldn't need to do it again. Now that you have the the right angle attachment actually attached, the bigger problems start to become evident. This thing is NOISY. It feels and sounds like it may be about to come apart, even though it's not. This attachment is many times louder than any of my rotary tools, even my older ones. This is due to it having straight cut instead of helical cut gears where the input and output shafts come together. This is a design decision by Dremel. Straight cut gears are cheaper and only exert force radially (around the shafts) where helical cut gears are more expensive and also exert a bit of force axially (parallel to the shafts) requiring design consideration to ensure that axial force doesn't cause other problems. Straight cut gears are also much, much louder. Let me be very clear in setting expectations here. There is no grease or oil that will make these straight cut gears quiet. Good quality grease can make them quieter, especially for a short period after being applied, but they will always be loud. If you read through reviews here, you'll see that the major complaints are due to the noise and the heat. The noise is almost entirely due to the design choice to use straight cut gears. I disassembled the right angle attachment and found that the bearings seem to be of reasonably good quality and the gears are cut reasonably well but are definitely very simple straight cut gears. When my particular right angle attachment was assembled, there was grease injected into the housing but it missed the gears entirely. It was globbed into the opposite end of the housing and that left the gears completely dry and unlubricated. This made the noise even worse, of course. It would also cause the gears to wear out much more quickly and generate a lot more heat while doing so. Since I mentioned it, let's cover the complaints about heat being generated during use. Obviously for this attachment the heat is going to be generated from friction. The friction points are going to be where the gears mesh, in the bearings where the shafts are turning, and anywhere the shafts or gears touch the plastic housing. There thankfully seemed to be relatively little friction from the moving metal parts turning against the housing. The bearings also seem to be good enough so far to not be source of an unexpectedly high amount of heat, although I have less than an hour's actual usage with the attachment so I'll have to wait to see if that stays true over time. That leaves the gears as the primary generator of heat, especially if they are not lubricated like mine weren't from the factory. The last frustration is the need to use another mandrel or other thin shaft to prevent the output shaft of the right angle adapter from turning so that the collet can be tightened. I understand why you can't just use the lock on the rotary tool due to the forces that would be exerted through the attachment, but it seems like a simple button locking mechanism could have been added to the attachment itself for this purpose also. I'll sum up this review with the statement that I'll likely keep this right angle attachment but I'll only use it when I really need to get into a tight space. Now that I've disassembled to see how it's designed, know that the noise isn't from defective parts AND I have lubricated the gears with high quality grease, I'm a bit more confident that it can work fine for relatively light duty tasks that don't require a lot of torque or last for long periods of continuous use. If that's all you need to do, this may work fine for you. If you need more torque, especially like is provided by many of the newest rotary tools from Dremel or Milwaukee or others, or need to use a tool for longer periods of continuous use, don't buy this. You'll just destroy it in relatively short order. Just use a right angle die grinder instead. You also shouldn't buy one of the off brand versions of a right angle Dremel attachment, as there is only one primary design for those and the flexible wire shaft that connects the rotary tool output to the right angle input collapses when you try to tighten the collet on it, which makes that design worse than this Dremel design. Again, just use (buy, if necessary) a right angle die grinder if you really need to do heavier duty work for longer periods. No current right angle attachment for a Dremel or other rotary device is going to hold up. Hopefully this is helpful for those who have read through the massive number of sometimes seemingly conflicting reviews of this attachment. It is noisy, but that's inherent in the design and not necessarily a sign of defective or low quality parts. Excessive noise could be a sign of incorrect assembly that left the gears without grease, as happened with mine, though. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2023 by J. McCurry

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