
Tag Archives: Drill Mixer
Edward Tools Drill Paint Mixer Review: Right for Us?
On our latest weekend project, we swapped the tired wooden stir stick for the Edward Tools Paint Mixer Drill Attachment, a helix-style paddle built for one-gallon batches of paint, epoxy, resin, and even silicone. Snapped into our 3/8” drill, it felt like upgrading from hand-whisking to a stand mixer—same job, less guesswork. The spiral design pulled material from the bottom and folded it back in, helping us chase that smooth, consistent flow that’s hard to get by hand, especially with thicker mixes. We liked how quickly it broke up settled pigments without splashing when we started slow. Still, we wondered how it would hold up across multiple projects and heavier compounds.
Edward Tools Drill Mixer Review: Right for Our Shop?
In our shop, mixing paint and joint compound is one of those small chores that can quietly steal time—unless the tool is right. The Edward Tools Paint and Mud Mixer for Drill aims to be that fix, with a 15 3/4" zinc-plated steel shaft and a 5/16" non-slip hex head designed to stay put in the chuck. It’s rated to mix 1 to 3 gallons, which fits the everyday buckets we actually use, and the reinforced weld suggests it’s built for repeated, gritty jobs. What caught our attention most is the promise of easy cleanup—because dried mud on a mixer is a slow-motion nightmare. In this review, we’ll see whether it blends smoothly, resists wobble, and earns its place on our wall.










