And what would cause it to shut down like it does when I try to use the 5v and 12v ports? Tried to do some looking around determined I needed to load the red 5v wires that's when I added the 10watt 10ohm resistor. But still the same problem? Oddly enough the 3.3 volt port will power the drill without shutting down just at a slow speed .
I doubt that load resistor you put on 5V is doing anything useful for you. That advice was for people using only the 12V on supplies with large 12V capability. Your supply does not have large 12V capability.
Look up Ohm's Law. One version of it is: Current in Amps = Voltage in Volts / Resistance in Ohms.
Let's suppose your simple motor has a resistance of 0.5 Ohms.
At 3.3 Volts, the motor wants to draw 3.3 Volts / 0.5 Ohms = 6.6 Amps. Slightly more than your supply is rated for. If it works at all, you're pushing the limits.
At 5 Volts, the motor wants to draw 5 Volts / 0.5 Ohms = 10 Amps. Which is exactly what your supply is rated for, so a borderline situation.
At 12 Volts, the motor wants to draw 12 Volts / 0.5 Ohms = 24 Amps. Clearly 24 Amps is more than the 2 Amps your supply is rated for. Not a chance!
I don't know the actual resistance of your drill motor, but I do know THIS supply will never run that motor in a useful way. As ATX supplies go, it may be the wimpiest one I've ever seen.