I come recommending clamping boards down to use as guide boards while boring out your lines, creating a type of jig. It will give you tight lines and much better over hand-and-eye lines. Also, there is a bit that looks like a drill bit that runs backwards and is very slim (triple flute down-cut bit), the channels in the bit will send the molten plastic downwards into the box and out of the way while giving you a nice edge to the cut in top. Other than that, this is how I would do it without a CNC - which basic X-Y CNCs aren't too hard to build and your drill would work fine :)
Thank you for your input. Very inspiring. And indeed I really wanted some kind of additional tool to guide me during the drilling process. My dream is some kind of CNC machine, but I haven't been able to buy one until now :-)
Thank you for showing a method that does not melt a lot of plastic. I was trying to do this too fast, and the plastic melted and closed up the straight edges.
You can use thin wood or some kind of plywood. Friction or drill the drill bit on the thin wood, then slide it towards the base of the drill bit. Then the plastic residue will come off easily.
This is such a waste of time and tools and not basic as you claim. Drill holes in the 4 corners and connect tangential the circles by using simple box cutter knife, that I saw you have at the table🤣 You don't even need power tools or special bits, you can do it with just a nail, cigarette lighter and box cutter knife and result will be significantly better looking than what you did and actually using basic tools.
I use this technique every time I punch holes in a plastic box for a DIY electronics project. And I've worked on a lot of projects. I have tried the heated soldering iron. Burnt nails, Flattened and angled hacksaws. I've tried pond knives, and more. The method I demonstrated in the video is the most effective method in my opinion. Especially if you often make projects that require perforated boxes. However, if you are only working on one or two projects, using a cutter is also sufficient. Be careful, don't let the cutter knife cut your fingers.
Suggestions: Go slower with smaller bits....1" in 20 or 30 seconds, don't "bounce" the contact, just steady light pressure. Also, take a break every minute to let the bit cool down.
@@CAXRAMEDIA I would like to see how you built that Dremel stand you use. I think it has to be very simple, but I think it's worth letting us have a look at it, how you've built it, and How it should work. Also, I've seen that most of your videos are in indostan language (correct?). I would be happy to listen your comments in English just as you did here. Thanks
I watched a few videos, this one was the most helpful for my projects. Thanks you!
I'm really happy if this video is useful. Happy working.
I come recommending clamping boards down to use as guide boards while boring out your lines, creating a type of jig. It will give you tight lines and much better over hand-and-eye lines. Also, there is a bit that looks like a drill bit that runs backwards and is very slim (triple flute down-cut bit), the channels in the bit will send the molten plastic downwards into the box and out of the way while giving you a nice edge to the cut in top. Other than that, this is how I would do it without a CNC - which basic X-Y CNCs aren't too hard to build and your drill would work fine :)
Thank you for your input. Very inspiring. And indeed I really wanted some kind of additional tool to guide me during the drilling process. My dream is some kind of CNC machine, but I haven't been able to buy one until now :-)
Thank you for showing a method that does not melt a lot of plastic. I was trying to do this too fast, and the plastic melted and closed up the straight edges.
You are welcome, sir 🙂
wih mantap nih bang, kalau punya alat kayak gitu kayaknya keren juga yah..
Bor biasa kok, Bang. :-)
Hoh to remove plastic residue from a drill when sticking on it? Tx mr 👍🙏
You can use thin wood or some kind of plywood. Friction or drill the drill bit on the thin wood, then slide it towards the base of the drill bit. Then the plastic residue will come off easily.
@@CAXRAMEDIA txu mr, i'll try
This is such a waste of time and tools and not basic as you claim. Drill holes in the 4 corners and connect tangential the circles by using simple box cutter knife, that I saw you have at the table🤣
You don't even need power tools or special bits, you can do it with just a nail, cigarette lighter and box cutter knife and result will be significantly better looking than what you did and actually using basic tools.
I use this technique every time I punch holes in a plastic box for a DIY electronics project. And I've worked on a lot of projects.
I have tried the heated soldering iron. Burnt nails, Flattened and angled hacksaws. I've tried pond knives, and more.
The method I demonstrated in the video is the most effective method in my opinion. Especially if you often make projects that require perforated boxes.
However, if you are only working on one or two projects, using a cutter is also sufficient. Be careful, don't let the cutter knife cut your fingers.
Power tools > hand tools = not a waste of time
what drill is this the one that moves?
Tungsten Carbide CNC Mini Drill. You can buy this:
aliexpress.com/item/32837357846.html
Mini Drill:
Tokopedia : tokopedia.link/SVkrj3AswBb or tokopedia.link/YfQ17u4rwBb
Shopee : shope.ee/3ptP4WPQPJ
Bit Drill:
Tokopedia: tokopedia.link/NymnvLG0vBb
Shopee : shope.ee/fwN4WWFpp
Box X4 Black:
Tokopedia: tokopedia.link/So6ITRfUvBb
Shopee: shope.ee/7UmhDHWBuN
👍👍👍
😊😊😊
What is the name of that panel?
The panel name is: Digital Voltmeter Ammeter
Thanks. Very helpful
You are welcome, thanks.
itu nama mata bor nya apa? saya cari gk ketemu
End Mill Carbide
tokopedia.link/jkCNlr2lnpb
whatis the name of drill bit?
Drill Bit Carbide
tokopedia.link/qotEFnyfhrb
bit breaks when, worked by side ways .
Do the sawing carefully, do it slowly. The last part sometimes needs to be tidied up. Use a cutter, or sandpaper, or file to tidy up the parts we cut.
Suggestions: Go slower with smaller bits....1" in 20 or 30 seconds, don't "bounce" the contact, just steady light pressure. Also, take a break every minute to let the bit cool down.
Hi! you finally showed me the purpose and hand-use of that dremel bit ... thanks a lot, very useful!
Thank's sir
@@CAXRAMEDIA I would like to see how you built that Dremel stand you use. I think it has to be very simple, but I think it's worth letting us have a look at it, how you've built it, and How it should work. Also, I've seen that most of your videos are in indostan language (correct?). I would be happy to listen your comments in English just as you did here. Thanks
@@mariodistefano2973 Hopefully I can make the video you're looking for soon. Thank you
mata drill saiz apa ya?
3 mm drill bit