Fitting metal barrels to a ship?
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The Tamiya drill you mentioned works at low speed and it's easy to handle as it's like a small pistol (e.g.: a Beretta 34 or Walther PPK if you are a Bond fan).
I find it easier to handle that than a hand pin vise, but I'm pretty sure this depends on how poor is my handling of a pin vise.
AndreaComment
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Afternoon Bob,
The guys have given you a lot of good info here and it should help with the metal barrels. You probably have about 20 float thingy's in the stash and and I would think you will also have to drill out portholes and other barrels and the like. You need something that will do these jobs quickly and efficiently without any stress. You could drill them out by hand, use a little electric drill OR you could stop playing around and get one of these,
The table is fully adjustable so you get the perfect depth every time. you can change the chuck and use bits down to 0.2 mm for the little jobs. 50 portholes drilled out in 5 minutes without getting cramps in your fingers. Has a handy lamp so you can always see what you're doing. It would fit in the corner of your new shed and not take up too much space. Yea, it's a bit pricey, around €1800.00, but think of all the years use you will get from it with no cramps in the hands. Just my 2 Pfennings worth Buddy and food for thought....
Prost
Allen
PS, It would also have many uses for building StuGs when you start up again 10 years from now......................Life's to short to be a sheep...Comment
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Afternoon Bob,
The guys have given you a lot of good info here and it should help with the metal barrels. You probably have about 20 float thingy's in the stash and and I would think you will also have to drill out portholes and other barrels and the like. You need something that will do these jobs quickly and efficiently without any stress. You could drill them out by hand, use a little electric drill OR you could stop playing around and get one of these,
[ATTACH=CONFIG]n1182519[/ATTACH]
The table is fully adjustable so you get the perfect depth every time. you can change the chuck and use bits down to 0.2 mm for the little jobs. 50 portholes drilled out in 5 minutes without getting cramps in your fingers. Has a handy lamp so you can always see what you're doing. It would fit in the corner of your new shed and not take up too much space. Yea, it's a bit pricey, around €1800.00, but think of all the years use you will get from it with no cramps in the hands. Just my 2 Pfennings worth Buddy and food for thought....
Prost
Allen
PS, It would also have many uses for building StuGs when you start up again 10 years from now......................
chris bmtbComment
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Not really, Bob: copper nerves will do the job perfectly :tongue-out3: .
The Tamiya drill you mentioned works at low speed and it's easy to handle as it's like a small pistol (e.g.: a Beretta 34 or Walther PPK if you are a Bond fan).
I find it easier to handle that than a hand pin vise, but I'm pretty sure this depends on how poor is my handling of a pin vise.
Andrea
Afternoon Bob,
The guys have given you a lot of good info here and it should help with the metal barrels. You probably have about 20 float thingy's in the stash and and I would think you will also have to drill out portholes and other barrels and the like. You need something that will do these jobs quickly and efficiently without any stress. You could drill them out by hand, use a little electric drill OR you could stop playing around and get one of these,
[ATTACH=CONFIG]n1182519[/ATTACH]
The table is fully adjustable so you get the perfect depth every time. you can change the chuck and use bits down to 0.2 mm for the little jobs. 50 portholes drilled out in 5 minutes without getting cramps in your fingers. Has a handy lamp so you can always see what you're doing. It would fit in the corner of your new shed and not take up too much space. Yea, it's a bit pricey, around €1800.00, but think of all the years use you will get from it with no cramps in the hands. Just my 2 Pfennings worth Buddy and food for thought....
Prost
Allen
PS, It would also have many uses for building StuGs when you start up again 10 years from now......................Comment
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Guest
Seriously, though, if you happen to know someone who has a table drill that you can use occasionally, it can come in very handy for certain jobs when building models, like this for example:
I wouldn’t have wanted to try opening a 5 mm hole up to 9 mm, eighteen times, either by hand or with a hand-held drill, so my father’s table drill was very useful.Comment
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Bob, I use the Tamiya drill with bits down to 0.3 mm. For larger than 1 mm size I have to change the "mouth" (I think its correct name should be "chuck") to fit larger tools.Comment
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