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#1
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I need to make a 1" x 0.5" square opening in the front panel of an
aluminum enclosure. I can handle round openings, however how do you make a neat square opening? Thanks in advance. Webmaster Meduci http://meduci.com |
#2
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Use a metal "nibbling" tool. Radio shack carries them:
http://www.radioshack.com/category.a...0%5F001&Page=1 Joe W3JDR wrote in message oups.com... I need to make a 1" x 0.5" square opening in the front panel of an aluminum enclosure. I can handle round openings, however how do you make a neat square opening? Thanks in advance. Webmaster Meduci http://meduci.com |
#3
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On 18 Jun 2005 08:48:46 -0700, "
wrote: I need to make a 1" x 0.5" square opening in the front panel of an aluminum enclosure. I can handle round openings, however how do you make a neat square opening? Thanks in advance. Webmaster Meduci http://meduci.com It is called a nibbling tool. You start with an undersized drilled hole, and this tool nips away at the edges until you have what you want. Slow, but versatile. Under $20 for a basic one. A rotary tool like a Dremel, or one of the larger spiral saws, could do this as well. If you need to do many holes of the same size, and need precision, look into Greenlee punches. Happy trails, Gary (net.yogi.bear) -- At the 51st percentile of ursine intelligence Gary D. Schwartz, Needham, MA, USA Please reply to: garyDOTschwartzATpoboxDOTcom |
#4
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... I need to make a 1" x 0.5" square opening in the front panel of an aluminum enclosure. I can handle round openings, however how do you make a neat square opening? Thanks in advance. Webmaster Meduci http://meduci.com If neatness really counts, you might want to just drill four corner holes and use a coping or jig saw to cut from hole to hole. A bit of filing at the corners and where the saw strayed from the line should produce precision results. The Adel Nibbler is good, but I find it hard to nibble to a line, and it requires a minimum 29/64" hole to start. It is also limited in the thickness of material it will work with. 73, Chuck W6PKP |
#5
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Chuck Olson wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... I need to make a 1" x 0.5" square opening in the front panel of an aluminum enclosure. I can handle round openings, however how do you make a neat square opening? Thanks in advance. Webmaster Meduci http://meduci.com If neatness really counts, you might want to just drill four corner holes and use a coping or jig saw to cut from hole to hole. A bit of filing at the corners and where the saw strayed from the line should produce precision results. The Adel Nibbler is good, but I find it hard to nibble to a line, and it requires a minimum 29/64" hole to start. It is also limited in the thickness of material it will work with. 73, Chuck W6PKP A rotozip type bit in a dremel will 'rout' out the required hole You can buy a router base for the dremel tool to make the job easier. You can make a frame with a square cutout to guide the router base to make the exact size hole you need. Norm Abram does this (with wood) on the New Yankee Workshop. |
#6
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![]() Ken Scharf wrote: Chuck Olson wrote: wrote in message oups.com... I need to make a 1" x 0.5" square opening in the front panel of an aluminum enclosure. I can handle round openings, however how do you make a neat square opening? Thanks in advance. Webmaster Meduci http://meduci.com If neatness really counts, you might want to just drill four corner holes and use a coping or jig saw to cut from hole to hole. A bit of filing at the corners and where the saw strayed from the line should produce precision results. The Adel Nibbler is good, but I find it hard to nibble to a line, and it requires a minimum 29/64" hole to start. It is also limited in the thickness of material it will work with. 73, Chuck W6PKP A rotozip type bit in a dremel will 'rout' out the required hole You can buy a router base for the dremel tool to make the job easier. You can make a frame with a square cutout to guide the router base to make the exact size hole you need. Norm Abram does this (with wood) on the New Yankee Workshop. Another useful thing is the "abrafile" or rodsaw - a round diamond dust coated rod that fits in a hacksaw frame. Whichever way you do it, its always a bugger of a job to get nice and neat! But after about 20 years, it does get easier. (or you get less fussy, anyway) Andrew VK3BFA |
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