Small Square Holes-How to cut
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Small Square Holes-How to cut
Fellow Modelers:
I am working on a model that I want to cut small square holes in the hull. The holes are 1 MM square and 1 x 2 MM rectangular. So far I have tried jewelers saw, files, cotton thread, but no success.
Does anyone have any good suggestions?
I am working on a model that I want to cut small square holes in the hull. The holes are 1 MM square and 1 x 2 MM rectangular. So far I have tried jewelers saw, files, cotton thread, but no success.
Does anyone have any good suggestions?
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Industry would use a broach to make holes like that, but a quick search didn't turn up any that small. You are probably stuck with drilling a 1mm hoke and squaring yup the corners, either with a new X-Acto blade or a file you have ground down to size. A tiny square file could probably be modified into a broach like shape, and could be worthwhile if you have a lot of holes to do.
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if you have a very steady hand and have a source of heat (small torch) you could take a regular steal nail, file it square (or see if you can fine 1mm sq. steel stock - maybe hobby stock?) heat it up just a bit and melt it through the hull, then clean off the surfaced where it melted through .......
that's not a 100% great way of doing what you want, but it's a thought
that's not a 100% great way of doing what you want, but it's a thought
Chris,
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From bitter personal experience, melting a hole in styrene is NOT a way to get a clean hole. Poking around I did find some square leather or conductors' type punches:
http://www.amazon.com/Square-Hole-Punch ... B003JIMQIY\
Maybe use the tooling from these to square off a drilled round hole? Or, punch the square holes in a strip of plastic and let that in to your hull? Just a suggestion.
http://www.amazon.com/Square-Hole-Punch ... B003JIMQIY\
Maybe use the tooling from these to square off a drilled round hole? Or, punch the square holes in a strip of plastic and let that in to your hull? Just a suggestion.
If you have (or have access to) a lathe, you can make a custom broach pretty easily. Here's a quick tutorial: http://www.sherline.com/tip20.htm
If you're broaching styrene, you can probably even get away with skipping the hardening step.
In fact, styrene is so soft, you probably could make it out of brass square-stock, in which case you could probably make your broach with a set of needle files.
If you're broaching styrene, you can probably even get away with skipping the hardening step.
In fact, styrene is so soft, you probably could make it out of brass square-stock, in which case you could probably make your broach with a set of needle files.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rjckF0-VeGITazMan2000 wrote:Perhaps a square drill bit?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L5AzbDJ7KYI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KalwdopngZs
Naoto Kimura
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I think you're approaching the problem the wrong way. If I understand what you're wanting to do, you want to make tiny rectangular holes for lighting, most likely windows.
Don't make the holes that small. It will be a waste of effort because you can never get them that small and be perfectly uniform, or even roughly uniform more than a few times.
The better alternative is to make a larger hole bigger than the window you want to make, fill it with epoxy resin of some kind (even that 5-minute stuff works okay if you don't mind a slight yellow tint that will mostly disappear when you shine bright white light through it), then mask off the windows and paint over with Rustoleum's black primer, then proceed to paint as normal. It will get sharper results and give you MUCH less of a headache.
Don't make the holes that small. It will be a waste of effort because you can never get them that small and be perfectly uniform, or even roughly uniform more than a few times.
The better alternative is to make a larger hole bigger than the window you want to make, fill it with epoxy resin of some kind (even that 5-minute stuff works okay if you don't mind a slight yellow tint that will mostly disappear when you shine bright white light through it), then mask off the windows and paint over with Rustoleum's black primer, then proceed to paint as normal. It will get sharper results and give you MUCH less of a headache.
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