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How do you make nice clean cutouts in pc board material?


 

开云体育

I can not impress you all how easy this is to do without any extra steel supporting ruler.

I draw the lines with a marker on the PCB.

I rest my hand on the table when cutting and simply follow the line.

I wear a full face shield and a dust mask.

It cuts like butter and does not run away or skip.

One thing you MUST accept when using cutoff wheels is that they do shatter so be ready.

Wear a face shield.

Have extra cutoff wheels waiting with a screwdriver.

You will be amazed how easy this is if you have never played with this tool before.

The abrasive wheels and sanding disk barrels are all I ever use with this tool.

You can shape? metal, cut threaded rod, cut nails. Sharpen drill bits.

Sharpen a chainsaw,? sharpen at circular saw.

ANYthing you would use a file to sharpen becomes fair game with this tool.

?It will cut a chain links and locks.

and

its now available as a battery operated tool so it goes every where.




On 06/24/2019 11:10 PM, MVS Sarma wrote:

I remember Jim saying, hand stability and 1" circular cutters breaking offbeing carbide make.?
Perhaps one has to take support of a steel ruler while tryong long straight cuts.
It is question of one's own experience.
sarma? ?vu3zmv

On Tue, 25 Jun 2019, 2:26 am Rob via Groups.Io, <roomberg=[email protected]> wrote:
I don't understand what the problem here is. You don't need diamond
cutters and milling machines.

DREMEL cutoff wheels EAT PCB material like spreading butter.

There has never been any? tool in my tool box that shapes PCBs as easily
as a DEREMEL cutoff wheel.












 

I remember Jim saying, hand stability and 1" circular cutters breaking offbeing carbide make.?
Perhaps one has to take support of a steel ruler while tryong long straight cuts.
It is question of one's own experience.
sarma? ?vu3zmv

On Tue, 25 Jun 2019, 2:26 am Rob via Groups.Io, <roomberg=[email protected]> wrote:
I don't understand what the problem here is. You don't need diamond
cutters and milling machines.

DREMEL cutoff wheels EAT PCB material like spreading butter.

There has never been any? tool in my tool box that shapes PCBs as easily
as a DEREMEL cutoff wheel.











 

I don't understand what the problem here is. You don't need diamond cutters and milling machines.

DREMEL cutoff wheels EAT PCB material like spreading butter.

There has never been any? tool in my tool box that shapes PCBs as easily as a DEREMEL cutoff wheel.




 

Correction: Electroplated diamond bits (not sintered). You can find them locally at a "big box store", hardware store, Hazard Fraught Tools, or order from Amazon or eBay.

?

Craig L


 

A couple of years ago, based on a post in an online discussion, I bought a 4" "nearly a toy" table saw from Hazard Fraught Tools to cut PCBs. It really works well on PCBs, better than any other saw i have tried. I haven't used it for anything else but based on comments in online reviews of it and similar saws it may be the only thing it does well.

?

I realize that you are trying to make a cut-out and not a straight cut, but lacking a milling machine or CNC router, I think sintered diamond bits are your best option. Cut a crude hole with a coping saw to within 1/8"- 3/16" or so of your final size. Get a small diameter cylindrical diamond coated bit for your Dremel, either one from Dremel or a cheap Chinese one. I wouldn't use one smaller than 1/8" or possibly 3/32'. Mount the Dremel with the bit pointing up through a table so your hands are free to guide the PCB. You could use the Dremel router-shaper table or make your own possibly using their drill guide attachment. I just tested this holding the Dremel in one hand and a small scrap of PCB in the other and was able to get within 0.01" to 0.02" of a scribed line. Take your time and don't force it, use a slower speed on the Dremel for less aggressive cutting if necessary.

?

This will still leave you with a small radius (1/16") at the corners that you may need to file. The best way to do this is with a file with a "safe edge" - an edge with no teeth. I use a 1/8" square file that I ground the teeth off of one of the four sides with a belt sander (as per: - although I held the file perpendicular to the belt and didn't need to make a magnetic holder).

?

If your PCB is not bare (still has copper on it) the best way to make a visible but fine line to mark your cut-out is to go over the area with a black or blue Sharpie pen then use a ruler and scribe (or sewing needle) to lightly scribe through the ink.

?

Craig L

?


 

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I have a couple Adel nibblers but have never been able to get them to go straight!? I have better luck with a coping saw or jig saw than I ever did with a nibbler.? Also it looks like by the time I got the hole big enough to get the nibbler in I would already have the entire LCD hole cut out...well almost.

Thank you.

Jim


On 6/23/2019 11:25 AM, Ben Hall wrote:

I'm a big fan of sheet metal nibblers such as this one at Amazon:



Drill (or punch) holes in the PCB material to insert the nibbler, then nibble around the edges.? Clean up lightly with a file.? Takes a bit of time to do it, and a little bit of time to become good with the nibbler, but it works pretty well.

Thanks,
ben, kd5byb






Ben Hall
 

I'm a big fan of sheet metal nibblers such as this one at Amazon:

<>

Drill (or punch) holes in the PCB material to insert the nibbler, then nibble around the edges. Clean up lightly with a file. Takes a bit of time to do it, and a little bit of time to become good with the nibbler, but it works pretty well.

Thanks,
ben, kd5byb


 

开云体育

The following procedure works great for any manual cutting or drilling, sheet metal or PCB:

Create a 2D CAD layout of the object to be made in a 1 to 1 scale.? Any free or other CAD packages can do that.? Some of the paint programs works also.? Mark holes and edges.? For the holes to be drilled, beside the desired shape, draw a very small circle, about 1.5mm.? It will later be used for center punching.

Print it.? Check the dimensions carefully.? Most printers are VERY accurate.

If not correct, the CAD plotter software usually comes with a calibration option. ?If not, scale your design so it comes out correctly when printing.

Spray the PCB or metal with removable contact cement and stick the print to.?? Let it dry.

Center punch where needed, make a rough cutout with some safety margin to the printed line.

Carefully file up to the line.? It is very easy to see the progress and of course it will be rectangular since the guide is right on the PCB.

?

As for cutting when a milling machine is not available:

I made a custom stand for a jigsaw mounted upside down.? It very easy to see the cutting process and gradually feed material.

Of course a hole has to be drilled to start the cutting.

Bertho


 

?
I've done the hole cutting with a coping saw.? My method is to score the copper
on just one side so I'll have a neat line as a reference.? I saw just "inside" the line
and then finish with a file...carefully.? For a one-off it works for me.
?
If coping saw blades are made like jig saw blades (and I'm pretty sure they are),
the blades are not exactly the same of both sides so they will not cut exactly
straight.? "Scrollers" know that from cutting wood, etc and will often rotate
the work slightly to compensate for that.? With a hand held coping saw you'd
have to do the same thing, except that the saw blade itself would have to be skewed
and the work held securely in a vise.
?
Charlie
?
On Sun, 23 Jun 2019 10:31:01 -0700 "Jim Pruitt" <jpruitt67@...> writes:

I tried that (coping saw and file) but the hole did not come out quite square.

Jim

On 6/23/2019 8:46 AM, Cornelis van Rensburg wrote:
Use coping saw and cut an undersize square/rectangle then file it to dimension...
Carefully...


On 23 Jun 2019, at 16:20, Harvey White <madyn@...> wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim


?


 

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Hi Jim

Have a look at:




I am sorry but I buy from Ebay Switzerland and the description comes in German. I also buy from Banggood.com and Aliexpress.com looking for endmill.

Jean-Claude


Am 23.06.2019 um 19:34 schrieb Jim Pruitt:

Do you have a link to the milling bits that you use?

Thank you.

Jim


On 6/23/2019 10:08 AM, casy_ch@... wrote:
Sorry I mixed the inch fraction. The milling bits I used were 1/8". I am still using them on my cnc router.

Jean-Claude

Am 23.06.2019 um 19:04 schrieb casy_ch@...:
Before I had a cnc router I made cuttings on a small stand drilling machine using small milling bits of 3/8in.

First a piece of thin plywood and on top fixing a flat bar either of wood or aluminium which made a nice guide to push the pcboard sideway. Then changing the fixing the flat bar for the next cut.

Entering and pushing the pcboard along is a bit delicate, one must push very slowly. It can be done with 1 or 3 depthpaths until the depth of the pcboard is reached.

The corner will be rounded at the 4 corners and a small file will do the job to get neat corners..

Jean-Claude



Am 23.06.2019 um 17:46 schrieb Cornelis van Rensburg:
Use coping saw and cut an undersize square/rectangle then file it to dimension...
Carefully...


On 23 Jun 2019, at 16:20, Harvey White <madyn@...> wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim






 

开云体育

Jim,

The Dremel type saw blades are still available. Do an ebay search for Dremel diamond blades, and you will find listings for 22mm, 30mm, 40 mm and 60mm wheels.? I have bought these, and they are fine for the purpose. While you are at it, pick up a few extra mandrels to replace the ones you have where you sheared off the screw.

That said, a word of caution is in order. These blades slice through the pwb material like a hot knife through butter. They also throw out a monstrous amount of glass and resin particles that you don't want to? inhale. In addition to eye protection, a mask is mandatory.

(The other) Harvey

On 6/23/2019 10:41 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:

Because the LCD cutout is something like 75mm x 25mm I don't think I could find a tile saw blade that would be usable for such a small cutout.? I have an old Dremel router base but figured trying to route out a cutout using a Dremel would just cause a lot of broken bits and I had no desire to dodge 30,000 rpm shrapnel.? That was why I used the coping saw.? I thought I could guide the coping saw better than I did.

I know that Dremel used to sell a steel 1" diameter saw blade but think that stopped when OSHA got wind of it as that thing is deadly!? My hand has never been steady enough to guide a cutoff wheel in a Dremel tool and cutoff wheels seemed to be too fragile so any side movement would cause them to shatter.

Thank you.

Jim
?


On 6/23/2019 7:20 AM, Harvey White wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim



 

开云体育


On 6/23/2019 1:41 PM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
Because the LCD cutout is something like 75mm x 25mm I don't think I could find a tile saw blade that would be usable for such a small cutout.? I have an old Dremel router base but figured trying to route out a cutout using a Dremel would just cause a lot of broken bits and I had no desire to dodge 30,000 rpm shrapnel.? That was why I used the coping saw.? I thought I could guide the coping saw better than I did.

I tried a dremel scroll saw for cutting a PC board.? Blade was toast within seconds.

I know that Dremel used to sell a steel 1" diameter saw blade but think that stopped when OSHA got wind of it as that thing is deadly!? My hand has never been steady enough to guide a cutoff wheel in a Dremel tool and cutoff wheels seemed to be too fragile so any side movement would cause them to shatter.

Exactly, although there are some heavy duty ones that are more tolerant.? That's why I said "fixture".?

Idea was that the dremel is mounted above the work with the blade normally not touching, horizontal dremel so it works like a radial arm saw.

The dremel is constrained so that it can only move perpendicular to its own axis, and therefore, parallel to the blade.? This should avoid stress on the blade from side to side.

Lower the dremel onto the work and the blade should start to dig a hole in the material.? (I'd suggest a screw/nut for height adjustment).? Move that back and forth as needed to cut either a slot, score, or all the way through the material.?

Note that you'd like a shield for this, and a good vacuum, since you're spraying fiberglass dust and the remnants of the wheel (normal wear and tear).?

If you know someone with a cpap unit, the hose often can fit into a normal vacuum, is smaller, flexible, and won't collapse easily.

You might consider moving the dremel sideways with a threaded rod as well, should keep the work from running away from you.

Depends on how much of this you want to do and the resulting effort.

Of the various solutions, a mill is by far the better one, although an XY vise may be a decent choice, or you could make the equivalent yourself.

Drill press bearings are not made for side to side load, but with a small PC board and a decent PCB router bit, the thrust is minimal.?

Mill is still the optimal solution, though, although expensive.


Harvey



Thank you.

Jim
?


On 6/23/2019 7:20 AM, Harvey White wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim



 

Jim, How are you? !
try pcb dremel with circular cutter . Pre mark? with marker pen. You can make sharp edge scrapping using ruler support.
?later pass the circular cutter thro the path created by sharp edge.
?
Of course , easier said than done.
regards
sarma
?vu3zmv



On Sat, Jun 22, 2019 at 10:30 AM Jim Pruitt <jpruitt67@...> wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim


 

开云体育

Because the LCD cutout is something like 75mm x 25mm I don't think I could find a tile saw blade that would be usable for such a small cutout.? I have an old Dremel router base but figured trying to route out a cutout using a Dremel would just cause a lot of broken bits and I had no desire to dodge 30,000 rpm shrapnel.? That was why I used the coping saw.? I thought I could guide the coping saw better than I did.

I know that Dremel used to sell a steel 1" diameter saw blade but think that stopped when OSHA got wind of it as that thing is deadly!? My hand has never been steady enough to guide a cutoff wheel in a Dremel tool and cutoff wheels seemed to be too fragile so any side movement would cause them to shatter.

Thank you.

Jim
?


On 6/23/2019 7:20 AM, Harvey White wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim



 

开云体育

Fair enough, filing is not trivial. During my marine engineering course we had to use hand file to file a 5mm thick metal plate about 50mmx50mm to a specific shape with angles etc to withing 0.1mm ton pass. Affectionately called “File a Mile”
Was quite impressed with what could be achieved by hand and Time!


On 23 Jun 2019, at 19:31, Jim Pruitt <jpruitt67@...> wrote:

I tried that (coping saw and file) but the hole did not come out quite square.

Jim

On 6/23/2019 8:46 AM, Cornelis van Rensburg wrote:
Use coping saw and cut an undersize square/rectangle then file it to dimension...
Carefully...


On 23 Jun 2019, at 16:20, Harvey White <madyn@...> wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim



 

开云体育

Do you have a link to the milling bits that you use?

Thank you.

Jim


On 6/23/2019 10:08 AM, casy_ch@... wrote:

Sorry I mixed the inch fraction. The milling bits I used were 1/8". I am still using them on my cnc router.

Jean-Claude

Am 23.06.2019 um 19:04 schrieb casy_ch@...:
Before I had a cnc router I made cuttings on a small stand drilling machine using small milling bits of 3/8in.

First a piece of thin plywood and on top fixing a flat bar either of wood or aluminium which made a nice guide to push the pcboard sideway. Then changing the fixing the flat bar for the next cut.

Entering and pushing the pcboard along is a bit delicate, one must push very slowly. It can be done with 1 or 3 depthpaths until the depth of the pcboard is reached.

The corner will be rounded at the 4 corners and a small file will do the job to get neat corners..

Jean-Claude



Am 23.06.2019 um 17:46 schrieb Cornelis van Rensburg:
Use coping saw and cut an undersize square/rectangle then file it to dimension...
Carefully...


On 23 Jun 2019, at 16:20, Harvey White <madyn@...> wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim





 

开云体育

I tried that (coping saw and file) but the hole did not come out quite square.

Jim

On 6/23/2019 8:46 AM, Cornelis van Rensburg wrote:

Use coping saw and cut an undersize square/rectangle then file it to dimension...
Carefully...


On 23 Jun 2019, at 16:20, Harvey White <madyn@...> wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim



 

开云体育

Sorry I mixed the inch fraction. The milling bits I used were 1/8". I am still using them on my cnc router.

Jean-Claude

Am 23.06.2019 um 19:04 schrieb casy_ch@...:

Before I had a cnc router I made cuttings on a small stand drilling machine using small milling bits of 3/8in.

First a piece of thin plywood and on top fixing a flat bar either of wood or aluminium which made a nice guide to push the pcboard sideway. Then changing the fixing the flat bar for the next cut.

Entering and pushing the pcboard along is a bit delicate, one must push very slowly. It can be done with 1 or 3 depthpaths until the depth of the pcboard is reached.

The corner will be rounded at the 4 corners and a small file will do the job to get neat corners..

Jean-Claude



Am 23.06.2019 um 17:46 schrieb Cornelis van Rensburg:
Use coping saw and cut an undersize square/rectangle then file it to dimension...
Carefully...


On 23 Jun 2019, at 16:20, Harvey White <madyn@...> wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim




 

开云体育

Before I had a cnc router I made cuttings on a small stand drilling machine using small milling bits of 3/8in.

First a piece of thin plywood and on top fixing a flat bar either of wood or aluminium which made a nice guide to push the pcboard sideway. Then changing the fixing the flat bar for the next cut.

Entering and pushing the pcboard along is a bit delicate, one must push very slowly. It can be done with 1 or 3 depthpaths until the depth of the pcboard is reached.

The corner will be rounded at the 4 corners and a small file will do the job to get neat corners..

Jean-Claude



Am 23.06.2019 um 17:46 schrieb Cornelis van Rensburg:

Use coping saw and cut an undersize square/rectangle then file it to dimension...
Carefully...


On 23 Jun 2019, at 16:20, Harvey White <madyn@...> wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim



 

开云体育

Use coping saw and cut an undersize square/rectangle then file it to dimension...
Carefully...


On 23 Jun 2019, at 16:20, Harvey White <madyn@...> wrote:


On 6/22/2019 1:00 AM, Jim Pruitt wrote:
I need to cut out an area of the top of a pc board enclosure (enclosure made using double sided pc board material).? The cutout is for a 16x2 LCD display.? Can someone tell me how to do that and keep the lines straight?

The best answer is that if you have a mill, you find a 1/8 inch carbide pc rasp/router bit and mill the hole.? Carbide is very fragile but very hard, so while it lasts a long time, it's easy to break and cannot be used in a handheld application.? Another possibility is to make a fixture that allows you to use a cutoff wheel in a dremel, lower it, and pretend that it's a radial arm saw.

Not the easy way with the dremel.?

You might try a tile saw, cutting it wet, but the saw blade is likely too big.

I might suggest using plates of pc board material, soldering them to get the right size hole, then covering that with a 3D printed cover, if you have the cover.

Sorry that this does require somewhat expensive toys.

You could try an XY vise and a drill press, that might work.

Harvey


I used a coping saw to do the first one but needless to say,? the cutout did not stay straight and with filing I ended up with part of the cutout too big.? I tried just using a razor knife and cutting the lines but could not get the board to break on those lines.

I have in the past been told to use a Dremel tool but I have not found a bit for the Dremel and have not seen the little 1" diameter saw blades for a while,? not that I would trust one to go straight for me anyway.

There has to be a reliable and neat way to make these cuts.? Does anyone know how to do this?

Thank you.

Jim