Disappearing buggy whips.....that made me smileI'll save you the geezer rant about disappearing buggy whips, but....apparently these aren't available any more, at least in metric.
Disappearing buggy whips.....that made me smileI'll save you the geezer rant about disappearing buggy whips, but....apparently these aren't available any more, at least in metric.
Thanks for the suggestion.
I don't have a printer, and there's a learning curve which I don't want to bother with (I'd rather make stuff not computer drawings of stuff..)
I know what I charge as a minimum to do 'hobby jobs', and I'd expect the same from a 3D printer owner.
I'll probably stack up some plexi and just drill my own. Stick on labels or print a sheet and sandwich it between the top plexi layers.
I guess I'm in a real minority with my preferences - I can't stand fiddling with those metal drill indexes, and I like to have commonly used drill bits on the shelf.
If you saw how relatively easy it is you would kick yourself. Take an off the shelf Ender-Pro-3, 30 minute tutorial (cost you a beer) and you would be banging out parts.I hear you on that one. I'd love to get a 3D Printer, I just don't have the patience to delve into CNC design and programing.
If you saw how relatively easy it is you would kick yourself. Take an off the shelf Ender-Pro-3, 30 minute tutorial (cost you a beer) and you would be banging out parts.
Thinking about your problem...here's a possible solution. It's not cheap, but more of a dual purpose solution if you do a lot of fabricating like me.For years, I've kept my common drill bit collection near my bench in plastic drill bit stands made by General USA.
Here's a picture of a knockoff of the fractional version:
View attachment 21590
I have fractional, number and metric versions. They work really well - molded recesses for each size drill and each size is marked (in a contrasting colour!) with molded raised numbers. If you've ever used a stand like this you won't be happy with a metal '2-tier' stand which requires threading the drill through two holes.
It's one of those items that seemed so practical (and cheap) that I assumed I easily could find another one to accommodate my increasing drill collection (for brass vs steel, for example).
I'll save you the geezer rant about disappearing buggy whips, but....apparently these aren't available any more, at least in metric.
For $20-$40 I can find molded stands without labels or with labels in helpful black-on-black or orange-on-orange printing. Not what I want.
Does anybody know a source for stands like these, in metric? (BusyBee has the fractional knockoff).
Thanks.
For some reason , probably from you mentioning the nearby walnut forest , just like when you get a song stuck in your head , I can't un-hear the chainsaws in the background on the Red Green show.I like this. When I get my DRO working so I can drill spaced holes easily, I think I'll make one out of black Walnut. Lots of that in the forest beside the house.
I'll be watching the rest of this thread for ways to do the labelling.
For some reason , probably from you mentioning the nearby walnut forest , just like when you get a song stuck in your head , I can't un-hear the chainsaws in the background on the Red Green show.
Not exactly what I wanted and the labels aren't coloured, but I ordered this one from eBay:
View attachment 21645
It will hold more different sizes, including the tap drill sizes for common metric threads, unlike the General version I bought years ago..
Last year, the following was in an auction lot but the price went WAY higher than I was willing to go. (There was a bunch of other stuff included that didn't interest me.) Nonetheless, I think this version of a circular drill stand is very cool.I don't really like round holders for such things, but it does look like it would work well.
I think you could just wipe some high contrast paint into the size marks and they would last forever.