Cuttin' STEEL!!

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Thread: Cuttin' STEEL!!

  1. #1
    Hammerhead Shark knuckles644's Avatar
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    Talking Cuttin' STEEL!!

    I have one of those Chieftech cases only mine is sold by Enermax. it's steel, so would a dremel rotary tool work for cuttin' out a window and bowhole? What RPM?
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  2. #2
    Old School OCer OS-Wiz's Avatar
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    Max RPM, heavy duty, reinforced disk, and go slow.
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  3. #3
    Hammerhead Shark knuckles644's Avatar
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    I think I'm going to cut it something like this:



    The jig saw will cut all of the straight lines, and the dremel will do the rounded corners. The reason for the odd shape is that there is a handle on my case. Then, I wil sand it down, get a precut piece of plexi glass from a little shop I know and lay it down with screws, rivets or silicon glue.

    For the blowhole, I will use the dremel. Sound good?
    Last edited by knuckles644; 07-10-2003 at 12:53 AM.
    Soulfire:
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  4. #4
    Reef Shark
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    Sounds good, but like they said, go slow. That little tool moving at max speed can easily get away from you. If you have the option, try it out on a test piece, or somewhere in the area to be cut out. It'll give you a feel for the tool's reaction to the material.

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    Tiger Shark Jagermeister's Avatar
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    Originally posted by OS-Wiz
    Max RPM, heavy duty, reinforced disk, and go slow.

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    Tiger Shark BigBlue66's Avatar
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    Yeah, and wear safety glasses.
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  7. #7
    Reef Shark bootlog's Avatar
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    Re: Cuttin' STEEL!!

    Originally posted by knuckles644
    I have one of those Chieftech cases only mine is sold by Enermax. it's steel, so would a dremel rotary tool work for cuttin' out a window and bowhole? What RPM?
    Incase you don't have a jigsaw you should use the dremel #426A(or 426 without the a but the former is better) reinforced cut-off wheels. Put the baby between mid~4 to early~5, but don't put it to full max. Your dremel might die on you.

  8. #8
    Sleeps with the Fishes talldude's Avatar
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    I just used a regular cut off wheel to cut out about 45-50cm worth of 1mm secc steel. I dunno why ppl go through so many disks while cutting stuff...i used about 1/5th of the wheel to do the whole thing. High rpm, low pressure and move to the direction that the wheel is going. The wheel will last a long time, even if it is a regular one.

  9. #9
    Hammerhead Shark knuckles644's Avatar
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    WEll, I don't know about the dremel now. I could cut out the round parts with a drill bit and use the jig saw for the rest...I'll save $50 and buy Morrowind. Although I'll probably need a Dremel in the future, but I can get that later.

    Like so: the inverse corners will be sanded and filed.

    Last edited by knuckles644; 07-11-2003 at 06:29 PM.
    Soulfire:
    Enermax FS-710B with 330 watt Enermax PSU/ 2500+ Barton at 210*11=2.31 GHz/ SLK-800 with Vantec Tornado/ Abit NF7-S ver. 2.0/ Sapphire Radeon 9800 Pro 128 MB/ 1*512 Corsair XMS PC3200/ Seagate 80 gig 7200 RPM/ Sony Black 16x DVD ROM/ Lite-On 52*24*52 Black CDRW/ Mitsumi Black FDD/ NEC FE990 19" / Altec Lansing 251/ Logitech Black SBD69 Optical/ Logitech Black Internet Keyboard/ Windows XP Home Edition

    I'm a Sunbeam fanboy, are you?
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  10. #10
    Sleeps with the Fishes talldude's Avatar
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    You really don't need a dremel at all if you have a jigsaw. Make the starter holes, saw the shape out and then file the corners. Pretty easy stuff to do.

  11. #11
    Reef Shark bootlog's Avatar
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    Originally posted by talldude
    I just used a regular cut off wheel to cut out about 45-50cm worth of 1mm secc steel. I dunno why ppl go through so many disks while cutting stuff...i used about 1/5th of the wheel to do the whole thing. High rpm, low pressure and move to the direction that the wheel is going. The wheel will last a long time, even if it is a regular one.
    I don't understand how you cut something by going the direction of the wheel(?). You suppose to move the machine in the opposite direction.

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