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No Longer Active
09-30-2009, 09:18 AM
Hi, I need some help!

I need to drill quite a few holes through an A4 sheet of 3mm acrylic.

I haven't drilled through acrylic for a long time (since my school days)!

I have a wood drill bit and a metal drill bit, a cordless vari drill and a good old fashioned hammer drill......ol yeah and a dremel drill!

What drill would be the best for drilling through acrylic and what drill bit would do the job, I am talking 10mm holes (encoder shaft size!).

I really don't want to snap the acrylic or apply too much presure, but not sure whether a fast speed or slow speed would be best!

So if you have any thoughts on this, or experience of doing so, I'd love to hear your advice!

Cheers,

Alex !

Tomlin
09-30-2009, 09:24 AM
This may help with drilling, but it is a must for cuttong acrylic- place masking tape where you plan to cut and it will help keep the plastic from fusing back to itself. For drilling, it will help the bit to stay where you want it until it digs in a little because the tape prevents the bit from run off.

Joe Cygan
09-30-2009, 09:39 AM
Hi, I need some help!

I need to drill quite a few holes through an A4 sheet of 3mm acrylic.

I haven't drilled through acrylic for a long time (since my school days)!

I have a wood drill bit and a metal drill bit, a cordless vari drill and a good old fashioned hammer drill......ol yeah and a dremel drill!

What drill would be the best for drilling through acrylic and what drill bit would do the job, I am talking 10mm holes (encoder shaft size!).

I really don't want to snap the acrylic or apply too much presure, but not sure whether a fast speed or slow speed would be best!

So if you have any thoughts on this, or experience of doing so, I'd love to hear your advice!

Cheers,

Alex !

Alex,
For non plastic drilling bits take a file and file down the two tangs of the drill bit that I have circled in the picture. Make sure you use a medium speed and not slow.
http://i37.tinypic.com/n4xwfa.jpg

steveeverson
09-30-2009, 09:54 AM
Try using an HSS metal bit but sandwich the acryilic between 2 pieces of scrap MDF/wood and drilling through. that should stop it cracking.
cheers
Steve

Kerbo
10-01-2009, 01:12 AM
I have also found it useful to use a lubricant when drilling acrylic. A 50/50 mix of water and liquid dish soap worked well for me. It is on the messy side but made the drilling (and circle cutting) process very smooth.

cscotthendry
10-01-2009, 02:16 AM
Alex:

One of the most useful drills I have found for drilling large-ish sized holes in sheet metal and acrylic are the stepped drills.

http://isctools.com/store/merchant.mv?Screen=PROD&Product_Code=81540&Category_Code=P12

They don't tend to "snatch" the way normal bits do. You may have to experiment a bit to get the speed right for what you are drilling. I found a set at my local hardware store that had three different sizes in a pouch.

percy
10-01-2009, 08:23 AM
Yes the stepped drills works great as I have drilled many holes with one and never have had a problem.. I drill a small 1/8 hole to start and then use the step drill and works great. You just stop at what ever size hole you want. I use the 1/2 inch max size one as I have not needed to drill a hole larger than that.
percy

skottc
10-01-2009, 06:13 PM
I have also found it useful to use a lubricant when drilling acrylic. A 50/50 mix of water and liquid dish soap worked well for me. It is on the messy side but made the drilling (and circle cutting) process very smooth.

That will help. Theres a company called Onsrud that sells bits just for acrylic and they work great. Here are some acrylic fabrication manuals, one is for drilling.


Acrylic Fabrication Manual (http://www.ocip.com/promo/fabrication_guide.htm)

twisted8
10-02-2009, 04:08 PM
how do you cut squares? for korry switches for example
thanks

mlscotti
10-02-2009, 07:32 PM
All real good suggestions. My findings is the right drill bit, mask it off and take your time. You don't want to melt the acrylic but you don't want to chip/punch through either..In reference to the square cuts..I drill 4 holes and use either dremel/scroll saw and file it. I would like other suggestions if they make a square bit.

Joe Cygan
10-02-2009, 08:12 PM
All real good suggestions. My findings is the right drill bit, mask it off and take your time. You don't want to melt the acrylic but you don't want to chip/punch through either..In reference to the square cuts..I drill 4 holes and use either dremel/scroll saw and file it. I would like other suggestions if they make a square bit.

Yup, I'm a dork! I thought you meant for cutting square plastic pieces not squares in plastic. Obviously the reply below I gave was for the square plastic pieces. In this case mlscotti is right with the drill method and probably a file to clean up.
--------
Don't waist your time with this procedure, just use a band saw with a metal cut blade at medium speed, right?

Joe

No Longer Active
10-03-2009, 05:30 AM
just use a band saw with a metal cut blade

I guess only a handful of builders would have these!

Joe Cygan
10-03-2009, 05:44 AM
I guess only a handful of builders would have these!

Hi Alex,
Actually just go to your local hardware store and pick up a small band saw for $100 and a $6 dollar metal cutting blade. Better yet you can find used ones on e-bay all day long for half that, in the states anyway.

I could not imagine building a cockpit without one of these tools. Saves a ton of time.

Joe

cscotthendry
10-06-2009, 11:28 PM
All real good suggestions. My findings is the right drill bit, mask it off and take your time. You don't want to melt the acrylic but you don't want to chip/punch through either..In reference to the square cuts..I drill 4 holes and use either dremel/scroll saw and file it. I would like other suggestions if they make a square bit.

In fact there IS such a thing as a square drill bit

Check this out

http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2009/10/drilling_square_holes_with_a_watts.html