I don't have a dremel, just the minicraft drill
surprisingly it is now over 10 years old, and as well as drilling
100s of thousands of pcb holes, it has drilled over 80 thousand 4mm
holes in steel and plastic about 2.5 mm thick as i used it as part
of a production tool in my previous business.
It seems to be incredibly robust.
I have mentioned before that the proxxon collet chucks are 500%
better than the dremmel ones, i don't know about the motors though.
I have heard it said that the best motors for this application are
the brushless motors used for model aircraft.
However, you need an appropriate motor speed controller to run them.
So for me the price outweighs the noise from the current setup.
Chris-- In
Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "soffee83" <soffee83@y...>
wrote:
>
> --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Chris Horne" <chris@s...>
> wrote:
> > If I was building with a big motor, i would make the pcb move up
and
> > down rather than the motor..
>
> No, I don't think I would dare do anything small with these
monsters.
> They do have an assortment of pulley/drive wheels here, so I guess
> they could be geared up faster and maybe the motor could wall
mount or
> something behind the drill with a belt, but I have no idea how to
get
> a chuck mounted on a spindle. That's getting way too complicated
for
> what I need. A cheap second Dremel or generic wouldn't even be bad
> just to keep mounted in the harness. I've got that handle/cable
thing
> with mine too, but I've never tried to use it.
>
> What would anyone guess does have a "quiet" motor for something
like
> this? I think even my Dremel sounds like a swarm of bees on the
higher
> settings. It seems risky on motor wear running for the duration of
> longer PCB drilling too. Those big motors here are about as quiet
as
> my press (good).
>
> BTW- Are any of the generic Dremel-press rigs that the home stores
are
> currently carrying comparable to the legendary older ones.
>
> -George
>