Thanks for the advice Harvey...I'll look into the methods
you suggested.
Yeah, the swarf from the board is a problem...have a vacuum
at hand, but some kind of automatic "vac as you go" method
would be best.
Charlie
mosaicmerc@... [Homebrew_PCBs]"
>> I use resharpened carbide in my dremel 395 with
1/8" shanks for PCB
>> work. They work fine....I go down to around
0.31 mm. I can go smaller
>> but bit breaking happens every 10 holes
or so.
>
>>Me too, but I rarely break bits since I switched to a
home-brew drill
>stand that seems to eliminate any "hand wobble" from
causing breakage.
>
>>My CNC machine can drill lots of holes
with resharpened carbide and a
>Grizzly pencil-style die grinder.
>
>>Perhaps rigidity in the holding of the dremel is more important
than
>runout? Or at least, ∗lack∗ of rigidity is more common as a cause
of
>breakage?
>
>>Posted by: DJ Delorie <
href="mailto:dj@...">dj@...>
>
>I purchased
a drill stand from Sears quite a few years ago. It
>had run-out, but I
cured that by tightening/adjusting all the
>critical screws that caused
the run-out. Works just fine since
>then, and no breakage of carbide drill
bits either. I'm using
>a Dremmel with the collets, mostly the 1/8" size.
I gotta say
>though that the stand sure is CHEAPLY made....lots of
plastic
>parts. Once when using the stand, the sector gear that
raises/lowers
>the drill carriage broke!! (Cheap plastic!!!) I made
another gear out
>of some thick aluminum and it's been good ever
since.
>
>My bigest problem is positioning the PC board on the
exact
>center of the pads. My drilling is close but most of the time
not
>dead-on especially if the pad's center holes don't get
etched
>away. I installed a 12v light bulb under the stand and
>that
helps to illuminate the pad locations, but still.....
You're looking at parallax as a problem. You're not looking straight
down on where the hole should be.
One option would be to put a webcam under the board, illuminate the
bottom, and drill from there. Your only problem would be the swarf
from the board.
Mine is upside down, with the camera above and the drill from the
bottom. It's a bit more complicated mechanically, and involves some
programming and a stepper motor.
However, a top drill press with a bottom view (and a vacuum sucking
off the swarf) would be a possible good idea.
You drill from the side where the pads are.
A good set of movable crosshairs (if there's any play) and a test hole
when the drill is changed ought to get you very very close.
Harvey
>
>On my drill stand I made a larger platform out of
some
>1/8" smooth hardboard so I could use a homebrew
>moveable
fence that clamps to the edges of the hardboard.
>Using that sure made
drilling easy when I needed to neatly drill
>holes in a row like for
IC's.
>
>Charlie
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by: Harvey White <
madyn@...>
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