Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Drill Holder - Combination Glowforge + 3D45

 I have wanted a complete set of Metric drills so this so where I started. 

1mm thru 10mm by 0.1mm = 91 pieces

To get an even 90 = 9 rows of 10 I had to drop out the 1mm drill. I rarely work down in that range. 

 


 

As mentioned in other projects I am fixated on using each machine for what it does best; Laser cuts flat stock, 3D Printer makes complex forms. 

The trick with drill storage is compactness verses accessibility AND readability of the markings. 

Yes it takes forever to map this out in CAD but worth the effort; any time spent in CAD always pays off in the final outcome. 

I added 0.05mm all around the drill holes for clearance, I think that was too much but it is fine.

I used CATIA for the body and Rhino for the Lettering. 


The top panel is on a 10 deg angle so I had to compensate for the thickness of the material. Each hole had to become a slot. 

Lettering each of the drills made no sense because of the logical arrangement of the rows and how difficult would be to see the markings, so I just labeled the "bookends" and the intermediates on the first row only.

This was my 1st time using acrylic (really nice) I wanted something that would not be affected by oil.

So the 3D has all the features incorporated: 3 different ledges to drop the Laser cut panels into.

I found that 0.25mm clearance all around was perfect for assuring that the wood and acrylic panels would fall right in. 

I also brushed Polyurethane on all the laser cut wood edges.


1 comment:

  1. Tom, that is a thing of beauty. Any chance you want to do another one? I have been enjoying your blog for years. I have a love for vintage tools and vintage sewing machines, so your blog is amazing. I'm in Ann Arbor and just realized you are in Detroit. Your Art is stunning. I am blown away. Thanks for sharing what you do with the world.

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