T
Too_Many_Tools
I am considering getting a small drill press for electronics
repair...what suggestions does the group have?
Thanks
TMT
repair...what suggestions does the group have?
Thanks
TMT
I am considering getting a small drill press for electronics
repair...what suggestions does the group have?
Thanks
TMT
I am considering getting a small drill press for electronics
repair...what suggestions does the group have?
Thanks
TMT
I am considering getting a small drill press for electronics
repair...what suggestions does the group have?
Thanks
TMT
Like wise - and for 37 years now. I have a 'standard' home power drill andI've been repairing electronics for 35 years and can count on one hand
the times I wanted a drill press while performing a repair. Get a
Metcal soldering iron instead.
At home I have a 15" Delta floor drill press and the drill press
adaptor for a Dremel. Go check out Harbor Freight, Home Depot and
Sears.
GG
Puckdropper said:Get a good woodworking or metalworking one. Make sure it can take your
half inch bits (as a fellow reader of the wRECk, you'll understand) and
don't worry about the small ones. If your chuck won't hold them, get an
adapter. (My Ryobi held a #80 bit with no trouble.)
Too_Many_Tools said:I am considering getting a small drill press for electronics
repair...what suggestions does the group have?
Thanks
TMT
What do you want to do with it?
I am considering getting a small drill press for electronics
repair...what suggestions does the group have?
Thanks
TMT
Too_Many_Tools said:So I take it that no one has a Servo drill press to work on circuit
boards?
TMT
Exactly what (repair?) work would you want to do on circuit boards, that
would require such a tool ...?
Arfa
Too_Many_Tools said:To access circuits within a multilayer circuit board.
TMT
Smitty Two said:This thread might hold some interest if you'd quit playing 20 questions.
Why not paint a complete picture for us? What, for example, do you mean
by "access?" To what end? How might a drill press assist in that
endeavor? You've asked for recommendations for a tool, but it's
difficult to offer those recommendations with any validity if you don't
tell us what the hell you're doing, or plan to do. I'm going to keep an
open mind, pending some actual information from you, but so far I'm not
envisioning a drill press as a very useful tool for PCB surgery.
<snip>This thread might hold some interest if you'd quit playing 20 questions.
Why not paint a complete picture for us?
msg said:Smitty Two wrote:
<snip>
How might a drill press assist... <snip>
Actually I think that this is a very good question and no one has
really answered with any make and model information for quality
minidrill press tools. If the definition of "repair" includes
"rework", "modify and engineer", "ECO", "FCO", etc. this tool
is _absolutely_ _essential_ in any well-equipped shop. I use
a Sherline MiniMill, but it is not ideal as a drill press since
its Z-axis deflection requires many turns of a handwheel. I also
use the Stahler PCB milling attachments for conventional drill
presses to clear areas on PCB copper for pads and vias and these
tools make very good small drill bit holders as well. The
ubiquitous high-speed hand tool like Dremel is also frequently
used to drill although I don't use the press attachment.
There are a class of precision drill presses that ought to be
mentioned by any one owning one...
Regards,
Michael
Is "too many tools" your brother, or your alias? You seem to be the only
one who's particularly enamored of his cryptic questions.
msg said:Smitty Two wrote:
Don't know him and the last reply was my only one to any posts of his.
Check article headers -- I have nothing to do with the original poster.
So I take it that no one has a Servo drill press to work on circuit
boards?
TMT