Treid a pin-vise, too unpredictable, too unweildy. I bought a few drill bits for my dremmel yesterday at Home Depot. I don't have the drill-press add-on so I don't have enough control over the high speeds of the dremmel to bore the holes needed for the Klingon BOP guns.
Anyone offer any suggestions on how to drill a small hole into a thin rod of plastic?
Boring out teeny tiny holes?
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- Chacal
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Or you could go that extra mile and replace the gun barrels with tubing (if you can find hypodermic needles of the right diameter). That's the usual procedure for aircraft modelers to do the wing-mounted cannons of WWII planes.
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I second Chacal's suggestion. Most hobby shops and train shops carry a good selection of brass and aluminum tubing, all the way down to .062 .o.d. Replacing gun barrels is a breeze with this stuff, and it always looks better than the ones that come with the kit. Drilling out the kit's gun barrels is a mess, and getting the hole on center is mostly a matter of luck, even with a drill press. (And note, even if a drilled hole is off center by only .003, you can see it from halfway across the room. The human eye is very good at seeing when circles are not concentric). Replacing the barrels with tubing is just too easy not to do it.
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On second thought, yah, go with the tubing.
It's not just the holes. A lot of these molded plastic rod-type details seem to have out-of-round issues. Fiddlybits of that sort seem to suffer a lot from even subtle mold misalignments.
It's not just the holes. A lot of these molded plastic rod-type details seem to have out-of-round issues. Fiddlybits of that sort seem to suffer a lot from even subtle mold misalignments.
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Or try SmallParts.com for even smaller tubing.
But, if you're set on drilling them out, use the smallest bit you've got an work your way out from there. You may need to get an adapter for using truely small bits (like No. 82's). THe other trick, if you're using a powered drill and not a pin-vise, is work slow. Problem is most Dremels can't go slow enough, but the 9.6 volt Dremel cordless works wonders.
But, if you're set on drilling them out, use the smallest bit you've got an work your way out from there. You may need to get an adapter for using truely small bits (like No. 82's). THe other trick, if you're using a powered drill and not a pin-vise, is work slow. Problem is most Dremels can't go slow enough, but the 9.6 volt Dremel cordless works wonders.
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