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John Doe February 13th 04 06:06 AM

A question for anyone who has made a rotary tool shank.
 
A question for anyone who has made or has thot about making a rotary tool
shank, like for attaching cutoff wheels.

What is an easy to find material for making a rotary tool shank? I was
thinking maybe using some rivet. Whatever, the qualities of the metal rod
have to be something like this.
....Drillable metal, not extremely hard.
....Straight.
....Diameter exactly 1/8" quickly flaring to 3/16" or whatever at some point
(it can be cut).
....Cheap.

To accuratly center the screw hole in the end of the shank, the unmade
shank can be inserted into a drill or rotary tool and spun against a
stationary drill bit.

Thanks in advance.

Lew Hodgett February 13th 04 06:57 AM

A question for anyone who has made a rotary tool shank.
 

"John Doe" writes:

A question for anyone who has made or has thot about making a rotary tool
shank, like for attaching cutoff wheels.

snip

Can you say Dremel?

For them, it's standard hardware.

HTH


--
Lew

S/A: Challenge, The Bullet Proof Boat, (Under Construction in the Southland)
Visit: http://home.earthlink.net/~lewhodgett for Pictures



CW February 13th 04 07:22 AM

A question for anyone who has made a rotary tool shank.
 
Yes, I have made them for specialty industrial applications but for what you
are doing, why bother? Go to a good model shop. Dremel makes them and so do
a number of others. Many are better than Dremel and they are cheap.

"John Doe" wrote in message
. ..
A question for anyone who has made or has thot about making a rotary tool
shank, like for attaching cutoff wheels.

What is an easy to find material for making a rotary tool shank? I was
thinking maybe using some rivet. Whatever, the qualities of the metal rod
have to be something like this.
...Drillable metal, not extremely hard.
...Straight.
...Diameter exactly 1/8" quickly flaring to 3/16" or whatever at some

point
(it can be cut).
...Cheap.

To accuratly center the screw hole in the end of the shank, the unmade
shank can be inserted into a drill or rotary tool and spun against a
stationary drill bit.

Thanks in advance.




John Doe February 13th 04 07:33 AM

A question for anyone who has made a rotary tool shank.
 
"CW" wrote

Yes,


Yes?

I have made them for specialty industrial applications


And?

but for what you are doing, why bother?


I enjoy making things.







Go to a good model shop. Dremel makes them and so do
a number of others. Many are better than Dremel and they are cheap.

"John Doe" wrote in message
. ..
A question for anyone who has made or has thot about making a rotary

tool
shank, like for attaching cutoff wheels.

What is an easy to find material for making a rotary tool shank? I was
thinking maybe using some rivet. Whatever, the qualities of the metal

rod
have to be something like this.
...Drillable metal, not extremely hard.
...Straight.
...Diameter exactly 1/8" quickly flaring to 3/16" or whatever at some

point
(it can be cut).
...Cheap.

To accuratly center the screw hole in the end of the shank, the unmade
shank can be inserted into a drill or rotary tool and spun against a
stationary drill bit.

Thanks in advance.





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Subject: A question for anyone who has made a rotary tool shank.
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Lewis Hartswick February 13th 04 09:24 PM

A question for anyone who has made a rotary tool shank.
 
John Doe wrote:

"CW" wrote

Yes,


Yes?

I have made them for specialty industrial applications


And?

but for what you are doing, why bother?


I enjoy making things.


I take you are talking about 1/8 in. shanks.
I have made several adaptors for my router to take slitting
saws and special cutters and a longer shank for the finger
joint cutter etc. I used plain old 1018 either hot rolled
or cold rolled steel. Didn't heat treat or anything special.
...lew...

Morris Dovey February 13th 04 09:44 PM

A question for anyone who has made a rotary tool shank.
 
John Doe wrote:

"CW" wrote

Yes,


Yes?

I have made them for specialty industrial applications


And?

but for what you are doing, why bother?


I enjoy making things.


Enco (http://www.use-enco.com) sells drill rod that you can
probably turn to what you've described.

Personally, I'd just use one of the standard mandrels from any of
the rotary tool manufacturers and spend the time making something
out of wood :-)

--
Morris Dovey
West Des Moines, Iowa USA
C links at http://www.iedu.com/c
Read my lips: The apple doesn't fall far from the tree.


CW February 14th 04 01:21 AM

A question for anyone who has made a rotary tool shank.
 
Drill rod machines very badly. My preference has always been 304 stainless.
Tough but machines well.

"Morris Dovey" wrote in message
...
John Doe wrote:

"CW" wrote

Yes,


Yes?

I have made them for specialty industrial applications


And?

but for what you are doing, why bother?


I enjoy making things.


Enco (http://www.use-enco.com) sells drill rod that you can
probably turn to what you've described.

Personally, I'd just use one of the standard mandrels from any of
the rotary tool manufacturers and spend the time making something
out of wood :-)

--
Morris Dovey
West Des Moines, Iowa USA
C links at http://www.iedu.com/c
Read my lips: The apple doesn't fall far from the tree.





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