@@rotarycrafts8760 Ich wünsche Ihnen viel Erfolg. Sie haben ihn verdient. Da ich früher selbst unterrichtet habe traue ich mir dieses Urteil zu. Mit solchen Videos helfen Sie vielen falsche Kaufentscheidungen zu vermeiden und bald viel Freude und Erfolg bei diesem Hobby zu haben. Danke!
As usual, with dremel, all looks so simple, well conceived and precise. I bought this stuff to make holes and chamfers on melamine kitchen furniture. The cutting tools provided are not very sharp, overheat and wear very quickly. Consequently you have to put more pressure on the plastic shell which is flexible leading to snaky cut line. Concept is good but design fails with such an indecent price.
Yeah. I do agree with you on that. There are many types of jobs where the Dremel is just not good enough, it certainly does not replace a router. Clean cuts are not the strength of a Dremel and the cutting guide. But for smaller projects that you can touch up afterwards it works fine. Thanks for the input.
I bought this and the threads on it quickly wore out and I was not impressed with the bits that came with it. It's a neat little thing, but they could build it better.
Yeah. It is not the highest quality. It is possible to buy custom builds that are better. But they are more expensive. I use it mostly for routing small stuff, it does an ok job for that.
Hi. Have not done much work with resin. But I think you use similar bits to woodcarving. Maybe a routing bit set. Whenever I cut plexiglass it seems to melt and clog up very easily. For small cuts you can use the ez476 plastic cutting disc. Use lower RPMs to reduce heat. I know some people also use a serrated saw blade, it will cut plexiglass ok, but it is a little bit sketchy to use.
FYI…the measurement sleeve is called a ‘gauge’ and you say it like cage but starting with a ‘g’….Not gowge. Yes…Dremels do not like deep cuts all in one go, better to make several passes of just a couple of mm each time.
I'm curious if you have a specific bit you'd recommend if you wanted to do an outline inlay? Like instead of filling in the whole paw you just did an outline around each part of it?
Hi. I have had the best experiences with the 562 tile cutting bit. Cut as shallow as possible. Some of the V shaped routing bits also works really good, because you have to remove less material compared to the surface area.
Gute, klare Informationen und Bilder. Mir fällt nichts ein was man an dem Video verbessern könnte.
Sehr instruktiv und hilfreich. Danke
Lovely to hear. Then I know I'm on the right track. Thanks for watching :)
@@rotarycrafts8760 Ich wünsche Ihnen viel Erfolg. Sie haben ihn verdient.
Da ich früher selbst unterrichtet habe traue ich mir dieses Urteil zu.
Mit solchen Videos helfen Sie vielen falsche Kaufentscheidungen zu vermeiden und bald viel Freude und Erfolg bei diesem Hobby zu haben.
Danke!
As usual, with dremel, all looks so simple, well conceived and precise. I bought this stuff to make holes and chamfers on melamine kitchen furniture. The cutting tools provided are not very sharp, overheat and wear very quickly. Consequently you have to put more pressure on the plastic shell which is flexible leading to snaky cut line. Concept is good but design fails with such an indecent price.
Yeah. I do agree with you on that. There are many types of jobs where the Dremel is just not good enough, it certainly does not replace a router. Clean cuts are not the strength of a Dremel and the cutting guide. But for smaller projects that you can touch up afterwards it works fine. Thanks for the input.
Thank you for such an informative video.
Great rotate 👌🏼 thx 🙏 for sharing this great explain video !
I bought this and the threads on it quickly wore out and I was not impressed with the bits that came with it. It's a neat little thing, but they could build it better.
Yeah. It is not the highest quality. It is possible to buy custom builds that are better. But they are more expensive. I use it mostly for routing small stuff, it does an ok job for that.
Great guide Thank YOU. questions, what would you suggest to use to on Resin (about 1 inch thick)? also on Plexiglass? Please advise thank you.
Hi. Have not done much work with resin. But I think you use similar bits to woodcarving. Maybe a routing bit set.
Whenever I cut plexiglass it seems to melt and clog up very easily. For small cuts you can use the ez476 plastic cutting disc. Use lower RPMs to reduce heat. I know some people also use a serrated saw blade, it will cut plexiglass ok, but it is a little bit sketchy to use.
Great stuff 👏 thanks
FYI…the measurement sleeve is called a ‘gauge’ and you say it like cage but starting with a ‘g’….Not gowge. Yes…Dremels do not like deep cuts all in one go, better to make several passes of just a couple of mm each time.
I'm curious if you have a specific bit you'd recommend if you wanted to do an outline inlay? Like instead of filling in the whole paw you just did an outline around each part of it?
Hi. I have had the best experiences with the 562 tile cutting bit. Cut as shallow as possible. Some of the V shaped routing bits also works really good, because you have to remove less material compared to the surface area.
@@rotarycrafts8760awesome. Appreciate the response
You're holding it too high, you should hold it on the black plastic attachment