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#1
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OT: need an assist --> cutting a ~30mm disc from a metal plate
have a small sheet of...basically iron, roughly 3-4mm thick...and i'd like a 30mm disc cut from it *without* a centering hold left after the cut.
does anyone know of a service where i can send in my stuff and they'd do this for me? or even better, any paceliners have the equip to do this? id pay for your time of course! also, the "iron" is actually meteorite...so its a 4 billion year old artifact, so i'm super keen to have this done right! living in detroit, all the machine shops around here seem to be focused on industrial-scale activities...some random guy with something like this isnt something they're keen to take on! Last edited by wallymann; 10-21-2024 at 09:18 AM. |
#2
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How perfect does it have to be? Dykem, outline circle, use band saw to get rough cut, bench grinder to make almost perfect.
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#3
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I have no idea how hard that material might be, but that aside, I don't see why you couldnt just clamp that down good in a standard drill press and run a hole saw through it (without a centering bit)....
Now I'm curious though; tell us more, where'd it come from and what's the vision for the final project???
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http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ |
#4
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Quote:
very dense, very susceptible to magnetic fields, and the interesting geometric crystalline pattern is called "widmanstätten" which is a characteristic of many meteorites in our solar system. "widmanstätten is a three-dimensional octahedral structure in the metal that is formed of bands of kamacite with narrower borders of taenite, the meshes being filled with a mixture of these two alloys"goal is to end up with basically a very simple challenge-coin...probably use it as a super-interesting golf-ball marker. Last edited by wallymann; 10-21-2024 at 09:28 AM. |
#5
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It sounds like exact diamater isn't terriibly important. I think Angry has it right, a brand new, quality, hole saw, clamp it onto a drillpress, take out the 1/4 inch centering bit. Just use plenty of fluid and go slow. An 1 1/4 should yield a blank disk a little over 1 1/8 in diamater, so about 29mm, an 1 3/8 should yield a disk a little over 1 1/4 or about 32mm. You could easily hand file/sand any burrs off and mission accomplished. Looks like a neat little project!
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#6
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yeah...since there's enough extra material to clamp, this seems do-able!
even if there wasnt any extra stuff, i could just super-glue it down to a piece of wood for clamping. Quote:
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#7
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if not tied to a specific precise diameter, i'd propably use a hole drill in a drillpress. or blue it, mark the diameter with a compass, then rough cut to a polygon shape and do the rest moving it on a flat surface against a Bench grinder, a belt grinder or similar; or hot-glue something you can grab with a battery drill to the center and use on a sandpaper glued to the bench.... There is even the old-fashioned way of using a vice and a flat file
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Jeremy Clarksons bike-riding cousin Last edited by martl; 10-21-2024 at 10:16 AM. |
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Since you're in Michigan, I'd try cobra framebuilding,
https://cobraframebuilding.com/machining-services/ I think he is over by Grand Rapids, so a bit of a hike from Detroit, but he may be willing to do a small job. |
#9
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Try to cut it with a file, maybe on one of the corners. If the file cuts, it can be drilled.
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#10
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Rocks and such - especially a high-density, Fe-rich meterorite, I would think - are typically cut with a diamond or a cubic boron nitride sawblade. If nothing satisfactory turns up, you might want to try a lapidary service, or a petrographic service....
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“A bicycle is not a sofa” -- Dario Pegoretti |
#11
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Attach the material using double sided tape to a sacrificial board, and use a diamond coated hole saw on a drill press.
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