Anybody tell me the best cutting equipement to cut opening for throttle boddies in a new fibreglass bonnet. Want to leave clean edge
A Dremmel would be my preferred tool for that.
A recommendation for this sort of stuff would be to buy a Dremel, they're fantastic...
Presuming you don't have one, I'd personally cover the area to be cut first with masking tape, drill a hole in each corner, use a hacksaw
blade covered in duck tape and then cover a wooden block with sandpaper (to get a straight edge) and sand back where necessary
We stitch drilled the shape we wanted to remove and then used a pad saw to cut the links between the holes and finished the edges with the dremel.
It's a good idea to use masking tape before drilling/cutting/sanding to stop the gelcoat from chipping and also makes the shape easier to mark
out with a pencil.
Phil
I used a dremmel with a drill bit in it then sanded the edge, you can buy a cutter for the dremmel or Dremmel clones
any type of rotary tool like a dremel
As above Dremel or similar but try to find some tile cutters (like miniature rotary rasps) - think there are some Bosch ones. Here you go
ROTOZIP RK164 ZIP BIT 3.2mm TILE CUTTER 5034914005955 | eBay
Mask out the shape you require and carefully cut the hole - remembering once it's cut you can't put it back - ask me how I know!
HTH.
Cheers, Pewe10
[Edited on 26/9/12 by pewe]
I used lots of 2" masking tape to mark out the shape on, hole saw and cordless jig saw with a fine steel blade.
Vents
Agree thick painters tape and a holesaw, if you want to make a perfectly round hole, my big question is how do you figure out where to cut. Measuring that out can be tricky...
quote:
Originally posted by fimi7
Agree thick painters tape and a holesaw, if you want to make a perfectly round hole, my big question is how do you figure out where to cut. Measuring that out can be tricky...
Yep, the tricky part is getting it central so the trumpets do not look one sided