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DREMEL cutting wheels?

When it comes down to it there is nothing better than manual tools for your Lock pick Set, whether they be retail, homebrew, macgyver style. DIY'ers look here.

DREMEL cutting wheels?

Postby Wade » 22 Oct 2005 21:16

what kind of cutting wheels do you guys use when making picks?
I just got my Dremel and I am using 420 cutting wheels. They wear down really fast!!!
Get revenge... Sh*t on a seagull!
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Postby ThE_MasteR » 22 Oct 2005 21:19

Heavy-duty cut off wheels
ThE_MasteR
 
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Postby Chrispy » 22 Oct 2005 21:22

That's why you buy a maxi pack. 100 cutting wheels, 100 grinding wheels, and 100 patridges in 100 pear trees. :wink:
Image
Some things may be pick proof, but everything can be bypassed....
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Postby Wade » 22 Oct 2005 21:22

ThE_MasteR wrote:Heavy-duty cut off wheels


are these brown, and how long do they last for you?
Get revenge... Sh*t on a seagull!
Wade
 
Posts: 128
Joined: 8 Jun 2005 0:36
Location: TX

Postby Wade » 22 Oct 2005 21:25

Chrispy wrote:That's why you buy a maxi pack. 100 cutting wheels, 100 grinding wheels, and 100 patridges in 100 pear trees. :wink:


maxi pack eh ? can you get em in the womens hygeine section?
Get revenge... Sh*t on a seagull!
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Postby treboR » 22 Oct 2005 21:42

I use the fiberglass reinforced ones. I can make 6 to 10 windshield wiper picks with 1 cutoff wheel.
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Postby Chrispy » 22 Oct 2005 21:57

Wade wrote:maxi pack eh ? can you get em in the womens hygeine section?

If you can make picks with those type of maxi packs, then you're a lot more skilled than I gave you credit for. :wink:
Image
Some things may be pick proof, but everything can be bypassed....
Chrispy
 
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Postby skold » 23 Oct 2005 4:02

The fiber glass reinforced ones are the disks i use for cutting het pick into the basic shape, the thinner ones are used for finishing touches.
Image
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Postby riskable » 23 Oct 2005 9:14

I haven't attempted to make a pick yet, but one thing I can say for sure: The wheels that come with the Dremel suck and will break much more easily than aftermarket ones (even the same type/brand).

Those initial 10 or so they give you when you buy a Dremel are just plain not as good.
-Riskable
"I have a license to kill -9"
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Postby mckutzy » 23 Oct 2005 15:19

dont forget to use the highest speed setting, im assuming u are doing this wade. i have found if u dont the wheel will just crumble do to stress.
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Postby c1187w » 24 Oct 2005 19:12

Don't put too much weight on the blade. It can cause it to crack. Dremels are far from the ideal tool for making picks. Be sure to wear safety glasses, because those wheels break easily.
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Postby mike-z » 24 Oct 2005 19:15

yeh i made a fue picks with a dremel because its the only tool i can get my hands on and ive broken many of wheels i just use the drill tool to do as much as i can because i dont want to break all the wheels
*busy reducing the height of my sig.*
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Postby treboR » 24 Oct 2005 20:09

I have yet to break a cutoff wheel while making a pick.
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Postby mike-z » 24 Oct 2005 20:17

your a lucky one :wink:
*busy reducing the height of my sig.*
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breaking wheels?

Postby Greyflex » 25 Oct 2005 0:10

I use the large brown disc. It is much thicker than the fiberglass wheels and wears down much slower.
Someone's else post said that the tungsten carbide cutting tip was much faster than cutting wheels. So I bought one..... and it can barely even scratch a hacksaw blade. Total waste of 9 dollars. I musta bought the wrong kind.

"Dremels are far from the ideal tool for making picks."

If a dremel tool isn't ideal for making picks, can you tell us what is (aside from a computer-controlled milling machine)?

Anyone who is breaking wheels is either doing something wrong or has a bad batch of wheels.

You are grinding on the edge of the wheel, not the top or bottom, right? :)
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