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Cutting 60mm Hole in Plastic

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wssix99

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Joined
Mar 2, 2011
Messages
5,162
Location
Chicago, IL
Easy fellas. It's just a dashboard - thin plastic.

I am working on a car project were I need to cut a precise 60mm hole in a piece of plastic dashboard material.

Don't scare off our new member by turning this in to the Manhattan Project! (If its too complicated or tight, one can get a step drill that maxes out at 60mm. No fuss, no grief, no worry about over-reaming.
 

PossumDog

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Jan 21, 2012
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58
Location
SC
I have used an expansive bit in a hand held brace. Can set the radius to exactly what you want and rotate as slow as you want.
 

rharman

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Apr 22, 2012
Messages
8,894
Location
SoCal
Hole saw in reverse, Forstner, or a step drill - all previously mentioned.

Forstner was my first thought - I didn't think about a step drill that large.
Would probably be great if you have the depth behind the face to handle it.
 

jonesg

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Mar 15, 2010
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Location
northern Maine/
Happy New Year guys. I am working on a car project were I need to cut a precise 60mm hole in a piece of plastic dashboard material. I am stuggling to find a hole saw blade that is not coarse or made for wood or metal. Any thoughts on how I could do this. Thank you!
it can't be done, get rid of the car.
 
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cgrutt

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Mar 4, 2016
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8,356
I like the step-drill suggestion and would try that if it works. Back in the day we cut many precise (to the eye) shapes in plastic dashs with dremels w/ carbide bits and files but it takes a lot of practice to get good at it. Helped if dremel was variable speed and adjusted to cut cleanly as some plastics had a tendency to melt back together and build up a burr. Direction of cut will alter which side of line the burr forms on but very easy for the carbide bit to climb over cut line. Wouldn't recommend this as first choice if you can get a precise and clean cut with a bit or hole saw. We tended to use dremel and file for irregular shapes for example fitting a rectangular shaped radar detector flush with dash etc.
 

Pexto

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May 5, 2018
Messages
640
They are pretty useless otherwise, but an adjustable bit in a brace works really well for situations like this in thin plastic or soft metal. The cut is very controllable and you can dial in *exactly* the size hole you need.

Edit: Sorry, I missed PossomDog's post suggesting the same thing first.
 
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rayra

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Dec 1, 2014
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Escaped from Los Angeles
Man you guys could complicate anything. A 60mm bimetal hole saw for wood will work just fine. In either direction. Particularly if you are looking to put a gauge hole thru a piece of plastic sheet suitable for an instrument panel.
 

Captain Spaulding

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Joined
Feb 13, 2017
Messages
754
Location
Southern Indiana
60mm OD pipe and tube is available. Sharpen by grinding a bevel on the inside. Hammer through. If you can tolerate a little goo, heat the pipe And push it through.
 
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