Hi all
Well have been making holes with a Parf guide 2 system and I now can see that things could be better. First the initial 3mm holes using the rulers for keeping the hole matrix square is fine, it works and delivers the required location holes. Now when it comes to actually cutting the 20mm holes you soon realise extraction is very important otherwise the waste just blocks the cutting process, but also I have found that it is different between two bits of MDF I have played with. One produces mostly dust whilst the other almost shavings so does anyone else have experiences like this and I don't think either of my MDF was moisture resistant which everyone else seems to use so could this be it?
Next I made some holes with my 1/4 Bosch router fitted with a Wealdons cutter, just holes for the sake of holes. This produced good clean holes much faster than the Parf guide Forstener bit, so why does the Parf guide system use that drilling jig and forstener bit? It is really clumsy when you actually sit down and take a good design perspective of it, once located on the 3mm pins the drilling action can easily impart a slight rocking motion unless it is clamped down. So rather than the drilling jig why not just have an aluminium bar that can be located in the 3mm guide holes and with a series of 30mm holes to take a router guide bush. Now once located you just plunge route all the holes and the router helps hold things in place rather than trying to rock it. Depending on the length of this bar you would only need 3mm holes at that length and not at every possible hole location so overall it would be much faster and easier. Also a length of aluminium with just CNC cut holes is less complicated than the drilling guide that requires the oilite bushed guides.
Well have been making holes with a Parf guide 2 system and I now can see that things could be better. First the initial 3mm holes using the rulers for keeping the hole matrix square is fine, it works and delivers the required location holes. Now when it comes to actually cutting the 20mm holes you soon realise extraction is very important otherwise the waste just blocks the cutting process, but also I have found that it is different between two bits of MDF I have played with. One produces mostly dust whilst the other almost shavings so does anyone else have experiences like this and I don't think either of my MDF was moisture resistant which everyone else seems to use so could this be it?
Next I made some holes with my 1/4 Bosch router fitted with a Wealdons cutter, just holes for the sake of holes. This produced good clean holes much faster than the Parf guide Forstener bit, so why does the Parf guide system use that drilling jig and forstener bit? It is really clumsy when you actually sit down and take a good design perspective of it, once located on the 3mm pins the drilling action can easily impart a slight rocking motion unless it is clamped down. So rather than the drilling jig why not just have an aluminium bar that can be located in the 3mm guide holes and with a series of 30mm holes to take a router guide bush. Now once located you just plunge route all the holes and the router helps hold things in place rather than trying to rock it. Depending on the length of this bar you would only need 3mm holes at that length and not at every possible hole location so overall it would be much faster and easier. Also a length of aluminium with just CNC cut holes is less complicated than the drilling guide that requires the oilite bushed guides.