Hole making in alloy
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Discussion

crankedup

Original Poster:

25,764 posts

265 months

Tuesday 18th September 2007
quotequote all
Soon I shall need to make two holes in the scuttle of my vintage car in order to fit vents. Each hole will be approx' 40mm and as the scuttle is in place (car in use)I will have to 'do' the holes whilst scuttle is in place. The alloy scuttle is single sheet and I guess 2/3 mm thick.
Are there any special tools available to do this job as I obviously don't want to deform or stretch the alloy surrounding the work areas. Thanks.

Trooper2

6,676 posts

253 months

Tuesday 18th September 2007
quotequote all
Hole saw and a drill motor.

Hole Saw:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hole_saw

Put down some masking tape to draw where you want the holes and to protect the surrounding area.



Edited by Trooper2 on Tuesday 18th September 19:38

The Griffalo

72,863 posts

261 months

Tuesday 18th September 2007
quotequote all
If you can clamp/wedge a piece of wood to the reverse side it will help yes

lotisi

219 posts

237 months

Tuesday 18th September 2007
quotequote all
Get one of these http://www.averytools.com/pc-234-97-panel-master-i... they are available in this country for sensible prices or you may be able to borrow one from a racing car manufacturer.

crankedup

Original Poster:

25,764 posts

265 months

Tuesday 18th September 2007
quotequote all
Thanks guys for links and advise. Averytools site is down at the moment, any others?

GreenV8S

30,997 posts

306 months

Tuesday 18th September 2007
quotequote all
If the metal you're cutting is flat then I reckon your best bet is a hole punch. In case you haven't seen these, think of two close fitting cylinders with a screw thread to pull them together. You simply drill the center out, put the punch in place and wind it closed. You'll have no trouble cutting 40mm in material that thin.

crankedup

Original Poster:

25,764 posts

265 months

Wednesday 19th September 2007
quotequote all
GreenV8S said:
If the metal you're cutting is flat then I reckon your best bet is a hole punch. In case you haven't seen these, think of two close fitting cylinders with a screw thread to pull them together. You simply drill the center out, put the punch in place and wind it closed. You'll have no trouble cutting 40mm in material that thin.
New to me an 'hole punch'. The scuttle is'nt flat tho' well not quite, its my Austin 7 Swallow saloon which I am fitting the vents too. You most likely are familier with that car anyhow. Its the 'ships funnel' style vents I'm fitting.