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Question in aquarium drilling and stony coral fragging.

Puffer

Member
Hey guys,
I wonder what is a good brand of tool to get in drilling holes on gass aquarium and fragging stonny coral?

Thanks.
 
For drilling holes, I used one of the cheap ($8) chinese bits off of ebay. I've drilled more than a dozen holes, and had no problems.
 
Do you use it on a dremel or drill? What is the power I should be looking for (watt, amp, or volt)?
 
I used it on an old powerdrill I had. Just go slow, take you're time, and keep the hole wet.


If you want to use a dremel, they make small diamond tip jewlery tips, which do a pretty good job. Theyre about $12 IIRC.
 
Same here... just a cheap $8 diamond hole saw bit off eBay and a corded drill. Depending on the glass thickness takes 5 - 20mins for the hole. I picked up a cheap drill press at HD which worked well when I just drilled out a 10g tank for a sump. I've only cracked an old 10g tank when drilling by hand once. I drilled a 70mm hole and 54mm hole in my 75g tank while it was half full of water without a problem. Usually a two person job where one drills while the other sprays it with water.

-Mike
 
Thanks guys for all the great info and link. What I don't quite understand is that, can I use a corded drill as a dremel, or a dremel as a drill? Or do I have to have both in order to cut corals and to drill holes in glass aquarium?

The other thing, What is the power (watt, amp or voltage) that I should be looking for in both of these items (drill and dremel)?
 
You really don't want to use a dremel cutting tool in a conventional hand drill; it's clumsy and doesn't have the RPM's to properly run the tool. You really don't want to run a hole saw in a Dremel either; it doesn't have the low RPM's and torque needed to make the hole saw run properly.

In a pinch though, you may be able to run the dremel bit in a hand drill... but definately not the hole saw in the dremel.

Steve
 
I agree with StevenP. As for the power of the drill... doesn't matter. I've drilled glass with a wireless Dewalt a friend had, as well as a Black and Decker hammer drill in standard drilling mode. I would recommended don't do cordless as many don't have enough juice IMHO. I'm am not the most handy of people at all (computer geek to be exact), and I found drilling a tank not too bad at all.

As for the corals, not as familair with that so don't have anything to add there. I usually snap off a piece if I want to frag.

-Mike
 
wow, thats a great deal for hole saws.

as for fraging sps,and some lps like branching hammers I think bone cutters would be best
 
nitrofish said:
wow, thats a great deal for hole saws.

as for fraging sps,and some lps like branching hammers I think bone cutters would be best

Yes, I was thinking about bone cutter too...Wonder where can I buy one, and how much it cost?
 
I got the dimond drill bits from ebay from hong Kong great price and worked great with my 18v cordless (45 and 60mm bit), you can get bone cutters from Fosters and smith i brought some last week but have not tried them yet. John
 
and if you dont like to order things...( i will in the future) you can use a 7134 diamond bit for a dremel to cut holes in glass.. paid $9 at home depot.. BEAWARE it took 45 mins and alot of water to drill one hole in a 65 almost 2 hours for both holes... go slow at the beginning and real slow before you go through.. but in the future i will be ordering hole cutters from ebay...
 
About 15-20 minutes with a diamond hole saw from Ameriglass
 
nhbloke said:
I got the dimond drill bits from ebay from hong Kong great price and worked great with my 18v cordless (45 and 60mm bit), you can get bone cutters from Fosters and smith i brought some last week but have not tried them yet. John

A couple of sponsors have bonecutters.
 
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