I know a lot of people use dremels for DIY. What is the cheapest Dremel, NOT THE EQUIVALENT, out there? I'd like to use pretty much all the dremel bits out there. I guess im asking for a Dremel that can use all the bits w/o breaking the bank.
Be a part of the community.
It's free, join today!
Recent Reviews
-
Overall excellent buds, very good sound quality, especially for their price, the medium set of tips fits exactly in my ears and provides a near perfect seal. Bass is very detailed, but not...
-
The AKG K270s are the classic, big huge studio headphones. There is little doubt if you see someone in these cans, they're tracking tasty licks on a new album. Despite their size, they do tend...
-
I'll keep this very short. They are very smooth sounding. Treble toned down so not so good for rock but have a magic about them that makes them better than mark 2. I use them with a '89/'90...
-
Bought these on whim, for your basic train ride to work I don't mind. But its far from being the best I have own.
-
First, I should note that I auditioned these both straight out of the box, without any break-in time and then later after 53 hours of break-in. Recent scientific studies have shown definite...
Head-Fi Sponsors
Dremel. Which, where?
- jdkJake
- Trader Feedback: 0
-
- offline
- 1,232 Posts. Joined 3/2009
- Location: Seminole, FL
- Select All Posts By This User
How important are ALL of the bits? There is quite a variety as well as some rather esoteric attachments.
I have a 300 series which I consider the sweet spot for price and performance. Comfortable and easy to use as well with adjustable speed. It is compatible with MOST bits. So far, I have not found a bit that I needed it could not handle. I mostly use the cutting wheels, polishing/filing and router-type bits.
I think I paid like $60USD dollars for it with a small selection of starter bits.
- Pingupenguins
- Trader Feedback: +2
- Member of the Trade: BTG Audio
-
- offline
- 391 Posts. Joined 4/2011
- Location: Bay Area
- Select All Posts By This User
I'd like to use the "125" ? a cone 1/4" high speed cutter for neutrik jacks.
- jdkJake
- Trader Feedback: 0
-
- offline
- 1,232 Posts. Joined 3/2009
- Location: Seminole, FL
- Select All Posts By This User
Cutting through what material? Aluminum?
That bit will fit all of them. They key difference is the speed. The 100 series is single speed, the 200 has two speeds and the 300 has variable speed.
What cutting technique are you thinking of using? Different speeds can trade off speed of cut vice ability to control the cut. Softer materials can also be problematic at higher speeds. Especially as heat builds on the piece being cut. For aluminum, I prefer a slower speed to keep the material from potentially fouling up a precision bit. Cutting oil helps as well.
- bcg27
- Trader Feedback: +2
-
- offline
- 573 Posts. Joined 11/2010
- Location: MD, USA
- Select All Posts By This User
Definitely go for variable speed, the flexibility makes a big difference.
- Pingupenguins
- Trader Feedback: +2
- Member of the Trade: BTG Audio
-
- offline
- 391 Posts. Joined 4/2011
- Location: Bay Area
- Select All Posts By This User
Whatever a NYS231 is made out of and probably aluminum case work. 300?
- buffalowings
- Trader Feedback: +25
- Went way too far, too many times.
-
- offline
- 4,703 Posts. Joined 5/2010
- Location: magical goldfish tank
- Select All Posts By This User
depends on what you want to use it for, grinding away plastic? you need a variable speed dremel with maybe even a voltage reducer due to the low melting point of plastics, drilling, for better control, again, a variable, try and find a used dremel too, that will absolutely help with the budget problem
- Pingupenguins
- Trader Feedback: +2
- Member of the Trade: BTG Audio
-
- offline
- 391 Posts. Joined 4/2011
- Location: Bay Area
- Select All Posts By This User
I've already said mostly case work and some kramer mods. i assume ebay is where to go?
- sml1226
- Trader Feedback: +1
-
- offline
- 767 Posts. Joined 1/2011
- Location: Illinois
- Select All Posts By This User
It's cheaper, quieter, more powerful, just less commercially focused. The motor brushes are a PITA to change if you ever want to do that unlike the easy drop in of a Dremel. Dremels are better for really fine work from what I've seen because their speed control covers a wider span (case work and enlarging holes are not that fine of a job, just requires some patience).
Don't just randomly give up on or hate other brands. Some suck, others outperform. Compare this to an iPod. How many times have you heard someone ask if you have an iPod when referring to any DAP out there. People say Dremel regardless of the rotary tool, but that doesn't mean it's the best in any way, just the most well known and popular. You may prefer an actual Dremel to an alternate rotary tool, but don't bash it until you've tried one.
I've used both a 300 and an RTX. The 300 felt like a tank, but the RTX is more comfortable. The RTX is quieter, the 300 has a much finer speed control. I can compare almost every feature, but I'll stop here and let you consider this option.
I have the 4000 and quite like it, thou not using it much recently. It has more powerful motor than 300 with feedback, great ergonomics and the 4000-4/65 kit is quite a deal. I also have the 220 drill station which is great for drilling DIY PCBs :) The only fear I have is that some say the 4000's motor is more prone to burning out.
- HiGHFLYiN9
- Trader Feedback: +16
- Member of the Trade: Zynsonix
-
- offline
- 5,043 Posts. Joined 2/2004
- Location: Maryland
- Select All Posts By This User

Black&Decker RTX. Try it now. You have to use B&D attachments instead of Dremel ones, but all of the Dremel bits and collets/chucks work no problem as far as I know, maybe not the EZ Lock, but I've never bothered to try. Specs say 3 speed, but it is definitely variable with dedicated stops at the three speeds they list. It's on a wheel so spin it to where you want and go.
It's cheaper, quieter, more powerful, just less commercially focused. The motor brushes are a PITA to change if you ever want to do that unlike the easy drop in of a Dremel. Dremels are better for really fine work from what I've seen because their speed control covers a wider span (case work and enlarging holes are not that fine of a job, just requires some patience).
Don't just randomly give up on or hate other brands. Some suck, others outperform. Compare this to an iPod. How many times have you heard someone ask if you have an iPod when referring to any DAP out there. People say Dremel regardless of the rotary tool, but that doesn't mean it's the best in any way, just the most well known and popular. You may prefer an actual Dremel to an alternate rotary tool, but don't bash it until you've tried one.
I've used both a 300 and an RTX. The 300 felt like a tank, but the RTX is more comfortable. The RTX is quieter, the 300 has a much finer speed control. I can compare almost every feature, but I'll stop here and let you consider this option.
Seconded. I bought myself a top of the line plug in Dremel. It lasted three uses before the motor burned out, and it looked like sending it in for repair wouldn't fiscally make sense. I replaced it with a B&D RTX, which was much cheaper and I like it a lot better for the reasons mentioned above. I've put tons of hours on it and it doesn't owe me anything at this point. I buy the Dremel branded bits and generic bits, I haven't found one that doesn't fit it yet.
Edited by HiGHFLYiN9 - 11/22/11 at 1:46pm
- Pingupenguins
- Trader Feedback: +2
- Member of the Trade: BTG Audio
-
- offline
- 391 Posts. Joined 4/2011
- Location: Bay Area
- Select All Posts By This User
I was worried more about people putting up some crap from harbor freight. Not putting up stuff that is actually decent. I am on a budget but I'd also like it to last.
- sml1226
- Trader Feedback: +1
-
- offline
- 767 Posts. Joined 1/2011
- Location: Illinois
- Select All Posts By This User
Amazon sells them for that price right now, and if you find the right store, you can probably get it in store for that price like I did.
- buffalowings
- Trader Feedback: +25
- Went way too far, too many times.
-
- offline
- 4,703 Posts. Joined 5/2010
- Location: magical goldfish tank
- Select All Posts By This User
lol... harbor freight @_@
not everything that is nameless is bad though, although you've really got to sift through the reviews and stay away from the ones that don't have any reputation. most stuff is manufactured in china these days and most are rebranded OEM products, if you can find the factory/oem maker, you can often find the product at lower prices (headfi related, the brainwavz b2 is the same thing as the dba-02 but for $30 less and consistently in stock)
- Dremel. Which, where?
Recent Discussions
- › TDK EB900 1 minute ago
- › 「Official」Asian Anime, Manga, and Music Lounge 1 minute ago
- › Best Connector 3.5mm female to 2x RCA male? 1 minute ago
- › Review: DUNU Hawkeye(DN-18) 7 minutes ago
- › The diary entries of a little girl nearing 30! 8 minutes ago
- › Official NYC Meet Sat June 2nd 2012 8 minutes ago
- › V-MODA Crossfade M-80 Reviews 11 minutes ago
- › Bricasti M1 DAC 13 minutes ago
- › Electrostat Speakers 14 minutes ago
- › Audioengine S8 Alternative? 17 minutes ago
Recent Reviews
- › AKG K 270 Studio by AmarokCZ
- › Sennheiser CX 870 ear canal phones by AndrewHume1
- › AKG K141 (Silver) by Captain Magenta
- › Skullcandy 50/50 - Headset ( in-ear ear-bud ) - white, chrome by shimrra
- › Sennheiser HD 449 Headphones Black by kstuart
- › Aiaiai TMA-1 by DE Nefta
- › Ultrasone HFI-780 S-Logic Surround Sound Professional Headphones by 12Rounds
- › Shure SRH1840 Professional Open Back Headphones (Black) by kstuart
- › TEAC PD-H600 Reference 600 Series CD Player by gonkulator
- › AKG K403 by eskimoo
New Articles
- › iBasso DX100 FAQ by DoctorHeadz
- › DIY Cable Info and Resources by Pingupenguins
- › Asr Head-Fi Threads Compendium by Asr
- › Headphone Buying Guide by keanex
- › Fostex T50RP modification summary LINKS - wiki by jgray91
- › Comparisons of the LCD-3 and the LCD-2 Rev. 2 by MacedonianHero
- › Posting Guidelines by Currawong
- › Comparisons of LCD-2 Rev. 1 and Rev. 2 by MacedonianHero
- › Membership Levels, Badges and Custom Titles by Currawong
- › Sennheiser Hd4 8 Modding For Newbies by koolkat
About Head-Fi.org | Join the Community | Advertise
© 2012 Head-Fi.org is powered by Huddler Tech | FAQ | Support | Privacy/TOS | Site Map





