|| ||

Dude, where's my jigsaw?

| 1 Comment

Well, my very first casemod project has come to a screeching halt. I decided to mode the case of one of my Shuttle PC's to give it a little more glitz and glamor. Since this machines are taken to shows regularly, and tend to be on display, I figure a little more whiz-bang would be good.

For those who don't know what a casemod is, it's a way of customizing your PC case using colored lighting, lexan windows, and other doodads to make it look cool. Some examples: a normal pc, and a Shuttle box like mine, but with a blue tinted case.


I decided 2 side windows with internal red or blue LED's would look great. This would require cutting the panels out of the side of the case using a metal blade for my jigsaw.

After measuring where I wanted the panel to go, I cut the 4 pilot holes with a 1/2" drill bit, and reached for my jigsaw to mount the metal blades in, and cut the rest of the panel.

Cept, I can't find my jigsaw. This is an ancient jigsaw I've had for 15 some odd years - a little black and decker number. I'm not devastated by the loss, but it does sort of put a damper on the evenings project.

I'll probably pick up a new jigsaw at some point, though I'm considering a reasonabl dremel tool, which seems more versatile, and with a little tweaking (ala a metal cutting wheel), doing these sort of mods should be pretty easy. I wouldn't mind hearing from the more experienced tool users on the merits of using a dremel tool vs a jigsaw or the like.

1 Comment

We have a case here that is a fairly elaborate dragon that T did on his case. He recommends that you use a dremel for the clean up work but as he used a dremel for the entire thing, he can't say with any real certainty that one would be easier then the other.

Pages

OpenID accepted here Learn more about OpenID
Powered by Movable Type 4.23-en

Twitter

Sponsors!

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by dbs published on November 18, 2004 6:34 PM.

Review: Goldstrike was the previous entry in this blog.

Power tools redux, or "Daves tears stuff up" is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.