Alternatives to IEC Power Jacks

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Of course you can buy a chassis punch and have a perfect hole for power connectors every time.

| 28 x 21mm Hand Rectangular Punch & Die Combinations |

Does that seem cost-effective for a guy who builds the occasional tube amplifier?

I mean, I would love to do some of my own work on my car, but I'm not going to buy a hydraulic lift for my garage. I know people who do; but it seems for them, the work they want to do is their excuse to purchase expensive tools for themselves. You're talking to a guy who doesn't own a Dremel. I have a hand drill and some files, and yes, I did buy some cheap chassis punches at Harbor Freight for $12 once.

I think those kinds of tools are very cool. Also wildly inappropriate for the one-off home build. They look like fun, though.
 
I know what you're saying, but you don't appreciate the level of my inability to cut a straight line of any kind! ;)

I have indeed cut out rectangles for the IEC that I tried to 'hide' the ragged holes; it was like that time I tried to fool my parents by moving the footstool to cover the place I burned in the carpet when I was a kid (not quite 40 years ago when I actually was a kid). I'm just that bad at it!

I'm the exact same way (and some of it is that I lack the space and tools)

There are some connectors that have a little more of a bezel which gives more room to mess up. My other thought was to use some lexan/acrylic/plexiglass and a laser cutter to do the percise cutout (since my city actually has a laser cutter at the library! but most people know a guy who knows a guy ;) ) then you can do a really rough hole and cover it with the acrylic.

While I like some of the non IEC connectors others have posted the draw back is you have a special cable and I have a zillion of those standard IEC power cables kicking around.
 
A dremel is a really inexpensive but hugely valuable tool.

It's very, very hard to mess up a short straight line with one.

What tool are you using in the Dremel? Abrasive disk?
I've used some of those, and aside from their delicacy (I always wear a full face shield), they didn't cut aluminum very well (the old 'never try to work aluminum on the shop grinder' thing??).
Also, I can't cut into a corner with a disk- same reason I can't cut a square hole with a Skilsaw.
There must be something better that I've overlooked.
 
Are there compact strain reliefs that fit in a circular hole? All the cords and black (squish and insert) strain reliefs I 'salvage' come from equipment having a hole with 'flats' for the strain relief.

The ones I've seen have flats on the sides, however they will fit into a circular hole as well. The flats prevent the strain relief (and power cord) from rotating and thus twisting the wires inside the chassis; probably not that necessary for an item that remains mostly stationary. However, to protect against rotating, you can also clamp the power cord to the inside of the chassis near the entry hole.
 
Just want to share what i have accomplished with hand tap, hand drill, and flat iron miser (this last item hopefully correct in english as google translate). My amplifier back panel only has iec hole, but i have to make extra hole for on/off socket, while for fuse,rca, and binding post is easy. So below step for rectangular hole on 3mm alum.

1. Mark your alum with a stright line with pencil as your reference.
2. Glue milimeter paper on plate alum and draw your rectangular
3. Use hand tap and mark 3mm inner rectangular line with 2mm distance
4. hand drill 2mm size, after all holes drilled then use 2.5mm size and this is the trick : while drilling, pull and push along the holes just like you are cutting with drill.
5. Clean the miser

Then you have rectangular holes, yes not perfect but from outside you'll not see imperfertion since it's covered by socket boundary
 

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As a side note I was crushed by the poor construction (and that's an understatement) of the punch and die set shown in the RS page.

The die (female) part is made out of 2 parts :eek: barely joined by 2 thin screws (around 4 mm) :eek:
R541264-01.jpg


WTF?

I own lots of die sets for punching my own chassis, cutting and stamping my own strip handles, corner protectors, etc. and *all* are one piece, very strong heat treated tool steel, you can use nothing less there.

What is RS trying to pull?

And they are not charging $15 for the set, but what a well made one would cost.
 
As a side note I was crushed by the poor construction (and that's an understatement) of the punch and die set shown in the RS page.

The die (female) part is made out of 2 parts :eek: barely joined by 2 thin screws (around 4 mm) :eek:
R541264-01.jpg


WTF?

I own lots of die sets for punching my own chassis, cutting and stamping my own strip handles, corner protectors, etc. and *all* are one piece, very strong heat treated tool steel, you can use nothing less there.

What is RS trying to pull?

And they are not charging $15 for the set, but what a well made one would cost.

I somewhat agree with you but keep in mind there is no stress applied where the parts are screwed together.
 
As a side note I was crushed by the poor construction (and that's an understatement) of the punch and die set shown in the RS page.

The die (female) part is made out of 2 parts :eek: barely joined by 2 thin screws (around 4 mm) :eek:
R541264-01.jpg


WTF?

I own lots of die sets for punching my own chassis, cutting and stamping my own strip handles, corner protectors, etc. and *all* are one piece, very strong heat treated tool steel, you can use nothing less there.

What is RS trying to pull?

And they are not charging $15 for the set, but what a well made one would cost.

i want this, will add to my list of tools to buy....:cool:
i will find out if these are good, $15 is not such a bad price...cheap if i may say so...
thank you for the link....;)
 
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