Very informative video!! The detailers grip is supposed to be gripped in a different way than your video. The angle between the grip and the tool is serving as a rest between the thumb and indexfinger almost like gripping a pencil. Works a charm!
Sooo useful. Dremel should compensate you, because I think many folks are going to buy some of these accesories after learning about them on your channel. That includes me :-) (I saw your Biltema ruler, right away it reminds me of the store when I visited Norway 4 years ago. Cheers!)
Didn’t know about some of this accessories Thanks so much!! Agreed that some are obsolete at certain skill level Please include prices range in your next post.. Great channel “
The cutting guide works with router bits I believe, making it the poor man’s (my) router attachment 😝 it’s also why I ended up with a 4000 instead 3100 since the guide is exactly the difference between the two kits and it comes with the 4000 not the 3100 😅
This tool (the Dremel) looks like it's a really good idea and very versatile, but is there a large version that can work with larger drill bits, e.g. 8mm?
@@rotarycrafts8760I caught that too. You were using it all wrong. I was yelling at my screen..."No!! Not like that!! Lol. I love mine. Next time, just try holding it like you would the grip of a pistol/hand gun & then you'll get it! (if you don't allow guns in your country, surely you must've seen one held one in a movie before). Good luck!
Lol, that's not how you use the Detailers Grip. You use the grip to hold your Dremel the way you hold the Flex Shaft at 9:00. You hold JUST the grip and let the Dremel rest on the top of your hand. It works great for me.
Hi I'd like to ask you a question, I own a different rotary tool very similar to the dremel, do this attachments adapt to other brands? DO they have adjustable grips to block the tool in place or are they fixed on a standard dremel ?
Great video. Thank you. But the attachment at 8:29 ... you're holding it completely wrong :) Grab the attachment itself with your hand, like a pistol. And it's mostly used for carving (where the dremel needs to be angled)
@@rotarycrafts8760 Beautiful shot. I've had a Dremel for over a decade, I haven't used it too much and stored it in it's case until recently. Seeing it hang from a hook has got me wanting to do something other than cut the occasional fastener. Even if it's just hang from a hook while cutting the occasional fastener with the extension.
Hehe. Yep. It was a bicycle chain. I just didn't have a chainsaw chain at my disposal at the moment. So I just used the bicycle chain to show the concept.
I can't answers from Dremel. No chart with the newest models, zippo. Will all attachments work on the 8250? Flex shaft, circle cutter, straight edge guide, shaping platform, etc? Will these also work on the flex shaft, or only the bits/carving /tools to use with flex shaft? TY for your vids! Keep them coming! I'm new to using the 8250 & learning much from your vids! TY! 😀
@rotarycrafts8760 I don't know why ppl say 8250 will not work with the attachments I listed above. So frustrating not having the correct info prior to a purchase. No word from Dremel at this point. TY!
No worries. Yeah, maybe some confuse it with 2050. Which is not compatible with the attachments. If you check out one of my recent videos "Dremel 8260 review" I go into depth about the 8250. 8250 and 8260 are basically the same, except Bluetooth and cosmetic design.
Am a furniture maker i do more of Wooding caving, but sanding it is difficult for me can i use this machine or is there any particular product that you can iintroduce to me
El operario debe trabajar bien con cualquier herramienta. La Dremel es muy buena.... Y más desembolso. Yo tengo 2 Dremel. Probé con dos marcas distintas, y no valiern un carajo.....
Awesome video. Can’t believe the dermel has no accessory to cut wood in a straight line! Something like a fenced workstation. Have been looking here and there but there is just this mini saw which is also a free cutting not a straight line !!, is it possible to use the table 231 with the right angle 575 accessory to achieve that? Thanks
Hi. The fact is that a Dremel is not really a good tool for cutting 100% straight lines. You have straight edge guides on the plunge router, and the circle cutter attachment. But for doing straight lines I would either do the best I can with free hand with the ez544 wood cutting wheel or use another tool. Haha, your idea about the Routing table and the right angle would be awesome to try out. But I don't think It would work.
Hi. I didn't know this, which of the new Dremel models do the attachment not work with? I knew that some needs adapter on some odd attachments like the routing table. But I don't wanna buy it if the attachments do not work.
Hello mate, great videos, informative, great pacing and narration , bravo. I have a question for you, what do you think about the 8250? Im considering buying it for automotive use, i think the cordless is the way to go but im not sure about the negatives of it... would appreciate a reply, and thanks for these videos!
Hi. I just got the 8220 a couple of months ago and I love it. The 8250 is similar only it has a little bit more battery time I think. The only downside is if you are using it for heavy duty tasks ex. Grinding/shaping steel with carbide burrs the battery will run out fairly quickly. Maybe 20 - 30 mins of runtime I would think. If you can work with that or maybe even get a spare battery, it should work just fine. ')
@@rotarycrafts8760 well, luckily for me i found an old dremel in my dad's toolbox, 395 from 2003... gonna use that to see if i need something more.. while checking out cordless rotaries I saw that ryobi have a decent looking one, seems very versatile but i dont think you can get a 90 degree attachment on it... Im considering porting my cylinder head with it, hopefully it'll get the job done.
there is a 3d printable adapter for dremel so it fits the proxxon micromot attachments, which are cheaper and made of metal and not plastics. the threads on dremel are M19 and to fit the proxxon stuff we need a M19 20mm wide adapter.
owned two dremmels, not great. on both the chuck would bounce around in and out. parts cost a fortune, and eventually the power switch locked out so it wouldnt turn off. dangerous. i realised for the price of a dremmel and one tool part i could get a proper tool that would last a lifetime and cost less to run. my dremmel is a cutoff tool only now. a sketchy one. i picked up a tiny cheap ($20)chinese hand drill thats outperforming it in all other tasks atm. its recheargeable usbc and even has a keyless chuck.
Hey there, brilliant overview, thanks a lot! If I may ask for your (or anyone else's) advice: If I get the plunge router, I can skip the multipurpose cutting guide and the circle cutter/straight edge attachment and can still do basically anything I would be able to do with the two, with only the plunge router? Or would you say it is worth to own all three of those? That is, are the plunger router vs. the other two at least partially redundant in functionality or am I mistaken? Really, it's less about the money and more about the available space in my toolbox.
Yeah. The plunge router basically does everything that the cutting guide and circle cutter can do. I like using the plunge router better, it is more stable and easier to work with. But the plunge router is not able to make really small circles like you can with the circle cutter. But if I were to only choose one of the 3 attachments, I would 100% choose the circle cutter.
Why dremel doesn't make cutting table? they made rotary table and mini saw attachement but i would love to do some more precise cuts, whether its wood or metal.
Hi. I would think so yes. I have never used the 100. But I checked out some videos right now of people using it, and it seems like people are using the attachments with it.
Hi. It depends on how much noise you will tolerate. I don't like cutting any deeper than 1/3" (8mm). But at that depth it will still make a high pitch noise and be hard to control. If you make several shallow passes at 1/8" you should be able to get through 1" thick material with something like the 561 tile cutting bit. But I find cutting thick material with Dremel a little bit tedious and I find it hard to achieve a clean cut, but it can be done.
Depends on where you are from? Most countries have them stocked in stores where they sell tools. Or you can buy some Dremel kits on Amazon. I left some links in the comments.
@@RustedOatmeali purchased the proxxon 12v system, it has analog regulation and not steps like dremel, power supply can bring it down way below 5000 rpm and costs ~25€ per tool. dremel is not a hobby tool, bad for thin wood, plastics and precision in general, just melts and burns stuff. flex shaft is also too bulky and as heavy as the dremel itself. also accesories are overprized compared to proxxon and of much lower quality (plastics vs metal). like the press, router etc. but with a 3d printed adapter dremel can be used with proxxon attachments
You said you didn't like the detailers grip. Well if you knew how to hold it you would see it is a very nice thing to use for detail. You were holding it wrong. Dah!!!!!
doesnt matter how your holding it, the problem isnt so much the shape, its that all the weight is at the top end, socyou have a gyroscope flapping aroubd with almost no suport from your hand. modern motors are much smaller and more efficient, dremel is old and clunky. they really would have helped themselves if theyd made the flex extension work well. but thats also badly made and is all slop with again, no support.
There's no need to be rude :-( You could have said this much more politely, with *constructive critique* , explaining the correct way to hold it, and complimenting the rest of the video. Just insulting doesn't help anyone, it just hurts.