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I've used a dremel to do piercing in the past, which is about the same speed as the foredom IIRC. Didn't work too well - had to push to get the wood to go away and it wanted to follow the grain. Haven't gotten one yet, but I've read that a dental handpiece (drill) is what you want for something like this. (35,000 rpm for the dremel, 400,000 for the dental drill.) There are cheap chinese dental drills on fleabay for ~$20-30 shipped; probably going to break down & buy one soon, just haven't yet.
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I have to agree that a drumel tool is to slow to use for piercing since I have tried, but it does work good for making grooves in wood for adding inlay.
Arlin
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Frank
This is what I have been watching on Ebay
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Dental-Portable-...M8AAOSwbdpWV7aKIt is high speed "Rotational speed: 220000-350000round/min." and comes with the hand piece. I am thinking an extra 1 or 2 hand pieces would be good too.
Hope it helps
Arlin
As of this time I am not teaching vets to turn. Also please do not send any items to me without prior notification. Thank You Everyone.
It is always the right time, to do the right thing.
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A high-speed dental tool doesn't have much power, so I'm not sure if it would work for piercing. If it would, it would be slow going. An NSK Presto would work a lot better. Some of the newer NSK micromotors may work as well. You could check out some of the woodturning or carving retailers to see if there any less-expensive alternatives.