Reddit mentions: The best indexable insert holders

We found 3 Reddit comments discussing the best indexable insert holders. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 3 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

🎓 Reddit experts on indexable insert holders

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where indexable insert holders are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 4
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1

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Top Reddit comments about Indexable Insert Holders:

u/lastingd · 4 pointsr/homeautomation

I'm mainly making things that work over wifi, lots of of sensors, dedicated RF gateways, LED lighting, relay controllers, little screens.

Decent volt meter
Decent Soldering Iron
Home Made soldering stand made with these
Flux, Soldering Iron Tip cleaner Don't use water on your soldering iron.

Component Boxes. I use the Stanley Fatman

Component Drawers for small components and "stuff" like resistors , solid state relays, solder bits, sensors, LEDs etc. These sit on a shelf above my desk for easy access.

CPU Component Box with loads of ESP32, Wemos D1 Mini and Mini Pro (long range garden work), Leftover Raspberry Pis from realising that 99% of what I want to do will work on an ESP (wemos) platform.

A Stack of project boxes bought on clearance including a load of waterproof ones.
Stacks of LED strips, RGB, RGBW, White tuneable etc.

Heatshrink, Tapes, Glues, zip ties ( got a set of sizes in a 1000 pack for something like £10, Epoxy, solvents, respirators, safety goggles, a range of protective gloves.

Storage crate of Epoxy handling and mixing kit.

Reels of cabling mounted under the shelf in front of me.

Huge box of half finished projects that got too complicated.

Stack of breadboards.

Dupont cable maker kit

Various biscuit tins full of dupont cables

Dremel

Enough "Big Tools" to build a house.

Load of 24v - step down regulators, load of pwm controllers.

A0 cutting matt

Soldering Project mat that has raised sections to hold components.

Magnifying Headset

USB Phone flexible borescope thing

About 2,000 lumens of adjustable lighting on my hobby desk.

A separate DIY 2,000 Lumens "Work Lamp"

All lighting under control of Alexa.

Since shipping is usually more than the component costs, buying in bulk makes sense, when you have organised storage.

I can build literally anything I need in a few hours including modify my code base that auto discovers in home assistant through mqtt + device based web interface and rest API.

u/XmodAlloy · 1 pointr/Machinists

The shop I'm in has something that looks just like one of these except it's on an R8 collet. It hogs material very well! I've taken 0.200" at 800 RPM on aluminum and can turn several cubic inches of material to chips in a minute, or I can take a 0.010" cut and get a fantastic mirror-like finish.

http://www.amazon.com/Sandvik-Coromant-A345-038M32-13L-CoroMill-Diameter/dp/B00FW6LJAW/

u/YMK1234 · 2 pointsr/whatisthisthing

Lathe coolant hose.

EDIT: amazon (obviously the size may be different)