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Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
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Re: Tub Hole Help
How I do it:
Turn your tub so that the side you're putting the hole in is flat and the iron will go straight down. Place the tip of the iron where you want the hole and firmly, but carefully push down until it goes all the way through. Immediately bring it straight back up.
There WILL be a little "lip" of melted plastic around your hole. There will very likely be little "strings" of melted plastic that stick like spider webs to the iron. All par for the course. I just ignore the strings and move on to the next hole. If you move quickly and deliberately, you'll have very little "mess" left behind...and the imperfections you're bound to have don't usually show up in photos...which is why everyone's looks so perfect.
CAUTION: Be very sure you're doing this in a room with LOTS of ventilation. Outdoors is preferable. Whatever you do, don't do it in the room with your animals. The fumes are nasty!!
EDIT -- Be sure you're using a round, pointy tip...not a flat "screwdriver" looking tip.
EDIT for one more tip -- Make your holes from left to right, if you're right handed...and right to left if you're left handed....so that you're not dragging the hand holding the iron over freshly melted holes.
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Tub Hole Help
i dont see anything wrong with just drilling the holes, or are you not supposed to do that for some reason?
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Re: Tub Hole Help
Melting the holes means less mess, in my opinion. Drilling risks cracking the more brittle plastics...it's noisy...and it makes lots of "plastic dust." Melting them is really super easy....but that's just my preference. I don't know of any particular reason why you shouldn't drill if that works for you.
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Re: Tub Hole Help
I have always drilled my holes into my tubs, never used a soldering iron because I have many other uses for that rather than mucking it up with melted plastic. In all the tubs I have drilled holes into, never once have I cracked any of them. Then I use a de-burring tool that belongs to my hubby that he uses as a machinist.. to clean up the edges of the drilled holes. The "shavings" that come off from the drilling and de-burring land right back in the tub and are dumped out after I am done, then the tub is cleaned, which you should do anyhow. If you are cracking your tub when drilling, most likely you are putting too much pressure on the tub to begin with or your drill bit is dull.
*Jeanne*
"To acquire knowledge, one must study; but to acquire wisdom, one must observe"
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Registered User
Re: Tub Hole Help
whenever i melted mine i kept a papertowel tube handy it had that last little bit of papertowell on it, you konw the stuff that you have to scrape off anyway, every couple of holes i'd just wipe it on there and twist it off, it kept the iron pretty clean
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Re: Tub Hole Help
Oh yeah...I forgot about wiping. LOL ....I always keep a very wet sponge nearby when soldering (or melting) anything. A quick swipe across the sponge cleans off any residue very quickly and easily.
I've never actually tried drilling, was just repeating what I've heard others say about it. As I said, I don't think one method is better than another, just whatever works best for you.
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Registered User
Re: Tub Hole Help
I hate being so OCD but oh well. Thanks for the feedback guys. Also another quick question: is it ok to clean your tubs with soapy water and then just wash everything off again with really hot water?
Thanks
R - U - S - T - Y 
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Tub Hole Help
should be fine. just rinse it out good, which you should do anyway.
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Registered User
Re: Tub Hole Help
Ofcourse, thanks. Can they breathe just fine without the tub holes though? there is a like a few centimeters of room between the tub and the shelf roof. I primarily wanted the holes for humidity and circulation.
R - U - S - T - Y 
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