Page 1 of 1

Dremel for Pets

Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2025 6:41 pm
by ColemanCollector
Works perfectly on tanks, too!

Picked up this"Pawcontrol" Dremel at a yard sale and what's great about it is that the first speed is incredibly low. Maybe less than 200rpm. Perfect for starting cuts or detail work. The next speed up is fast but still nowhere near as fast as a regular dremel. I'm sure the mach 1 rpm's of a regular dremel would roast a nailquick pretty fast. Recharges with a USB type C I think.
20251220_133331.jpg
20251220_133331.jpg (1.9 MiB) Viewed 154 times
Lady I bought it from said her dog freaked out the first time she used it, so never again. Dogs are a modelers best friend!

Mike.

Re: Dremel for Pets

Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2025 8:14 pm
by Estnische
A great pick-up. Hopefully the low speed prevents plastic from melting.

Re: Dremel for Pets

Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2025 9:57 pm
by ColemanCollector
So far, it works well with a cheapo aliexpress saw blade. Can't push it as it's pretty low torque, but doing well on ABS.

Mike.

Re: Dremel for Pets

Posted: Sun Dec 21, 2025 3:30 pm
by Herr Dr. Professor
Nice tip! This is one to seriously consider, for even at its lowest setting my "old" Dremel can melty-welty plastic in a flash. A quick search of "Dremel for Pets" brought up a surfeit of links to Dremel and other brand nail trimmers, including those for us hoo-mans. Prices run from about $20US to $65US.

Re: Dremel for Pets

Posted: Sun Dec 21, 2025 5:09 pm
by Stormbringer
yeh this is cool to know as standard Dremel is to fierce and fast on plastic even on lowest setting :thumbup:

Re: Dremel for Pets

Posted: Sun Dec 21, 2025 7:14 pm
by ColemanCollector
Here's a piece of 2mm thick abs from a Stuart fender with a couple of dremel cuts for comparison. Blade is one of those crappy aliexpress buzzsaw wheels.
20251221_141658.jpg
20251221_141658.jpg (1.68 MiB) Viewed 75 times
The dog dremel on slowest setting is on the left, a regular corded dremel multispeed on slowest setting on right.
20251221_135644.jpg
20251221_135644.jpg (184.29 KiB) Viewed 75 times
No severe melting from either on these short cuts, but the corded dremel definitely distorts and gets the plastic a bit melty/whitish looking on both sides of the cut after the fuzz--dare I say swarf?-- is removed.
20251221_135857.jpg
20251221_135857.jpg (258.94 KiB) Viewed 75 times
Interestingly, I checked Dremel's site for specs and they're saying "speed 1" on the dog dremel is 8000rpm! There is no way that my fully charged dog dremel is even remotely close to the 5000rpm of my corded dremel. Dog dremel definitely does not have the torque of the corded model, but much nicer and controllable to me for those "take-a-deep-breath-you-got-this-Mike-steady-steady" cuts.

Mike.

Re: Dremel for Pets

Posted: Mon Dec 22, 2025 12:49 am
by Panzermechaniker
I know with my Dremel expertise that cutting a dog's claws would be a bloody painful experience for the poor dog

Re: Dremel for Pets

Posted: Mon Dec 22, 2025 9:47 am
by RobW
Panzermechaniker wrote: Mon Dec 22, 2025 12:49 am I know with my Dremel expertise that cutting a dog's claws would be a bloody painful experience for the poor dog
You use an hour glass shaped grinding tool. Claw goes into the neck part and use with caution as they get warm. Our Ridgeback cries when she sees clippers never mind when anyone gets close with them, with this she just sulks.