I’m just a lurker but thanks for your commitment to this community @[email protected] the constant flow of quality wrestling content in my feed is greatly appreciated.
Believe it or not these were made using a brad point bit. Others have mentioned the low budget quality + it becoming dull and I imagine that’s a big cause. Thanks for the fisch recommendation, I have been looking and don’t really know good brands for bits, so that’s really helpful!
I hadn’t considered the quality of the bits, but that’s a fair point. These are from sets that are probably $25 max, I’ll be sure to grab some higher quality ones, I didn’t realise that would have such an impact on something like drilling holes. Thank you.
I failed to clarify properly, but these are actually not through holes too. The router sounds like a good idea - these blocks are about 10cm x 10cm though, would you still be able to do it with your jig without the router tipping?
Woops! I’ve fixed the title now. I’ll give this a try, thank you.
I’m sorry I didn’t clarify this in the original post - the holes do not go all the way through as they are for putting metal crochet rods in.
I think countersinking might cause issues. This is for a crochet board that a friend requested. The pins that sit inside might wobble a bit too much. I didn’t realise faster speed would be better, I imagined it would be rougher, thanks for that!
If you’re on linux you can use id3tool
I did this a while ago for incorrect tags on my Plex and it worked well.
https://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/lunar/en/man1/id3tool.1.html
If I understand correctly you would just need to put all of the files you want into one folder, navigate to the folder in your command line and then run id3tool -G Jazz *.mp3
.
It operates off a list of predetermined genres which you can identify by running id3tool -l
Furthermore the *.mp3
will apply it to only mp3 files, if you have other formats and would like to capture all files simply remove make it just *
instead.
Sorry I can’t be more specific as I can’t fully remember, but I thought I’d comment in case it helps.
For downloading a bunch of music, especially more obscure stuff, soulseek might be worth a try - if you search a genre you like you can then explore the libraries of the posters - some are very extensive. Just make sure you follow whatever guidelines they set out on their profile before you download a bunch of stuff, definitely make sure you’re sharing some music yourself on the platform and that your listening port is set up otherwise you might get blocked.
I have played a fair bit over the past few days via Steam proton on Mint 22 without any issues.