Multi Page Deep Slot Punch Machine

Chucking reamers, or machine reamers, are the most common type of reamer used in lathes, drill presses, and screw machines that provide a smooth finish to the hole. They come in a variety of flutes and cuts (e.g. Right hand cut, left hand spiral, straight flute) as well as different shank types.

Product Summary:
  • New and improved model with side guide and depth margin
  • Punches up to 25 mil for hard plastics (i.e. polyester or PVC)
  • Maximum capacity of 0.8 mm for hard plastics and 1.2 mm for soft plastics
  • Slot measures 1/8' x 5/8'
  • The 'reach' is adjustable from 3/16' to 3/8'. This is the distance from the edge of the document to the slot punch.
  • Punches up to 16 sheets of 20 lb. bond paper

ID supplies and attachments sold separately.

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Ratings & Reviews

8 reviews

  • 2 stars
  • 0 reviews
  • 1 star
  • 0 reviews
2/16/2017 2:39 pm

Great Machine

by Bobbie's Printing -

This is a great machine to punch the hole for the lanyard type of work...the machine is easy to use and the guide make it more easy to assure that you have the hole in the center of the item being punched...Great Machine...love it

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2/16/2017 2:47 pm

The punch works exactly as expected. The price was great.

by Business shopper -

The punch has been reliable. It is a reasonable price and does exactly what we expected. It was a budget-friendly option to punch our badges.

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2/16/2017 2:47 pm

Great Product

by A.R. -

works as intended :)

Slot paper punch

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2/16/2017 2:47 pm

Used with Prayer Card Pouches for Name Badges

by Julietteo -

We purchased this slot punch along with the prayer card pouches to make name badges for our 50th year high school reunion. It was perfect. The price was right! And it was more economical that trying to find pouches with slot already punched. It was better constructed than I thought it would be - for the price, I expected it might be flimsy...but it was not at all. Easy to set the depth of the slot and easy to use rather than a hand held punch.

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2/16/2017 2:39 pm

LOVE IT

by PACKING A PUNCH -

MY DAUGHTERS MAKES LETTER CARDS AND THE PUNCH HELPS WITH DISPLAY.

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2/16/2017 2:39 pm

Sturdy and customizable

by SReynolds -

We are using this to punch slots in our ID badges and it works great. You can customize both the vertical and horizontal position, and it seems to be quite sturdy.

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2/16/2017 2:47 pm

Great solution

by Church lady -

Why pay to have slots punched when you can do it yourself? It's the best of both worlds, and much cleaner-looking than using a regular round hole punch which we had previously tried.

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2/16/2017 2:39 pm

Unusable numbers on side guide

by jer -

I would consider this product excellent except for one extremely frustrating aspect and that is the side guide. The side guide is needed to be able to accurately center the punches. I use laminating pouches that are measured in inches and eighths of an inch. Thus, I need a guide that is measured likewise. But this punch uses some other system that I have yet to figure out. The numbers on it (7, 10, 15, and 20)are useless. The distance from the numbers 10-15 and 15-20 is one inch with the distance between the numbers being marked off in tenths. After doing some measuring and calculating of my own, I was able to roughly determine where the guide should be set; although it was never precise since I needed measurements in eighths instead of tenths. On the plus side, the guide doesn't move easily once it's set. The numbering system on the side guide is my only complaint, although I consider that a serious fault. The ability to set the depth margin can be useful although I found the default setting to my liking. I found the punch to be well constructed and I would recommend it to people who only punch items of the same size or to people who aren't concerned too much about centering the punch. I would not recommend it to people who punch items of various sizes and who therefore have a need to constantly reset the side quide.

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Trust me. That slot machine doesn’t feel a thing.

by Frank Legato

Time for a little reminder to all of you disgruntled slot players out there who may have had a losing session:

Multi Page Deep Slot Punch Machine

The slot machine does not care that you are mad. In fact, you can swear you’ll never talk to that slot machine again, and the slot will just ignore you, and go on happily, giving jackpots to other players, and maybe even to you if you come back—even though you may have called it nasty names, or even if your rage was such that you considered physical violence your only recourse.

I say this because of the following story, taken from the Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Express-Times:

“An Emmaus man punched a slot machine on Friday afternoon at the Sands Casino Resort Bethlehem, causing $1,610 in damage.”

According to the article, the 40-year-old man (they named him, but I won’t, because I feel his pain) left the casino “immediately after the attack on the machine.” He was sent a summons for criminal mischief by District Judge Elmo Frey. (Yes. “Elmo Frey.”)

Corner Slot Punch

Wow. An “attack on the machine.” Doesn’t that tell you enough about the folly of the activity? Attacks on machines seldom result in real satisfaction. I slapped my toaster upside its dial once, and it still burned my toast. It was like the machine was mocking me. Another time, I punched a gumball machine, and it actually punched me back.

Not really, but you get my point. In fact, the very reality that machines cannot punch you back is no doubt part of the appeal of what is widely known as electro-mechanical abuse, or EMA. The scourge of EMA, moreover, is not restricted to people who punch slot machines. An even more common form of EMA is what I like to call “button abuse.” I was playing a video poker machine at Sam’s Town in Las Vegas last week, and the woman next to me apparently was having a bad evening.

She was muttering as the machine kept churning out losing hands, and with every losing hand, she slapped the buttons harder. Deal. Discard. Draw. Deal! Discard! Draw! ! DEAL! DISCARD! DRAW! SLAP! BANG! BOOM! (Sound effects courtesy of Marvel Comics. Copyright 2011. All rights reserved.)

By contrast, I was playing my own video poker buttons as if they were a piano, gracefully and gently touching the controls for each hand. Deal… discard… draw; life is good. Deal… discard… draw; oh well, better luck next time, old bean.

The whole time, she’s slammin’ and bangin’ and I’m touching and playing, and you know what? We both ended up with the same result. The credits on each machine dropped to zero.

Multi Page Deep Slot Punch Machine

But while she crashed and boomed and cursed and walked off in a huff, I simply removed my player’s club card and calmly walked away, took the elevator to my room, walked quietly inside, and threw the television set out the window.

It made a much larger sound than punching the machine.

Oh, of course I didn’t throw a TV out the window. (For one thing, the windows don’t open, and Sam’s Town has that indoor park on the other side of the window, so I could have hurt someone.) But my point is, I ended up having a lot better of a time than the button-abuser had, because I have learned machine forgiveness over the years. I know that the machine does not make me lose. It is an inanimate object. A computer. With an evil spirit inside.

No, as I’ve said many times over my career of wisecracking slot-column writing, what makes you win or lose is a random sequence of numbers generated by the electronic device you are operating. The machine did not look at you and say, “I don’t like this guy’s shirt—he loses,” or, “This woman makes annoying mouth noises—four to the royal, then… two of clubs. HAH!”

No, the reason you win or lose is simply that well-known intangible, luck. And of course, if you have bad luck, it’s not the machine’s fault. It is simply because you are a bad person.

Electric Slot Punch

Oh, I’m kidding. You’re aces with me. And with that slot machine in front of you.

Slot Paper Punch

So, the next time you get frustrated with a machine after hours upon hours of losing and feeding more cash and losing more and more, don’t punch the machine. Punch the player next to you instead. Just make sure he’s not District Judge Elmo Frey.