If I remember correctly, you make the oval molle holes with a hole saw and a saber saw, correct? Your design and the patience to execute it are very impressive.
Thanks, yes normally that's what I do, and yes it takes some patience. But in this case since there were so many holes to make I decided not to use a hole saw. I went to a local fab shop that's very friendly to my projects - they let me use their "big tools" like the press brake and press shear. To punch the holes this morning I used their "Iron Worker". An Iron Worker is a large machine specifically built for punching holes and notches. These are photos of the Iron Worker, my aluminum panel is sitting on the machine in both photos. Using the Iron Worker is only marginally less work than using a hole saw, but it makes more accurate holes than a hole saw does.
Before taking the panel down to their shop I drilled a 1/8" pilot hole for each place I planned to punch a hole, drilling the pilot holes ensured perfectly accurate placement of the punched holes. I marked the locations for the pilot holes by center punching through my full-size printout of the panel design, there are center marks on the printout for every hole. In the photos below none of the holes have been punched yet so you can see all the pilot holes I drilled.
Side note: in the background of the first photo the guys are cutting a piece of steel plate in the press shear. It's capable cutting a 12' width of steel sheet in one shearing action, and can cut a 6' length of 3/8"-thick steel plate. Not something I'd ever have in my home workshop. Their press brake can do 12'-long bends and is even larger than the shear in the photo.
After I punched the holes with the Iron Worker, I used their press brake to put a 3/4" bend along each long end or the panel (no way my homemade bending brake can do a 40" long bend 1/8" aluminum), and then I used one of their manual box and pan brakes to put a similar bend on each short end. Then I brought the panel home and used my saber saw to turn each pair of holes into an oval. In this next photo I'm back in my own workshop, in the process of turning the holes into ovals.
Even with the Iron Worker it's a lot of work to make so many holes, but the punch makes the holes (and resulting slots) more accurate.
Also there are 4 holes for mounting each Rotopax that need to be square for carriage bolts, so I converted all 12 of those from 1/4" round holes to 1/4" square holes with a small square file.
Normally I would do almost everything on a panel like this in my home workshop with my drill press, a few drill bits, a hole saw and my sabre saw. The only thing I can't do at home are the long edge bends, my homemade bending brake works really well for smaller/thinner projects but these bends are beyond its capabilities.