Rhyolith
Established Member
This has been touched on in the recent threads about Stanley and Record Drills, I would like to go into it more. Note for this thread I am ONLY talking about hand drills, not breast or bench ones.
The best British made hand drills I own are the one made Suffolk Iron Foundry (SIF)
SIF 1944 Hand Drill by Ryolith, on Flickr
and what I think is an older version of the Stanley No.803
Stanley No.803 by Rhyolith, on Flickr
The SIF has a wonderful mesh between the gears and runs great both with and without load, as does the Stanley. The Stanley has the chuck with the half paper clip shaped springs (cannot think how to describe them) which I think was invented by North Bros, and is possibly the best chuck design I have seen on old hand drills, however slightly loses to the SIF when it comes to smoothness of the gear mesh. So although the the SIF has one of those nasty coiled spring chucks (where the springs always get bent in some way), I still pick that up over the Stanley when choosing from my British Selection.
Someone said the Record No.124 was a better example of a British Drill, so I am interested if that is the best Britain had to offer (I don't own one of those unfortunately) and does the best of British really compete with the quality and design of North Bros or Millers Falls USA?
The best British made hand drills I own are the one made Suffolk Iron Foundry (SIF)
SIF 1944 Hand Drill by Ryolith, on Flickr
and what I think is an older version of the Stanley No.803
Stanley No.803 by Rhyolith, on Flickr
The SIF has a wonderful mesh between the gears and runs great both with and without load, as does the Stanley. The Stanley has the chuck with the half paper clip shaped springs (cannot think how to describe them) which I think was invented by North Bros, and is possibly the best chuck design I have seen on old hand drills, however slightly loses to the SIF when it comes to smoothness of the gear mesh. So although the the SIF has one of those nasty coiled spring chucks (where the springs always get bent in some way), I still pick that up over the Stanley when choosing from my British Selection.
Someone said the Record No.124 was a better example of a British Drill, so I am interested if that is the best Britain had to offer (I don't own one of those unfortunately) and does the best of British really compete with the quality and design of North Bros or Millers Falls USA?