Hello all,
I would be grateful for some advice on how to accurately bore deep wide holes.
I am looking for the best set-up for making hollow dowels, 14" long and, say 1" OD and and internal diameters varying from 13 to 19mm right down the centre of the dowel (i.e. 1 dowel with 13 mm ID, one with 16mm ID, one with 19mm OD, etc, so the ID needs to be consistent for each piece but vary between pieces).
I have got a pillar drill with 650mm chuck-to base and I now have a Record DML24x lathe (24" between chucks) at my disposal.
What would be the best and the most accurate way of boring square blanks to arrive at the hollow dowel?
I can think of 3 ways of doing it:
1) Make up a jig to hold the blank in the pillar drill, hollow out with a long wide drill bit (auger? flat?). Fix between cone centres on the lathe and turn.
2) Turn the dowel on the lathe, fix on the lathe with a scroll chuck, support with a home-made roller steady, first put a short, then a long wide drill bit into the tailstock and bore.
3) Bore a small pilot hole on the lathe using a hole boring tailstock kit and then enlarge the hole on the lathe or the press with a flat bit to the required size.
Any suggestions on what method to chose (or any alternatives) would be of help.
Thank you.
I would be grateful for some advice on how to accurately bore deep wide holes.
I am looking for the best set-up for making hollow dowels, 14" long and, say 1" OD and and internal diameters varying from 13 to 19mm right down the centre of the dowel (i.e. 1 dowel with 13 mm ID, one with 16mm ID, one with 19mm OD, etc, so the ID needs to be consistent for each piece but vary between pieces).
I have got a pillar drill with 650mm chuck-to base and I now have a Record DML24x lathe (24" between chucks) at my disposal.
What would be the best and the most accurate way of boring square blanks to arrive at the hollow dowel?
I can think of 3 ways of doing it:
1) Make up a jig to hold the blank in the pillar drill, hollow out with a long wide drill bit (auger? flat?). Fix between cone centres on the lathe and turn.
2) Turn the dowel on the lathe, fix on the lathe with a scroll chuck, support with a home-made roller steady, first put a short, then a long wide drill bit into the tailstock and bore.
3) Bore a small pilot hole on the lathe using a hole boring tailstock kit and then enlarge the hole on the lathe or the press with a flat bit to the required size.
Any suggestions on what method to chose (or any alternatives) would be of help.
Thank you.