In an old Popular Woodworking, Adam Cherubini indicated that the "center drill bits" are (in his opinion) the best period bits, especially for hard woods. I acquired a few of these bits and tried out a 3/4" specimen. I sharpened the cutting edge and filed the inside of the outer spur and tried to make a hole in oak. The bit makes a hole, but it is excruciatingly slow. It seems that the problem is the center spur, which doesn't cut. It limits how fast the cutting edge can work. Bearing down as I drill doesn't seem to help. I found that when i drilled a pilot hole for the center spur then the bit cut much faster (like maybe 10 times faster). But the wrong sized pilot hole leads to problems with centering, and a ragged hole. And in any case, surely the best period bits shouldn't require a pilot hole. I tried sharpening the center spur but that didn't seem to make any difference.
So I'm wondering if anybody knows how to make these bits work.
Here's a picture of the type of bit I'm talking about to make sure there's no confusion. (Not my picture.)
So I'm wondering if anybody knows how to make these bits work.
Here's a picture of the type of bit I'm talking about to make sure there's no confusion. (Not my picture.)