Simon_M
Established Member
I want to drill a dead straight 10mm concentric hole in a spindle about 100mm deep without it wandering off e.g. by not following the grain and not staying true. The spindle is the hub for a wheel so needs to limit any later wobble e.g. it shouldn’t prove the hole hasn’t stayed true.
Instinct says best result will be by using the lathe, checking the headstock and tailstock alignment, drilling a pilot hole with metal centre drill bit or using a gouge to create a dimple. Then a 10mm metal twist drill bit at a fast speed using a steadied Jacobs chuck in the tailstock.
Or would the pillar drill chuck in the tailstock (or taking the workpiece to the pillar drill) be better options? A wood (brad point) drill bit cuts a clean hole but the wings can divert the path along the grain?
I can roll drill bits on a metal table to check they are not still straight and not bent. I could check the runout on the Jacobs chuck as well.
Instinct says best result will be by using the lathe, checking the headstock and tailstock alignment, drilling a pilot hole with metal centre drill bit or using a gouge to create a dimple. Then a 10mm metal twist drill bit at a fast speed using a steadied Jacobs chuck in the tailstock.
Or would the pillar drill chuck in the tailstock (or taking the workpiece to the pillar drill) be better options? A wood (brad point) drill bit cuts a clean hole but the wings can divert the path along the grain?
I can roll drill bits on a metal table to check they are not still straight and not bent. I could check the runout on the Jacobs chuck as well.