Phil Pascoe
Established Member
Which doesn't matter a jot if the OP needs a 1/2" drill.
The plans I am working from only state imperial fractions for hole sizes and also all other measurements are also imperial it is just a pain having to convert to decimal inch measurements. This also includes the reaming sizesPlease pay good attention to this reply. There is very little engineering need today to buy imperial drills. The standard increment for metric drills is 0.1mm, or four thou' in freedom units. Unless you are into doing serious mental gymnastics over letter and number drills, that increment is finer than the standard imperial increment of 1/64" (roughly 16 thou'), so metric drils have four times 'resolution' of imperial.
That's all very well, but every 'big shed' here has imperial sizes, however you have to find a specialist supplier (often at specialist prices) for drills in 0.1mm increments....The standard increment for metric drills is 0.1mm, or four thou' in freedom units. Unless you are into doing serious mental gymnastics over letter and number drills, that increment is finer than the standard imperial increment of 1/64" (roughly 16 thou'), so metric drils have four times 'resolution' of imperial.
What about letter drills! They may be odd sizes but can give hole sizes that suit different metric fits.There is very little engineering need today to buy imperial drills
What about letter drills! They may be odd sizes but can give hole sizes that suit different metric fits.
I recently found a large amount of good quality imperial drills at our local car boot sale, many of which had never been used, new in their packets, made in England etc. 50p for the lot so a good find.Hi all,
Anyone know a good place to purchase imperial drill bits?
Specifically 1/2 inch?
Regards
Nick
If used in a handheld drill then the accuracy may not be precision but you get a hole, used in a drill press with the workpiece fixed down then you get a precise hole providing the drill bit is sharp and suitable for the material being drilled, for real precision then yes you will need a mill.Twist drills are not precision items: you can guarantee neither location, diameter, straightness, roundness or surface finish with them.
If you measure a drilled hole you will find that it will drill slightly over size to get a precise size would mean drilling very slightly under and reaming itIf used in a handheld drill then the accuracy may not be precision but you get a hole, used in a drill press with the workpiece fixed down then you get a precise hole providing the drill bit is sharp and suitable for the material being drilled, for real precision then yes you will need a mill.
...but in general hardware stores metric drills come in 0.5mm increments and they don't stock imperial anymore...
...I use a lot of small gauge round bar in 1/16" and 1/8" diameter because for some reason small round bar is still sized in imperial...
...Why is so much engineering stuff still sized in imperial? This is a continual anguished cry from a lot of metal workers I know.
Yes, getting drills in 0.1 mm increments is more than difficult.That's all very well, but every 'big shed' here has imperial sizes, however you have to find a specialist supplier (often at specialist prices) for drills in 0.1mm increments.
Cheers, Vann.
We only have a Bumblings here in Whangamata and although they have good stocks of imperial and metric engineering, coach bolts etc there's not an imperial drill bit to be found in the store. Nearest place to source imperial bits would be Bay Engineers but thats in Tauranga, 100 clicks away.You've got me worried now. I'll have to go down to Mega and check, but last time I looked (2-3 years ago) they still sold both metric and imperial (I haven't had to buy any recently as they had a good supply at work).
Nuts. I wanted some 1/4" round bar (to thread 1/4" BSW) two weeks ago and Fletcher Steel said they had none in New Zealand.
I'll send you some imperial drill bits if you send me some imperial rod...
Cheers, Vann.
Possibly because the US never fully adopted the metric system?, but having worked for an American company manufacturing in the far east, all drawings were metric.Why is so much engineering stuff still sized in imperial?
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