Phil Pascoe
Established Member
My way's easier and cheaper.
Here's an image of the finished product. The dowel is obviously inside the copper ends with the screw insert facing up and the screw sticking out. Hard to explain but easier to see with the picture.
Hence my final paragraph!!We're talking now of industrial drills and lathes. How many tens of thousands of these are you making?
I was about to suggest this. Also the warco 2b12 I got last week was able to do what the OP is looking to do, 4mm hole through 45mm. If it is out then it is barely 0.5mm, in fact small enough to need a micrometer. Anyway the drill was only £310 and seems not bad, however the warco 3 in 1 formit shear/brake/sliproll I got this morning is utter garbage and better be going back.You could use a flat bit the size of your dowel to drill into a fixed/located block of wood. This would position and keep the dowel still, directly under the required drill.
Extra depth hole would allow you to probably do doubles with a longer drill or turning over.
This is unless the drill is truly knackered....
Cheers Andy
BPI has frequent machinery auctions, unfortunately they tend to be way too far north for me.Evildrome, the main question now is, where are those auctions ?
This is actually what I've done already. I can't say it was my idea but did have a search on the net a while back and someone else mentioned it. It's been perfect for holding the dowel in place.You could use a flat bit the size of your dowel to drill into a fixed/located block of wood. This would position and keep the dowel still, directly under the required drill.
Extra depth hole would allow you to probably do doubles with a longer drill or turning over.
This is unless the drill is truly knackered....
Cheers Andy
For old ones: Fobco Star, Meddings, Multico. Single phase. There are lots about but they can look dauntingly rough. Usually that is cosmetic but some have been abused. Unfortunately the modern ones at the low end of the price scale are pretty much all Chinese and branded variously. Typically they do not run true. To get that in a modern drill press, think £700 upwards. For an old one that will be much better than the £700 new one, if you buy carefully or take someone with you who knows what they are doing, maybe £300. Will last you a lifetime.
I’ve got drill press envy.Consider auctions. That's your best bet for a good price on an industrial drill.
I bought three Fobco 7/8's at an auction for between £180 & £220.
I kept one for myself and sold the other two for £600 each.
So I got a free drill + £600 for a days work.
View attachment 92902
Meddings, Startrite, Fobco or Wadkin...
... I usually make between 50- 100 a week so it's a fair amount and at the moment it's just the time it takes rather than the cost of the dowel as it is so cheap.
Evildrome, the main question now is, where are those auctions ?
Ollie
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