bertterbo
Established Member
So, lets say you're wanting to drill a 13mm hole into 20mm thick Bright mild steel on a bench top drill press.
My approach for this has generally been :
- Centre punch a mark to guide the drill
- Have the piece clamped in a vice, but have the vice loose on the table so it can find it's place as the drill centres on the mark
- Sometimes use a centre drill for the first hole if I want it to be very accurate
- start with 6mm, then progress through 8, 10, 12 and finally 13mm.
However, the problem I find is that when you go to use the next size drill bit, it often doesn't cleanly centre in on the previous hole. The wings of the drill catch, and you get a lot of vibration. For the larger bits this can be really bad as they're so long and can flex. The same problem applies if you use a centre drill. The wings catch.
So, clamp down the vice to the table you say? ... well, I tried that too. But the problem there is that as the drill bit diameter increases, the drill gets longer. And so to remove the drill to change it, you have to move/lower the table, losing your positioning. So whilst its more stable, the wings are still likely to catch as its unlikely to be correctly centred.
Having done some research on this, I have discovered that you're actually not really supposed to use a centre drill (which are actually designed for the live centre on a metal lathe, love learning new stuff!), but instead, a spotting drill. A spotting drill has a much larger angle than a centre drill, 120 degrees vs 60 degrees. So the wings on a standard drill (135 degrees) are much less likely to catch.
So, the question is, if you were going to drill the hole described, would you start off with say a 12mm spotting drill? and then go through 6, 8, 10, 12. Or ... go straight to the 12mm drill? or something else?
My approach for this has generally been :
- Centre punch a mark to guide the drill
- Have the piece clamped in a vice, but have the vice loose on the table so it can find it's place as the drill centres on the mark
- Sometimes use a centre drill for the first hole if I want it to be very accurate
- start with 6mm, then progress through 8, 10, 12 and finally 13mm.
However, the problem I find is that when you go to use the next size drill bit, it often doesn't cleanly centre in on the previous hole. The wings of the drill catch, and you get a lot of vibration. For the larger bits this can be really bad as they're so long and can flex. The same problem applies if you use a centre drill. The wings catch.
So, clamp down the vice to the table you say? ... well, I tried that too. But the problem there is that as the drill bit diameter increases, the drill gets longer. And so to remove the drill to change it, you have to move/lower the table, losing your positioning. So whilst its more stable, the wings are still likely to catch as its unlikely to be correctly centred.
Having done some research on this, I have discovered that you're actually not really supposed to use a centre drill (which are actually designed for the live centre on a metal lathe, love learning new stuff!), but instead, a spotting drill. A spotting drill has a much larger angle than a centre drill, 120 degrees vs 60 degrees. So the wings on a standard drill (135 degrees) are much less likely to catch.
So, the question is, if you were going to drill the hole described, would you start off with say a 12mm spotting drill? and then go through 6, 8, 10, 12. Or ... go straight to the 12mm drill? or something else?