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Home > Off Topic > Drill bits. |
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Chuckalicious Member Since: 23 May 2014 Location: Midlothian Posts: 1796 |
I get mine from ukdrills.com
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16th May 2017 9:04 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
Good drill bits are expensive. Drill at low speed and keep cooling the drill bit and stud, plus the cutting fluid as you have been doing, & wear safety glasses! Procrastination, mankind's greatest labour saving device!
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16th May 2017 9:22 pm |
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Dartman the one Member Since: 04 Apr 2013 Location: Seville, Spain Posts: 1687 |
If you keep blunting them then sharpen them, any angle grinder with a grinding disc will do of you don't have a bench grinder, these days most drills work better when sharpened even new ones. my PC is slightly to the right of Genghis
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17th May 2017 4:28 am |
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chicken george Member Since: 05 Dec 2007 Location: N. Yorks Posts: 13289 |
I have a fairbucket full of blunt bits,, might invest in one of these and spend a rainy day sorting them
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17th May 2017 7:28 am |
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Trav Member Since: 27 Aug 2016 Location: Aberdeen Posts: 167 |
I Do have a devise for sharpening them in a bench grinder! Probably not as good as the drill doctor would be but it does work. The problem I was having was brand new out of the packaging or freshly sharpened they just wouldn't even scratch the material I was going into as it was that hard. Was wondering if anybody had a recommended type or manufacture of bit they prefer. I was using dormer bit always been led to believe they was a good make? |
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17th May 2017 8:24 am |
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Dartman the one Member Since: 04 Apr 2013 Location: Seville, Spain Posts: 1687 |
If the metal is that hard you only have one option, heat it to red heat and bury it in hot sand and allow to cool for a couple of days my PC is slightly to the right of Genghis
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17th May 2017 9:15 am |
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chicken george Member Since: 05 Dec 2007 Location: N. Yorks Posts: 13289 |
i went on a training course re drill sharpening, altering the rest height on bench grinder holding at correct angle. sometimes I do a wonderful job most times I make it worse.
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17th May 2017 9:53 am |
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Dartman the one Member Since: 04 Apr 2013 Location: Seville, Spain Posts: 1687 |
You can get away with some pretty crude angles when sharpening drills, the big problems are the angle across the tip being nearer to 180deg rather than 90 or less and the cutting edge is lower than the trailing edge, providing the drill cuts away from the cutting edge it will drill. Generally it's pretty near when the swarfe comes off in nice spirals. my PC is slightly to the right of Genghis
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17th May 2017 3:29 pm |
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dunkley201 Member Since: 09 Jul 2011 Location: Lincolnshire Posts: 2739 |
I recall "back in the day" for really hard jobs, instead of Dormer HSS bits we used "Cobalt" bits. They were quite short but "well 'ard".
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17th May 2017 7:26 pm |
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Trav Member Since: 27 Aug 2016 Location: Aberdeen Posts: 167 |
It was a Cobalt bit clearly just the exhaust studs had been tempered over the past 10 years of use. Just wanted to know if any one had any bright ideas for future reference. Thanks for everyone's input. |
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17th May 2017 7:48 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
Recently bought a 1/2 cobalt bit, cost an arm & 2 legs! https://www.bunnings.com.au/sutton-tools-2...t_p6350492 Procrastination, mankind's greatest labour saving device!
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18th May 2017 1:25 pm |
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dunkley201 Member Since: 09 Jul 2011 Location: Lincolnshire Posts: 2739 |
Wow! When I last used them, the Queen was paying for them! 10MY (Sept 09) TD4 HSE Auto in Stornoway Grey (Now Gone)
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18th May 2017 3:51 pm |
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