myboostedgst
Well-known member
A couple of buddies and I are looking to build a glass top table. What is the best way to drill glass? We have a a single piece of square glass and we need to drill 8 holes for the head studs.
Should we start small and work our way up? The hole will have to be close to a half inch, so should we do multiple holes through or just a small single pilot hole through and then move up to the size?
The info about the putty is great. We were trying to figure out how to keep water over the hole.
. . . As to drilling holes in regular glass, the diamond-coated 'tube' bits are the way to go. The spade bits may or may not work (without chiping or shattering the glass), the diamond bits will work (RTFM and use water!)
The 'make a dam around the hole location with some putting' is a good trick. Either that or you can just run a (small) trickle of water constantly onto the bit as it is cutting (grinding).
I think that your best bet would be to have the holes cut with a water jet cutter, they cut glass like butter.
My dad used to use valve lapping compound and pieces of tubing to make holes in glass. He would put a putty dam around where he wanted the hole and put several drops of kerosene in the putty dam he also mixed his valve lapping dust with kerosene not water. He would use the tubing as a drill he would let the tube turn a few times and then lift it slightly to let the valve compound get back under the end of the tube. He would just keep pumping the tube "drill" slighly up and down as he went to renew the compound under the tip until he ground a hole the size he wanted in the glass. The kerosene cooled and lubricated the area being "drilled " better than water. In the glass shops Ive worked in the glass cutters were all used with kerosene as lube even brand new cutters were set into cans of kerosene just deep enough to cover the cutter heads.
Don't use a centre punch prior to drilling and don't use a hammer action drill...![]()