Hoopy Frood
Well-known member
Howdy all!
I've been cutting my teeth drilling on 3/8" steel plate freehand for my startup, practice projects. I've been using good, vintage drills and mostly crappy or neglected (DeWalt black oxide) drill bits. I'm getting things done, but have had challenges along the way in spite of going slow and using cutting oil.
I'm on a very tight budget, but I think I'm bound to keep drilling on steel. The (literal) pain and suffering at the hands of your nominal harbor freight bits has led me to decide it's worth investing in quality bits. But I'm trying to keep it under $100 as much as I can.
Most of my drilling is probably going to be on 1/4"-1/2" mild steel, but there may be a small amount of hardened or stainless steel in there, too. I do not have (nor am likely to have) a drill press. So I need a bit that can handle a LITTLE bit of noob freehand SNAFUs. I'm not THAT bad, but I'm still learning and make mistakes from time to time.
I've been researching what might be good options for me and wonder what the GJ folks think. Given my budget and after a fair bit of research here is my top pick: Norseman 1/4" hex shank set from Harry Epstein:
https://www.harryepstein.com/index....ck-release-mechanic-length-bit-set-qr-12.html
The runner-up is this more-complete set from Triumph via Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000PSDNOM/?tag=atomicindus08-20
I love that the Norseman set is cheaper and recommended for hard metal applications. But in my Harbor Freight drilling misadventures I snapped a step drill bit off a 1/4" shank in the blink of an eye with my '68 Milwaukee heavy duty drill. I also dulled three HF bits over 3/8" diameter through poor workmanship. I was going as slow as possible (given there's no variable speed on my drills), and using GENEROUS amounts of cutting oil...
The HF bits were "HSS Steel" with titanium nitride coating. But side-by-side with a big box store equivalent DeWalt bits they were GARBAGE. The ones I didn't torture were fine, but I doubt they'd last more than a few holes under the best circumstances. I doubt big box store DeWalt is what I want either...
Either the Norseman or Triumph sets would be a huge improvement, but I'm worried the 1/4" shank on the Norseman compromises bit integrity. Yet the more expensive Triumph set has reviews that are less than flattering - especially if you are using them outside of a drill press. Some reviewers even suggest these are knock offs?
What does the GJ community think?
I've been cutting my teeth drilling on 3/8" steel plate freehand for my startup, practice projects. I've been using good, vintage drills and mostly crappy or neglected (DeWalt black oxide) drill bits. I'm getting things done, but have had challenges along the way in spite of going slow and using cutting oil.
I'm on a very tight budget, but I think I'm bound to keep drilling on steel. The (literal) pain and suffering at the hands of your nominal harbor freight bits has led me to decide it's worth investing in quality bits. But I'm trying to keep it under $100 as much as I can.
Most of my drilling is probably going to be on 1/4"-1/2" mild steel, but there may be a small amount of hardened or stainless steel in there, too. I do not have (nor am likely to have) a drill press. So I need a bit that can handle a LITTLE bit of noob freehand SNAFUs. I'm not THAT bad, but I'm still learning and make mistakes from time to time.
I've been researching what might be good options for me and wonder what the GJ folks think. Given my budget and after a fair bit of research here is my top pick: Norseman 1/4" hex shank set from Harry Epstein:
https://www.harryepstein.com/index....ck-release-mechanic-length-bit-set-qr-12.html
The runner-up is this more-complete set from Triumph via Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000PSDNOM/?tag=atomicindus08-20
I love that the Norseman set is cheaper and recommended for hard metal applications. But in my Harbor Freight drilling misadventures I snapped a step drill bit off a 1/4" shank in the blink of an eye with my '68 Milwaukee heavy duty drill. I also dulled three HF bits over 3/8" diameter through poor workmanship. I was going as slow as possible (given there's no variable speed on my drills), and using GENEROUS amounts of cutting oil...
The HF bits were "HSS Steel" with titanium nitride coating. But side-by-side with a big box store equivalent DeWalt bits they were GARBAGE. The ones I didn't torture were fine, but I doubt they'd last more than a few holes under the best circumstances. I doubt big box store DeWalt is what I want either...
Either the Norseman or Triumph sets would be a huge improvement, but I'm worried the 1/4" shank on the Norseman compromises bit integrity. Yet the more expensive Triumph set has reviews that are less than flattering - especially if you are using them outside of a drill press. Some reviewers even suggest these are knock offs?
What does the GJ community think?




