Long time lurker, first time poster. I recently bought a Primeweld Tig 225X and have been teaching myself to weld. I have gotten to point in my welding practice where it would be helpful to be able to clamp pieces down, so I began the process of turning the 24 x 36 x 3/8 inch hardox plate I've been welding on into a proper fixture table. I wanted to make drilling 216 holes as quick and easy possible, so I drew up a jig that would allow me to drill 5/8th inch holes on a 2 x 2 inch grid and had it laser cut in 3/8th mild steel by SendCutSend. The jig is designed to accept hardened drill bushings to reduce wear on the jig from the annular cutter I'm using to drill the holes. The jig indexes off the previously drilled row using four 5/8th shoulder bolts which also clamp the jib to the table. I thought using this jig would allow me to drill my fixture table as accurately as possible, but I've run into problems...
The Problem - After drilling the first seven rows of holes, I've realized that my rows are slowly drifting to one side. I lined up a carpenter square with the first row holes and determined that rows are a) not square with each other and b) have shifted 0.100" over the next six rows. This maths out to approximately 0.016" offset per row and 0.47 degrees out of square.
The Failed Solution - My first thought after realizing the problem is that the jig has some alignment issues due to cut tolerances of the laser cutter (allegedly 0.005") and thus the reference holes are slightly offset from the drill bushing holes. If this is the case then I should be able to flip jig over and the next rows of holes will move 0.016" to the left instead of the right like it had been. Nope. I drilled another row with the jig flipped, checked again, and now the overall offset is now .116".
What gives? If the reference holes were slightly offset then flipping the jig 180 degrees should have pulled the next row in the opposite direction. If it was issue with the jig being out of square in relation to the table then that should have translated to each row and they would be square relative to each other, but they are not. Where is the drift coming from? Any ideas on how to fix it?
Thanks!
The Problem - After drilling the first seven rows of holes, I've realized that my rows are slowly drifting to one side. I lined up a carpenter square with the first row holes and determined that rows are a) not square with each other and b) have shifted 0.100" over the next six rows. This maths out to approximately 0.016" offset per row and 0.47 degrees out of square.
The Failed Solution - My first thought after realizing the problem is that the jig has some alignment issues due to cut tolerances of the laser cutter (allegedly 0.005") and thus the reference holes are slightly offset from the drill bushing holes. If this is the case then I should be able to flip jig over and the next rows of holes will move 0.016" to the left instead of the right like it had been. Nope. I drilled another row with the jig flipped, checked again, and now the overall offset is now .116".
What gives? If the reference holes were slightly offset then flipping the jig 180 degrees should have pulled the next row in the opposite direction. If it was issue with the jig being out of square in relation to the table then that should have translated to each row and they would be square relative to each other, but they are not. Where is the drift coming from? Any ideas on how to fix it?
Thanks!


