UpSideDownClown
Active member
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2023
- Messages
- 33
Hi all - newbie here, fabricating a specialty tool for automatic transmissions, and due to limited resources have to find inexpensive solutions. Each tool will use (2) flat bars, A36 steel, 3/8 thick, 1 inch wide. For each bar, I need to drill 2 holes with finished size of either 23/64 or 3/8, and one hole with finished size of 7/16. I have managed to use Harbor Freight titanium bits with a 1/2 corded hand drill to prove out the design but not much more. I invariably drill the smaller holes off-center, and yesterday I actually managed to drill the big hole at an angle, top to bottom. I mean, it is visible to the naked eye that the hole through the bar was crooked. And what I notice is that some of these cheap bits cut like a beast, and others sound different, simply laugh at me, and of course get very hot and burn. So not only is the bit quality suspect, it's inconsistent from one bit in the set to the next. I step up in size many times, starting very small after punching a pilot notch.
So...I'm wondering if I got a cheapo 8" drill press at Harbor Freight, I might solve the off-center thing, and it would also potentially solve any drill speed issues. I'm thinking the risk there is that the part you put the work piece on would want to move down vertically as you drill, so maybe I could block it up underneath with wood or bricks, to keep it from moving. Then, I wonder if I could use a drill bit of the above mentioned sizes, to achieve the finished size in one shot, and avoid all of the stepping up. Might that be doable? And then the final piece would be the bit; should I go to a brand-name cobalt bit? Thank you; this is not really my bailiwick, as you can no doubt tell.
So...I'm wondering if I got a cheapo 8" drill press at Harbor Freight, I might solve the off-center thing, and it would also potentially solve any drill speed issues. I'm thinking the risk there is that the part you put the work piece on would want to move down vertically as you drill, so maybe I could block it up underneath with wood or bricks, to keep it from moving. Then, I wonder if I could use a drill bit of the above mentioned sizes, to achieve the finished size in one shot, and avoid all of the stepping up. Might that be doable? And then the final piece would be the bit; should I go to a brand-name cobalt bit? Thank you; this is not really my bailiwick, as you can no doubt tell.
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