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Show off your largest drill bit!

OccupantRJ

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Sorting drills tonight, so I decided to take a pic of this 2-5/8" runt and start this thread for fun and for your viewing pleasure. Next I gotta find a container to vinegar soak it. Now it's someone else's turn at the largest personally owned drill bit challenge, beginning now.
 

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Rye425

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Feb 28, 2011
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CT
I think you just threw all the cards out on the table and left no room for any improvement!

That's one big freakin drill bit
 

alex71

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SE Florida
what sort of personally-owned machine do you have to turn that personally-owned drill?
 

Stephenw

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Utah
Sorting drills tonight, so I decided to take a pic of this 2-5/8" runt and start this thread for fun and for your viewing pleasure. Next I gotta find a container to vinegar soak it. Now it's someone else's turn at the largest personally owned drill bit challenge, beginning now.

My biggest is one inch.

Your bit looks like it has a morse taper shank. Post pictures to prove you have a machine that can turn it.
 

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OccupantRJ

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what sort of personally-owned machine do you have to turn that personally-owned drill?

I can adapt it to turn it, but don't think I could do much drilling with it! I've hung onto it for a conversation piece, and used to have it displayed on a bookcase in my shop. It sure makes jaws drop! I've often thought about adapting it to fit a standard pistol grip drill, and just leave it laying around to see what people do who see it.
 

Alchymist

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Mar 1, 2009
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Central PA
Not a drill bit, just a small ball end mill - that's a 6" 4 jaw it's setting next to.
 

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A_Pmech

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May 8, 2007
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IL
I haven't tooled up the little radial yet.

;)

Offhand, the largest I can scare up is around 1 1/16" straight shank:

drill-1.jpg
 

east_tn_emc

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Aug 30, 2008
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426
Location
East Tennessee
How did that drill on the left do for you? What name does it go by? Is it considered a concrete spade drill?

It did very well...long story short, my concrete guy showed up earlier than expected so I did not get conduit in place for electric before concrete was poured. I went ahead and did the block knee-wall and used the drill to go thru about 8-10 inches of fully cured 5000PSI concrete. It took about 20 minutes to go thru.....loud but not too difficult...I kept a waterhose on to keep the bit cool.

It was a 3 1/2" carbide spline bit...that, the 1 1/2" bit and a Dewalt rotary hammer-drill code ~$60 to rent for 24 hours.
 

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OccupantRJ

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It did very well...long story short, my concrete guy showed up earlier than expected so I did not get conduit in place for electric before concrete was poured. I went ahead and did the block knee-wall and used the drill to go thru about 8-10 inches of fully cured 5000PSI concrete. It took about 20 minutes to go thru.....loud but not too difficult...I kept a waterhose on to keep the bit cool.

It was a 3 1/2" carbide spline bit...that, the 1 1/2" bit and a Dewalt rotary hammer-drill code ~$60 to rent for 24 hours.

Great. I haven't had the need for one like that yet, but it's always good to know what weaponry is available.
 

BigMike782

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Dec 19, 2008
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I don't have any pics of it......cuz I never figured on posting pics of hole making tools but my biggest is the boring head for the Bridgy.
 
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327-365hp

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Jun 8, 2006
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43
Location
Central Mass
I've been looking for some big drill bits to go with my big taps. :)

DSCN2880.jpg
[/IMG]

The bigger one is 3 1/4" The bolt is 2" and takes a 3 1/8" wrench.
 

theoldwizard1

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Feb 22, 2011
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SE MI
No pic, but related. There is a surplus store nearby that sells all sorts of "interesting" stuff (much is Chinese). Kitts is a pretty amazing place. Any tool guy would go nuts in there.

So I picked up a 3/4" drill with a shaft turned down to 1/2". The first time I used it, I was drilling a hole in a stud to run some wires and was smiling about how well it worked when the bit stuck. It flipped the drill around and smashed my wrist into the wall (not using the side assist handle). After checking to see that my wrist was not broken (not the first time with this drill) and backing out the bit, I found that I actually BENT it !
 

scott37300

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May 5, 2010
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Location
Wisconsin
No pic, but related. There is a surplus store nearby that sells all sorts of "interesting" stuff (much is Chinese). Kitts is a pretty amazing place. Any tool guy would go nuts in there.

So I picked up a 3/4" drill with a shaft turned down to 1/2". The first time I used it, I was drilling a hole in a stud to run some wires and was smiling about how well it worked when the bit stuck. It flipped the drill around and smashed my wrist into the wall (not using the side assist handle). After checking to see that my wrist was not broken (not the first time with this drill) and backing out the bit, I found that I actually BENT it !

Similar story about 10 years ago I was an electrician. Roughing in a new house and went to drill the 4" hole out the side of the house to vent the bath fan. Using a hole hawg and a 4" hole saw going through OSB sheathing and it caught. Ripped the drill out of my hands and spun it around and broke my nose. I was standing in the trusses and fell to the floor. Those things have some major torque when they catch! Also had an incident with a 3" hole saw and hole hawg going through 3/8" steel. Just have a small drill press so figured the hole hawg would handle it better. Really need a mag drill before I break another bone!
 

speed bump

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May 28, 2008
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Location
Butte Montana
My avatar is a 8.75" diameter bit, I was looking around today but I couldn't find the 13 5/8" tricone we use for surface. We had a bunch of cute little 6.125" Tricones and full drift bits though.
 
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OccupantRJ

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May 15, 2009
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Eastern North Carolina
No pic, but related. There is a surplus store nearby that sells all sorts of "interesting" stuff (much is Chinese). Kitts is a pretty amazing place. Any tool guy would go nuts in there.

So I picked up a 3/4" drill with a shaft turned down to 1/2". The first time I used it, I was drilling a hole in a stud to run some wires and was smiling about how well it worked when the bit stuck. It flipped the drill around and smashed my wrist into the wall (not using the side assist handle). After checking to see that my wrist was not broken (not the first time with this drill) and backing out the bit, I found that I actually BENT it !

I have seen a few good quality drills bent that way. There's a lot of force applied when a drill hangs up and can flip the operator around. I don't usually drill wood with a twist drill without grinding the end to a brad point configuration. This will make some really nice, clean holes in wood when used in a drill press, and helps prevent the hangup you refer to.
 

Sterff

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Feb 8, 2010
Messages
1,367
Location
PA
If you have ever used a core drill you will see some big bits. I have used a 24" bit before.

corer.jpg
 

cnc-me

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Jan 6, 2010
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Location
MI
No pic, but related. There is a surplus store nearby that sells all sorts of "interesting" stuff (much is Chinese). Kitts is a pretty amazing place. Any tool guy would go nuts in there.

Used to buy a lot of tools from Kitts.
A lot of my sockets are SK bought from Kitts.
Even got a Brut sandblaster from them.
They used to have some of the best deals on air tools too, these were
in the days before the internet.
 
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