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Source for really small masonry drill bits (1/16 or smaller)

nes999

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Does anyone know where I could buy masonry drill bits that are 1/16" or smaller?

Our RC club is wanting to sink some bits metal (1/32" rod) into some scale concrete barriers. The best way I can think of is to drill and back fill with epoxy. The barriers are made of vinyl concrete patch.
 
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CGT80

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You shouldn't need masonry bits, as it sounds like the patch is made from a form of vinyl. Drill bits under 1/16" will be less common, but out there. x2 on drilling with a 1/16" and using glue, epoxy, silicone or other adhesive.


Have you tried a run of the mill 1/16" bit in that material yet?
 
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nes999

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You shouldn't need masonry bits, as it sounds like the patch is made from a form of vinyl. Drill bits under 1/16" will be less common, but out there. x2 on drilling with a 1/16" and using glue, epoxy, silicone or other adhesive.


Have you tried a run of the mill 1/16" bit in that material yet?


I haven't tried a normal bit yet. I wont be over that way until next weekend.

I believe this is what the we will be drilling.


https://www.quikrete.com/productlines/vinylconcretepatcher.asp
 

6PTsocket

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That stuff has sand in it. You are not going in with a nail or a regular twist drill. Masonary bits have a piece of carbide brazed to the tip of a steel bit. In the smaller sizes you can get a solid carbide bit. A brazed carbide tip is not workable in the tiny sizes.They are actually easy to find. Just google" solid carbide bit". Amazon has a bunch of them. They are used for things like drilling the better printed circuit boards that are glass filled and would dull a regular bit very fast. 1/16,1/32 and much smaller are available.

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nes999

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That stuff has sand in it. You are not going in with a nail or a regular twist drill. Masonary bits have a piece of carbide brazed to the tip of a steel bit. In the smaller sizes you can get a solid carbide bit. A brazed carbide tip is not workable in the tiny sizes.They are actually easy to find. Just google" solid carbide bit". Amazon has a bunch of them. They are used for things like drilling the better printed circuit boards that are glass filled and would dull a regular bit very fast. 1/16,1/32 and much smaller are available.

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Thanks, I ordered some. Didn't even cross my mind.

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rlitman

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That stuff has sand in it. You are not going in with a nail or a regular twist drill. Masonary bits have a piece of carbide brazed to the tip of a steel bit. In the smaller sizes you can get a solid carbide bit. A brazed carbide tip is not workable in the tiny sizes.They are actually easy to find. Just google" solid carbide bit". Amazon has a bunch of them. They are used for things like drilling the better printed circuit boards that are glass filled and would dull a regular bit very fast. 1/16,1/32 and much smaller are available.

Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk

They're readily available, and also incredibly fragile. Like trying to drill with a glass fiber fragile. And they need to be run at REALLY high speeds. But once you're past all that...

I'd suggest a different angle. Use a dental drill.
 
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driftpin

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They're readily available, and also incredibly fragile. Like trying to drill with a glass fiber fragile. And they need to be run at REALLY high speeds. But once you're past all that...

I'd suggest a different angle. Use a dental drill.

Dremel has a drill press adapter available at the Big Orange Box store
 

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6PTsocket

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They're readily available, and also incredibly fragile. Like trying to drill with a glass fiber fragile. And they need to be run at REALLY high speeds. But once you're past all that...



I'd suggest a different angle. Use a dental drill.
A dental bit is actually more like a burr, for grinding out a pocket. It is not really made to drill a straight hole. Also the shank tapers to a larger diameter right behind the tiny burr.

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rlitman

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A dental bit is actually more like a burr, for grinding out a pocket. It is not really made to drill a straight hole. Also the shank tapers to a larger diameter right behind the tiny burr.

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True, but if you use a tapping motion with it, you can successively get it to go deeper and drill a straight-ish hole with one. The taper behind the burr will prevent it from snapping if you accidentally go a little off angle when hand drilling.
 

NC Rick

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If I was buying a drill for that, I would first try an expendable standard dill and if that didn’t work, I would buy a carbide drill made for hard metal. The hard metal bits are a type of spade drill with no flutes and support the tip better. Those drills are also shorter so less likely to break. I’d use what ever drill press device I happened to have and retract often during the drilling operation to blow out the crud. I’d be amazed if that didn’t work fine. You don’t want a lot of side force of those drills.
 
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nes999

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So I had some extra time today and drove over there. I definitely think in the long run a dremel drill press would be handy. I did however drill quite a few fairly quickly free handing the dremel with the carbide bit.
 

egdede

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Thanks 6PTsocket. I'm going to order some of those bits. Just because...
 
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