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Spot weld hole cutter

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evildky

Well-known member
Joined
May 1, 2005
Messages
774
Location
Louisville, KY
I have used both of those got them both from eastwood, and neither work very well, the problem is that sportwelds are not prefect;y flat and smoothe and therefore when the cutting portions start to make contact on one part of the weld area it wants to move, the one with the spring loaded center works a bit better but is still a bear to deal with, there is another type I have yet to try and that is basically an air drill with a clamp that reaches around the back to keep you steady of course sometimes the clamp isn't gonna reach, spot welds **** :soapbox:
 

Der Bugmeister

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 29, 2005
Messages
445
Might be a bit late to help bmwpower, but...

I have a spring loaded center punch that I use to dimple the center of the weld, and this seems to keep the saw's point centered nicely. I've used these to do a few panel replacements and am happy with their performance...
 

motorheadjohn

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 28, 2005
Messages
207
Location
Poquoson VA
I have had problems breaking the small hole-saw portion of the spot-weld cutters like posted above. And I haven't found a source to replace that part, have to buy a whole new bit. I usually only get 3-4 welds out of one before it breaks, and I do use cutting oil.

I bought one of the Blue Point spot-weld drills, nice but $$$, and there are only a few placed you can actually use that support that reaches around behind. If you're trying to remove a trunk floor, floor pan, frame rail, etc you have to pull the support off.

If you get the paper Snap-On catalog, you can get the replacement bit part numbers and buy just those, then use them in a regular drill to save quite a lot of money.
 
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eighthd

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 25, 2005
Messages
134
Location
california
mac tools has a spot weld cutter that works very good. And if it breaks he will replace it. I dont have a part number but on monday I will look in my tool box for it.
 

red caddy

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
94
Location
venice, Florida
I use the MAC tool cutter, in a high torque/low rpm (550) air drill with saw blade wax for lube. I get about 200 holes on a cutter head, less on the late model HSS panels, but I don't do much of the newer stuff. I drill a 1/8 th. pilot hole, it's a little oversize for the guide pin, but much better than trying to keep that spring loaded pin in a punch mark, and leaves a neat hole to use with Cleaco clips when fitting the new piece. RED
 
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B

bmwpower

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
12,578
Location
NJ
Any help is appreciated...it's still not too late. I've yet to start the project. Waiting for my garage to be finished.

Here's a picture of my damaged baby who needs a new core support welded in...among other things.
 

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dante81_98

Active member
Joined
Aug 18, 2005
Messages
39
Location
AZ
you know you could just use a step bit. That is what I have always used.

Laterz
Chad
 
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