Jmellc
Well-known member
Sometimes I see a need for a square hole in metal, smaller than easily cut with a saw. A good example would be to use a carriage bolt for a metal part. What is the best tool for this?
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How expensive are these? I wouldn’t use it enough to spend a large outlay. Boss might consider one for the team if not too high.
Die Filer or Bench Filing machine
A die filer is one of those tools that you see pop up from time to time in magazines or construction manuals. The owners of these machines always speak very highly of them, yet commercial manufacture of these tools ceased a long time ago. I had been looking for one on Ebay for years, and had even considered fabricating one from scratch, before finding this option available as a kit from Andy Lofquist at Metal Lathe Accessories.
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Easiest way is to drill close to size and then use a file. More complicated is a square broach and a press.
This is the answer. For the price and for what you want to do, it can't be beat. I have had one for 30+ years. In many other situations, it works better than a rotary tool.
That rotary broach is cool stuff. Had never seen one before. Thanks for sharing the idea and video. Learned something good this weekend.
This particular HF air file? A different model HF air file? Or someone else's air file?
Agreed. Totally cool but it’s so slow I think I’d wanna shoot myself.
Good for those machinists getting paid by the hour, but us retired guys got stuff to do![emoji23]
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What are you talking about slow? A 17-4PH material with a broach the size of 1/32”-1/2” can be machined at 800 RPM with a feed rate of 0.003” IPR. Tell me what other process besides EDM can cut detailed broached holes as clean and as fast as a RB?
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I have Greenlee knockout cutters from 1/2 inch to 2 inch conduit sizes. I’ve never seen a punch of theirs for square holes.