1950coronet600hp
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2010
- Messages
- 81
So I need to cut down the shank of a 9/16 drill bit, going to do it on the lathe. everyone says that the shank isn't hardened so that the chuck jaws bite the drill well, and that its regular soft steel. and that makes sense. Here's where it gets muddy for me. the drill starts out as a piece of hss steel alloy, then its machined and then hardened. so, what exactly is the shank? just carbon steel? or what? is it the hardening process that makes it HSS? I can reduce the front angle of my lathe bit, as well as radius the cutting edge to help with heat transfer. but still it seems to me that the tool and the work are made of the same material, which would tell me that the work piece would dull out the tip quickly. regardless if its hardened or not. I'm not against sharpening the bit after every pass, but that would be a pain. I'm hoping that I'm overthinking this, and its easier than I think. but some input would be appreciated.