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A smiple Problem 1

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power453c

Mechanical
Sep 29, 2006
7
I have a piece of steel in the shape of the disk. 10" diameter .25" thick. I need to drill 7/64's holes into the side of the disk. I punched indentions where I needed. The holes I drilled on the flat side of the steel worked fine. However as soon as I tried the curved side holes, I had a problem.

The drill bit will not engage. It simply rides on the surface.

I tried a drill press at each speed and then tried a hand drill. I used cutting oil.

Is there any way to make the drill bit go in?
 
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You probably work hardened the material. What kind of steel? Try a smaller diameter drill and more force. You may need to use a carbide drill to break through the hardened surface.
 
The steel is nothing special. I managed to get a hole directley in the center with minimual difficley. I used a 3/32 bit to start. Perhaps this is because the side was machined. I'm not sure. The bit I used is a cobalt steel bit. I used enough force that the bit almost broke. It bent over nicley under stress.

I thought that maybe the center punch hardened the steel at that precise point. So I took my dremel and ground off the indentation flush. That didn't help much. It speeded up the initial penetration on the flat side but not on the round side.
 
Have you tried a split-point drill. That's basically what they're for.

Don
Kansas City
 
No I havn't. Don't seem to have one of those in my collection. However I do have a dril doctor that is supposed to be able to turn ordinary bits into split points. I think I might try that.
 
How was the disc made? Laser Cut? Plasma cut? Stamped? First two could have a lot to do with your problem.

Griffy
 
I'm Not sure. However, I believe it was cut on a milling machine?
 
I split point the bits. That worked niceley. However, what I found is that the first 1/8" down or so was hardened. I am guessing this is because it was cut using a laser. Well at any rate after the first four holes the bits would either dull or break. Also I could not tap threads, the tap would simply not engage into the hole. So I've decided on plan B. Use jb Weld.

Thanks For everyones Advice.
 
Since the first 1/8" is hardened, could you drill that portion a clearance drill size, then you'd only have to get thread in anything deeper than 1/8"?

Ken
 
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