Lanso
Cast Iron
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2013
- Location
- Cerritos, CA
I agree with those who suggested a step drill - I’ve put many 1/2” holes in steel tubes with very little burr.
As we all agree the setup and drilling environment is miserable. It is so obvious I didn’t feel it necessary to mention that in my reply. But it is the reason for my recommendation. The rotabroach has a small pilot drill which will locate the peripheral teeth as the teeth engage. Yes, even though it is wobbling; at a low rpm the pilot serves for the tool to track quite well. It’s the only tool that will. We all saw the drill freeze up and the belt slip! Obviously, too much bite (feed rate, or chip load) for the existing, miserable, conditions. Because of the many teeth on the rotabroach the chip-load is drastically less than a 2 flute drill! The feed rate is far less. Most importantly, the “feel” of the cut is magnified and an inexperienced operator can react quicker to a tooth “catching”. The hole breakthrough occurs with a smaller tooth with less chip-load!In addition to that, pretty sure they don't make a 3/8" diameter annular cutter that would make it through that tube in one shot. (edit . . .)
As we all agree the setup and drilling environment is miserable. It is so obvious I didn’t feel it necessary to mention that in my reply. But it is the reason for my recommendation. The rotabroach has a small pilot drill which will locate the peripheral teeth as the teeth engage. Yes, even though it is wobbling; at a low rpm the pilot serves for the tool to track quite well. It’s the only tool that will. We all saw the drill freeze up and the belt slip! Obviously, too much bite (feed rate, or chip load) for the existing, miserable, conditions. Because of the many teeth on the rotabroach the chip-load is drastically less than a 2 flute drill! The feed rate is far less. Most importantly, the “feel” of the cut is magnified and an inexperienced operator can react quicker to a tooth “catching”. The hole breakthrough occurs with a smaller tooth with less chip-load!
Yes, the correct size is available. My post had a link to the Blair Rotabroach and I have added it here again. If you look at the spec it specifies the maximum DOC is ¼”. That is referring to the thickness of the wall (in this case) and not the total travel. The tool will quite easily drill through both sides from one direction. See p/n 11108-3 for a 3/8” hole.
The step-drill suggestion is a good one and usually will save a poor situation. However, I have seen a dull drill leave a burr and it also suffers from having no pilot to guide it (or react to) the wobbling environment.
Yes, we agree. They reduce force . . . but it is not only large diameters but all diameters. That is the point. Due to the conditions, less axial force is required.Yeah, I'm well aware of all of that fella...At a 3/8" diameter I don't think that a piloted annular cutter will do much if any better than a solid drill. Annular cutters are handy for reducing cutting forces at larger diameters
Of course, any of us here could do it with our experience . . . and besides, nobody would tolerate such a environment. But we are trying to help someone with less experience.I honestly don't think it would be of any benefit at all here. I could probably do that hole with a hand drill for crying out loud
Who on here would allow such an issue. . . .none of my mandrels have a protruding screw.And according to your link, the smallest arbor is 3/8" in diameter; if there's any protrusion of the screw holding the pilot drill it won't fit through the hole, and won't make it through from one side anyway.
Think about what you wrote. What made the too-loose belt stop?I'd bet the belt slip had nothing to do with the torque required to drill the hole and everything to do with a loose belt.
Thank you for looking up the link.
Yes, we agree. They reduce force . . . but it is not only large diameters but all diameters. That is the point. Due to the conditions, less axial force is required.
Of course, any of us here could do it with our experience . . . and besides, nobody would tolerate such a environment. But we are trying to help someone with less experience.
Who on here would allow such an issue. . . .none of my mandrels have a protruding screw.
Think about what you wrote. What made the too-loose belt stop?
The cutting geometry and push at exit on a Rotabroach is very different than a standard drill bit.Yeah, I'm well aware of all of that fella...At a 3/8" diameter I don't think that a piloted annular cutter will do much if any better than a solid drill. .
The cutting geometry and push at exit on a Rotabroach is very different than a standard drill bit.
It acts more like a step drill or plunging endmill at the exit.On a large one, sure. Not a whole lot different when there's a pilot drill and not much room between the pilot drill and the annular cutter because it's barely bigger than the pilot... Very minor reduction.
If it's not too far from the end, three-sided scraper. Plus you can't see all the gouge marks on the insideThe one on the outside not so hard to deburr.......the one on the inside?
Seen that tried and it seems like a good idea. However often it just folds some of the burr back inside the hole.....If you're crazy, run a dingleberry hone down the tube afterwards, those are cheap and fast.
I meant run the dingleberry thru after you deburred with the three-sided scraper but ja, tubing is often made out of some really nasty stuff to deburr.Seen that tried and it seems like a good idea. However often it just folds some of the burr back inside the hole.
I meant run the dingleberry thru after you deburred with the three-sided scraper but ja, tubing is often made out of some really nasty stuff to deburr.
How about thermal ? Put it in an explosive atmosphere and light it off. Even if it didn't work well, that would be fun![]()
Why ? He got a whole bunch of different approaches to try, some of them will probably work for him.Can we change the title to “Horrible outcome when asking question on forum”?
Why ? He got a whole bunch of different approaches to try, some of them will probably work for him.
How is that a horrible outcome ?
The OP got a whole lot of "use a better machine, it wobbles too much, fixture not rigid" .
These 100 percent wrong and clueless on drill exit burr formation.
Sad to see this here.
Bob
Why ? He got a whole bunch of different approaches to try, some of them will probably work for him.
How is that a horrible outcome ?
Oh, the poor baby. Let's start a gofundme for people who have to put up with unrelated arguments when they ask for free info on how to solve a problem.He also got two pages of a people arguing over stuff unrelated to his question.
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