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Posted

looking for any ideas on drilling the small holes in my stack cut I/8in Baltic birch ornaments. Not the blade entry holes but the small holes that would be left in the finished product. Sometimes the holes are small and several of them so its easier to drill them than cut them but I always seem to get a blowout on the bottom piece. Doesn't look good. Maybe its the drill bit or I am going through to fast. Any of your input would be appreciated. been doing it that way for a long time but finally decided to ask advice.

grizz

Oregon 

Posted
11 minutes ago, scrollingforsanity said:

looking for any ideas on drilling the small holes in my stack cut I/8in Baltic birch ornaments. Not the blade entry holes but the small holes that would be left in the finished product. Sometimes the holes are small and several of them so its easier to drill them than cut them but I always seem to get a blowout on the bottom piece. Doesn't look good. Maybe its the drill bit or I am going through to fast. Any of your input would be appreciated. been doing it that way for a long time but finally decided to ask advice.

grizz

Oregon 

Maybe a pic of what you are doing Grizz.

 

Posted

I use a scrap board for drilling.. a real good sharp drill bit helps some too.. also.. take it slow.. especially going through the last ( bottom )of the stack.. When drilling wood.. I find that if you are making a small pile of fine sawdust on the top board.. your probably going the right speed... if not then you end up with the drill clogged and as you bring the drill back up it unclogs and leaves you the packed sawdust strings rather than a sawdust.. if that's the case.. pushing to fast through the wood.. I push through most times if its away from the line into a waist area.. otherwise I go slooooow, LOL..   

Posted
40 minutes ago, Scrappile said:

Waste board underneath and good brad point bits. 

brad point bits are awesome.. I had a set several years ago and never had any ripping or push through splinters.. I doubt they have them in the small numbered sizes though do they?  Don't think I've ever seen them smaller than 1/8.. 

Posted
7 hours ago, kmmcrafts said:

brad point bits are awesome.. I had a set several years ago and never had any ripping or push through splinters.. I doubt they have them in the small numbered sizes though do they?  Don't think I've ever seen them smaller than 1/8.. 

If someone has a supplier of brad point bits in the smaller sizes I would love to know about them.  Never been able to find the really small ones.

Posted
2 hours ago, Paladin said:

If someone has a supplier of brad point bits in the smaller sizes I would love to know about them.  Never been able to find the really small ones.

You won't. 1/8" smallest. There are some China sets out there that claim they have a 1/16" brad point bit but I would like to see it and do not believe it. Big name tool manufacturers do not make them.

Posted

The smallest brad point is probably the 3mm, which I guess is a hair smaller than 1/8".  The reason I mentioned them is when I was cutting out the parts for a wooden gear clock, I needed some precise holes in several places.  I started buying good Brad Point bits, from Lee Valley, buying individual bits of the size needed.  Now I add to that collection from time to time.  If you get into things that work with gears, like the clock, robots, etc. you will need to have some good bits to drill the holes in the wood.

Posted

The smaller the bit the faster the speed. Most big Drill presses do not spin fast enough. I Have a dedicated drill for the tiny holes from Micro Mark.

and as the others have said you need a backer. Also nibble at it as you drill. Wow has the price gone up since I bought mine.   

https://www.micromark.com/MicroLux-3-Speed-Mini-Drill-Press

 

The Dremel tool with drill press attachment and drill chuck would probably be a better choice.

https://www.homedepot.com/p/Dremel-Rotary-Tool-WorkStation-for-Woodworking-and-Jewelry-Making-220-01/202263196?cm_mmc=Shopping|G|VF|D25T|25-9_PORTABLE+POWER|DREMEL|NA|Versa|LIA|71700000044136618|58700004605584227|92700039522038325&gclid=Cj0KCQiA6dLgBRDoARIsAJgoM4u38ZxQ7mLDdGrw5x3qFt8GE_-bkS7k9onoDLi8PsPoQbaqumX4TnsaAn3hEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds

Posted
On 12/14/2018 at 9:17 AM, scrollingforsanity said:

Thank You for all the suggestions,  I will give them a try. I am sure it will help. I think I am drilling so many holes I get in a hurry and force the bit through I think.

grizz

Oregon

Take your time. No hurry. This is a hobby remember. And someone else has suggested more than once that if you have a lot of holes to drill, don't drill them all at once. Drill a few and then scroll. Sort of takes the rush out of it. Sloooooooowwwwwwwdddooooowwwwwnnnnn!

 

Posted

Biggest problem I have seen with drilling on a drill press is most people turn the drill press on and then proceed to punch the bit through the wood.  The second biggest issue is using dull bits. So to drill properly and have nice clean holes the bit rotation should fast, the feed rate slow and use a backer board and a clean sharp bit.    

Posted
On 12/14/2018 at 8:11 AM, Scrappile said:

The smallest brad point is probably the 3mm, which I guess is a hair smaller than 1/8".  The reason I mentioned them is when I was cutting out the parts for a wooden gear clock, I needed some precise holes in several places.  I started buying good Brad Point bits, from Lee Valley, buying individual bits of the size needed.  Now I add to that collection from time to time.  If you get into things that work with gears, like the clock, robots, etc. you will need to have some good bits to drill the holes in the wood.

Paul, I checked out Lee Valley and they have brad point bits down to 5/64". I have no idea how they can do that but they do. They get a ton of money for their bits. I hope they are that much better than the cheaper ones. I'm going to order up the basic set of 7 I think.

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