This Hole was IMPOSSIBLE to Drill Until I Figured Out this Process

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июл 2024
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Комментарии • 186

  • @pcsmachineworks
    @pcsmachineworks 10 месяцев назад +17

    People asking for results... about a month after titans first video on this first came out, a job came through my shop that I almost passed up. .379" hole drilled 16.25" deep in 316L stainless. I ordered up this exact combination, ran it just like the video, 120 pcs with absolutely no problem. End to end the holes had a tolerance of .0015" deviation, mine where all within .0008" of Centerpoint location. My diameter tolerance was .0015/-0.000 and mine where consistently +.0005 to +.0012. It works, and works well. That job opened up a whole new series of opportunities for us and now my guys are deep drilling and gun drilling crazy L/D ratios on the regular.

  • @Turboy65
    @Turboy65 10 месяцев назад +185

    So let's see the results. Show us the bottom end of the stock and the three holes. Measure the hole locations and report their runout relative to their planned/programmed positions.

    • @tropixMw2
      @tropixMw2 10 месяцев назад +10

      Maybe holes that need to be that long have some wiggle room in the tolerances.

    • @ChrisRidesHisBike
      @ChrisRidesHisBike 10 месяцев назад +15

      I’ve got a feeling that a carbide drill of that diameter isn’t walking very much, especially since the hole was already pilot drilled and it’s running thru spindle HP coolant.

    • @supremecommander2398
      @supremecommander2398 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@tropixMw2 often they have not. for example in molds you have to drill several of those close together for the cooling. or in Automotive applications, they drill such deep holes into the main shaft of the engine, for oil distribution to the different bearings.

    • @nh18343
      @nh18343 10 месяцев назад +20

      In the original video they do exactly that.

    • @larryblount3358
      @larryblount3358 10 месяцев назад +3

      Very informative. How about a case of 3/8s and smaller for a depth of 6 inch. With a rpm limit of 1800 (AKA Haas TL-2 and no through coolant). This is my challenge in 17-4.

  • @philmattrick9324
    @philmattrick9324 10 месяцев назад +8

    I’m an old fart machinist, served a 5 year apprenticeship at an aerospace company in Europe way back further than I care to mention. I honestly think cutting tool technology as progressed faster than the machine tool technology. Amazing stuff. Thank you.

  • @TheSoftTaco631
    @TheSoftTaco631 10 месяцев назад +8

    Nothing like some morning coffee and a new Titan video

  • @No1x3N
    @No1x3N 9 месяцев назад +2

    The content on this channel is pure gold, I've never machined a single thing nor have been near a cnc machine and I can appreciate the content here.

  • @Sara-TOC
    @Sara-TOC 10 месяцев назад +9

    I appreciate all of the technical information Titan drops in his videos. I’m always adding something new to my notes. 😊

  • @nofunallowed3382
    @nofunallowed3382 10 месяцев назад +2

    This video was a great help when I first started machining couple years back! Deep hole drilling was a pain, but this vid sure helped!

  • @AM-bk2zb
    @AM-bk2zb 10 месяцев назад +8

    I'm a machinist apprentice in the Basque Country and I can't even begin to express how grateful I am for these videos. It's awesome, really. Thanks for taking the time!

    • @Laurelinad
      @Laurelinad 15 дней назад

      i'm a career changer and feel just the same. wish i could have a full course to properly learn the trade

  • @EZCUSTOMZ
    @EZCUSTOMZ 10 месяцев назад +1

    Easy peasy lemon squeezy . You know your about to learn something when that intro music hits!

  • @travisjarrett2355
    @travisjarrett2355 10 месяцев назад +4

    Deep drilling is an art in and of itself. This video was great info then and is great info now. Love it!

  • @shaniegust1225
    @shaniegust1225 10 месяцев назад

    Always informative. Awesome throwback Titan! I remember watching as you recorded this and it was absolutely amazing. We were all glued to the machine 💪

  • @mikeygoertzy4524
    @mikeygoertzy4524 10 месяцев назад +2

    Love that y’all post videos right a 9am for my 10 min break lol

  • @boblove6487
    @boblove6487 3 месяца назад

    Wow, I like this stuff I’m not alone in the world. I programmed my deep holes. Also basically the same way little bit different pretty much the same. I love that these guys teach been doing this for 47 years. That’s what I do. I teach all the time now young guys gotta take over, so I thank you Titans of CNC. Thank you for always teaching and always being the student.

  • @tubbytimmy8287
    @tubbytimmy8287 10 месяцев назад +1

    I actually had to pull up the old video a couple of weeks ago when I had to drill a 5mm 30xD hole in stainless. Worked great 👍

  • @JohnBlaze505
    @JohnBlaze505 10 месяцев назад

    These videos are the ones that got me hooked on this channel. All your videos are awesome!

  • @davecox8922
    @davecox8922 10 месяцев назад +1

    So good - love this throwback with such great info.

  • @jorgeramirez9319
    @jorgeramirez9319 7 месяцев назад

    wow bro this one is new for me I have had drill holes up to 3 inch deep one shot, but this one is insane!!! thank you for this well done lecture.

  • @Alex_Fire777
    @Alex_Fire777 10 месяцев назад

    Insane drill. Lot of great information Titan!

  • @markdavis304
    @markdavis304 10 месяцев назад +1

    Insane drill.😎 Lots of great information Titan!

  • @Jessie_Smith
    @Jessie_Smith 10 месяцев назад +2

    Love to see the detailed explanation for the OG himself!

  • @SiempreConTrasto
    @SiempreConTrasto 10 месяцев назад +3

    Man could you please show us the real measurement of the entering and exiting ends of the holes? I mean I would like to see how does it maintain position, especially when drilling horizontally. The material structure is also important because usually there is some internal stress to relax or material anisotropy. How does this affect position of both ends when deep drilling. Appreciate your job Gilroy! Go ahead!

  • @MeDieValUKRAINE
    @MeDieValUKRAINE 10 месяцев назад +5

    One more thing to consider:
    when the long drill is getting twisted by cutting forces the chip evacuation channels "unwrap" a bit and the diameter becomes larger, It is why the drill is on the lower side of the tolerance

    • @scottgarrison1190
      @scottgarrison1190 10 месяцев назад

      The longer the drill, the smaller it is to be able to pilot drill with shorter drills. Not by much, microns.

  • @firebry23
    @firebry23 10 месяцев назад

    I like how you've added going through the code.

  • @samsam18200
    @samsam18200 10 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome!! Titan you rock!!!

  • @ipadize
    @ipadize 10 месяцев назад +5

    what the hell, i was LITERALLY just a few minutes ago watching the same video but from 4 years ago.

  • @yushinandrew
    @yushinandrew 10 месяцев назад

    Great teacher, great video! Thanks a lot!!!

  • @EnricoMarangonJunior
    @EnricoMarangonJunior 10 месяцев назад

    Good class Tytan thank you very much.

  • @ocratitude
    @ocratitude 8 месяцев назад

    I have used this method in they hydraulic industry and had great success in mild steel. HP coolant thru is incredible.

  • @donniehinske
    @donniehinske 10 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome story Titan!

  • @inthefade
    @inthefade 10 месяцев назад +1

    You giving out the code is amazing. You're inspirational, man.

  • @krazykillar4794
    @krazykillar4794 6 месяцев назад

    Unbelievable, this drill bit cost £500 in the UK 🇬🇧 .The most expensive drill bit I've ever come across.
    I've been learning so much since I subscribed to this channel.
    Thank you

  • @barrysetzer
    @barrysetzer 10 месяцев назад +5

    Nothing blew my mind like the first time I used a 30x diameter drill. Great video!

    • @barrysetzer
      @barrysetzer 10 месяцев назад +3

      Well, except for full slotting in stainless with the Harvi 1TE. That blew my mind more.

    • @LoneWolfPrecisionLLC
      @LoneWolfPrecisionLLC 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@barrysetzernot even 300mrr?

  • @russellofcnc
    @russellofcnc 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great information! Bank those speeds and feeds, people! 🤯

  • @tink2805
    @tink2805 10 месяцев назад

    Been deep hole drilling for over a decade now, from 10-70xD in almost every material you can imagine, form stainless to inconel, even 55 HRC dies steels. This video give good insight to the programming which is crucial but not as hard as so many make it out to be. With the right programs you can flawlessly deep drill in any material with consistent repeatability.
    My only issue is that the IPR is too small, .003" IPR is less than 1 percent of diameter of the drill, in this material the minimal I would go is 2 and all the way up to 4 percent of the diameter. With this feed being low, you can see how small and thin the chips are, you will wear this drill out prematurely and it is more likely to wander.

  • @bazwabat1
    @bazwabat1 9 месяцев назад

    Our company here in New Zealand makes hydraulic manifolds for the most part, usually out of Ductile Iron, Mild steel and Aluminium. And occasionally stainless steel. Ane we use these drills for all our deep drillings and they are a great drill. My machine is a Horizontal (Matsuura HP630) and deepest drilling I've done is around 350mm with a 12mm Kennmetal. What you do is pretty much what we do although we reverse direction in Z 5mm once we get to depth, theres a half second dwell spindle goes to 50RPM and it retracts at 100% rapid. We also leave the flood coolant on and our CTS is on just before the drill enters the pilot hole. We also use 4mm drills but only go to 150mmmm max deep and as there have been issues with chips not clearing we stopped doing this cycle and changed it so it plunges to 50mm then changes to a chip break cycle (G83). Great video.

  • @johnnycomelately6341
    @johnnycomelately6341 9 месяцев назад

    Could you have a guide jig for the drill maybe made from a bronze with reverse spiral relief for the coolant?

  • @christophervillalpando5865
    @christophervillalpando5865 10 месяцев назад

    Awesome Video and great tips!

  • @nicolespittler9530
    @nicolespittler9530 10 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome video!

  • @andrewfaure1475
    @andrewfaure1475 9 месяцев назад

    looking at your work holding i have 2 good fundamental questions. #1 how do you decide when to use a dovetail jaws between 2 vices or 2 serrated jaw vices? #2 how do you line them up to assure the work piece doesn't fly out?

  • @AntonHoward-mx9sb
    @AntonHoward-mx9sb 8 месяцев назад

    Used to regularly drill 5mm oilway holes through 240mm of En40B on a bridgeport.

  • @mjshorty19
    @mjshorty19 10 месяцев назад +3

    Quick tip to anyone new at deep hole drilling like this - turn your spindle on backwards entering the hole so the cutting edge will never catch the wall of the predrilled hole and snap the drill off (ask me how I know) then turn it back to the correct cutting direction when you begin the drilling cycle at full speed

    • @tink2805
      @tink2805 10 месяцев назад

      Correct! also do this when exiting the hole.

  • @ivanfouche5060
    @ivanfouche5060 10 месяцев назад

    i remember the original vid!!! it helped me a few times

  • @Fexrless1234
    @Fexrless1234 10 месяцев назад

    Thats crazy! Id love to give that a go. Ive just got my company to start ordering kennametal tooling

  • @cm9779
    @cm9779 10 месяцев назад

    We drill stainless using 3 different length 3.5mm Walter drills almost 5 inches deep. First a pilot, then an intermediate and finally a 6" long drill. The trick is to engage the intermediate and long drill slowly in M4 rotation at low rpm to about 3/16" depth, stop the spindle, turn on the through tool coolant, M3 12,000 rpm and in it goes like butter.

  • @battlebeard2041
    @battlebeard2041 10 месяцев назад

    If you take this guys word, Kennametal makes the best over every kind of tool imaginable across the board. They’re fine, but I’d call them mid-grade. In my experience, at least with smaller diameters, Mitsubishi makes the best deep hole drills. Harvey tool makes nice ones too but not a big range of sizes. I’ve personally run an .093” Mitsubishi drill 3.2” deep in 304SS through several thousand parts in a Swiss lathe holding under .0005” T.I.R drill to outer diameter and .0002” T.I.R to a shallow bore at the front of the drilled hole.

  • @assassinlexx1993
    @assassinlexx1993 5 месяцев назад

    Because of the very high pressure plus volume of coolant. Does it help hydraulically to center the drill stem?

  • @vaibhavbharambe6163
    @vaibhavbharambe6163 10 месяцев назад

    We are already use this drill in steel En19 materials
    Hypermill has a particular cycle for this.
    We are useing D8 Kenna drill with deep of 286mm with pilot drill of 25mm .
    Life of the drill is achieving with 5m with coated corners , with regrading we were achieved more then 50m life.
    Onevthe best drill geometry I ever seen.

  • @iDeLaYeD_o
    @iDeLaYeD_o 10 месяцев назад

    I realize that in this specific scenario it doesn't matter because the pilot drill will have coolant to clean any chips but, by not turning flood coolant back on, is it in case you have multiple pilot holes drilled and preventing chips from falling in there or some other reason?

  • @WildStyleWorks
    @WildStyleWorks 5 месяцев назад

    we once drilled a 175 times diameter hole into steel :-) and it worked great. they made a spezial tool, its a pipe that was squished into a 3/4 cake shaped crosssection, to get the cooling fluid to the tip, that was made from tungsten cabide and soldered onto the pipe. its was really fun to do, first we predrilled a 60mm deep hole with a normal 8mm cabide drill, then we slowly inserted the spezial 8mm drill and drilled up to the 1400mm deep we had to go. and i am not sure but we were off by 0,1 or 0,2 mm wich is pretty imperssive. the hole was just for grease, so it was not that important to be perfect.

  • @Yourmommaluvsme
    @Yourmommaluvsme 10 месяцев назад +1

    Sweeettttt! Love the value!!

  • @cmdrclassified
    @cmdrclassified 10 месяцев назад

    Dude is buff, and knows his stuff! o7

  • @thomasleach9417
    @thomasleach9417 10 месяцев назад

    I never knew that a twist drill could be drilled by using gun drill tactics. Interesting. Thanks

  • @Doc_Chronic
    @Doc_Chronic 10 месяцев назад +16

    You want to reverse the spindle when entering the drill into the pre drilled hole. And also stop the spindle and turn of coolant before exiting the hole completely. This is a common gundrill strategy and also works great with long carbide drills.

    • @hanibal764
      @hanibal764 10 месяцев назад +3

      In my work site we work a lot with Deep drilling, i m talking of holes of even 2 meters, and we do like that in most of cases, but like always depending on the situation, but usually thats the usual tactic.

    • @greg2337
      @greg2337 10 месяцев назад +3

      Its a great way to prevent the drill from catching a corner and breaking. But if theres a chip in the hole, it might not evacuate. Thats why I always run CW at 50 RPM like Titan mentioned.

    • @tech-utuber2219
      @tech-utuber2219 10 месяцев назад

      @@hanibal764 Two meters? What was the smallest diameter ever drilled that deep?

  • @gregramsey9545
    @gregramsey9545 10 месяцев назад +1

    Good stuff

  • @tuxedo94
    @tuxedo94 9 месяцев назад

    thats pretty cool, but how do they make the tiny holes all the way through the tooling for the coolant ?

  • @greg2337
    @greg2337 10 месяцев назад +1

    I havent tried this kennametal drill but I have done dee drilling like this in tool steel with Guhring, Sandvik, Sumitomo, and OSG. So far. OSG has been the best. Next time we get a part that needs a deep hole, maybe I'll try this, just to see how it performs.

    • @alessandroguglielmina1308
      @alessandroguglielmina1308 7 месяцев назад

      Try Mikron Crazy Drills... Osg, Mitsubishi and guhring are always replaced when it comes to high performances and quality

  • @johnspathonis1078
    @johnspathonis1078 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent video. Love your practical hands-on approach to your work. Q. How do you stop a 'birds nest' when drilling normal steel? Cheers!

    • @tink2805
      @tink2805 10 месяцев назад

      If you are birdnesting with stringy material like 1018, 4140, other alloys you may have to increase feed, generally with a 2 flute carbide coolant drill you want to be feeding at 2-4 percent of the diameter. Also, look for tooling with r-gashing that forces the chip to break instead of the x-thinning style tip.

  • @bulley91
    @bulley91 4 месяца назад

    I'm using this technology since 5 years, the holes parameters are dia: 3mm lenght: 95mm
    1 drill drills more than 100 holes.
    Walter titex drill

  • @koosscholtz8266
    @koosscholtz8266 10 месяцев назад

    Great video, can you please show us gun-drilling also.

  • @Awfultyming
    @Awfultyming 10 месяцев назад

    Love this video style vs the more marketing type that happens here. The irony is that in more likely to buy it

  • @fabiansigfridsson3995
    @fabiansigfridsson3995 7 месяцев назад

    me who is used to 3d-printing and feedrates at 20+k looking att .55 thinking that will take some years to finnich and then realizing that its a different unit and spec on those machines, still reely cool to watch and learn (sorry for language, not naitive english)

  • @hraj283
    @hraj283 9 месяцев назад

    What type of collet and holder are you using for this?

  • @dangeruss87rs
    @dangeruss87rs 10 месяцев назад

    Some in depth S33 Studer videos would be awesome

  • @stamatouvable
    @stamatouvable 4 месяца назад

    I operate excavators. But love watching this all the time. I would love to be in a machine shop

  • @ryanjordan7113
    @ryanjordan7113 10 месяцев назад

    Love you guys. Anyway I could get a Titan shirt? XL

  • @Lwimmermastermetalart
    @Lwimmermastermetalart 10 месяцев назад

    Will this drill work in Hastalloy ? We’ve been experimenting with different types of drills. All very costly so they need to produce a lot of holes.

  • @user-vn6hi2bi3g
    @user-vn6hi2bi3g 10 месяцев назад +1

    Even I get it, Great video. Ray Stormont

  • @mikecounsell
    @mikecounsell 10 месяцев назад

    Genius

  • @Blakes123
    @Blakes123 10 месяцев назад

    I am a sophomore in high school and like engineering and I have a free version of solid works what do you recommend for learning how to get better at cam software

  • @jcleese9651
    @jcleese9651 10 месяцев назад +2

    Would'nt a gundrill have been a better choice for such a deep and small hole?

  • @SkaJuliano
    @SkaJuliano 10 месяцев назад

    We do this on the machine shop I work here in Brazil, I remember the face of my manager the first time we pulled It off 😂

  • @gulch1969
    @gulch1969 10 месяцев назад

    Were these holes drilled using 1000psi tsc?

  • @anssi5853
    @anssi5853 8 месяцев назад

    Some how I have difficulty to understand that climax wen you speak how it's like a miracle to drill those holes.
    I'm drilling 400mm deep 9mm holes to 42CrMo4 steel m35 cobalt drill bit that i get aliexpress abaut 20€/22$

  • @alessandroguglielmina1308
    @alessandroguglielmina1308 7 месяцев назад

    Nice video! But i guarantee you tha with Mikron Crazy drills you can get much better performance in terms of time, roughness and hole runout

  • @xXxTheBoBxXx
    @xXxTheBoBxXx 10 месяцев назад +1

    Be really careful with those long drills! We almost killed somebody with these long drilling tools.
    In the company i work we have similar drills from diameter 5 to 80mm.
    We had a crash because we speed up the tool before it was engaged, then the drill bend to an L shape and the head of the drill shoot through the sheet metal of the machine. It was 30-50cm next to the head of the worker.

  • @Tezza120
    @Tezza120 10 месяцев назад

    The pilot hole is key. It supports the long drill to stop it blazing it's own trail, but not much info on why 1.2" was said. Could you get away with 1"? is it 1.2" for any size drill? The answer is that it needs to be deep enough to support the long drill on 4 points along it's twist - the cutting flutes and 90º to the cutting flutes or then 1/4 helix pitch of the long drill in depth. That stops it dancing around off center.
    As the pilot drill is still just a drill, it can wander too even if very short and if you're aiming for the best straightness, you don't use a tool that slaves to the hole like a reamer or drill, you'd bore the pilot so it's 100% concentric with the spindle.

    • @scottgarrison1190
      @scottgarrison1190 10 месяцев назад

      Probably was a 3xd drill that he buried. Depending on the manufacturer, a 3xd drill can have 5xd of flute length. Here he went just shy of 4xd.

  • @user-mn3hu5dk5p
    @user-mn3hu5dk5p 10 месяцев назад

    YOU ARE BEST

  • @kzimmerman311
    @kzimmerman311 10 месяцев назад

    He didn't talk about everything this video but it is really hard to cover everything at once in a relatively short video. I have a couple of additions.
    Pilot hole needs to be 3 times drill diameter or greater. Titan talked about hole diameter and other things, but it is also worth noting double checking the diameter with a gauge pin is a good idea. This will catch both diameter and roundness problems, both of which will break drills. A small chamfer at the top of the hole also isn't a bad idea to guide the deep hole drill.
    This demonstration was with a vertical machine. The struggle with vertical machines is chips wanting to fall back into the hole. Horizontal machines struggle with drill drooping, and you might have to program in a slight offset to account for this. Also, drilling one pilot followed by one deep hole is the preferred method if time allows. This prevents chips from being in the pilot hole.
    The piloting process shown here was very conservative, you can definately go faster but work up to it. You still need to keep your rpms low, but you can feed a bit faster. Pilot RPM should always be below 500 rpms.
    The pauses in this program are way too long, and you don't need one when you turn the coolant on. 50-100 ms is enough after you tell the drill to go to full rpm, assuming a fairly modern machine.
    For though holes, it is a good idea to slow down the federate before exit. There 50-75% is generally the range for exits.
    The exit feedrate and rpm was very conservative again. These are good to start with, but in high volume production these numbers are too slow.

    • @verakoo6187
      @verakoo6187 10 месяцев назад

      Could u elaborate on the pilot hole needing to be 3 times drill diameter? Are u saying if im drilling a .25" hole i need a .75" pilot? Because that would kill 100% of the parts i run lol

    • @kzimmerman311
      @kzimmerman311 10 месяцев назад

      @@verakoo6187 the pilot needs to be 3x the drill diameter in depth. Diameter should be about 0.001" larger than the deep hole drill, but most suppliers will have a pilot tool made for their deep hole drill. Use that and diameter should not be a problem.

  • @sparmar4884
    @sparmar4884 10 месяцев назад +1

    GREAT

  • @donnykisa
    @donnykisa 10 месяцев назад +1

    it is good to spin the drill counterclockwise. down the hole. so it doesn't capsize and the corners come off then I usually drill with 20 times the diameter before I go on with 40/50 times the diameter

    • @mehmettemel8725
      @mehmettemel8725 10 месяцев назад

      40/50 times the dia. man that is nerve wrecking for me.I've never drilled anything that deep especially in small sizes.

  • @Brokoro
    @Brokoro 3 месяца назад

    Deepest hole I've ever machined was 42.5xD in 718 inconel at a 60° angle. Hole was like 2.5" deep at like .0625" dia

  • @fredbloggs4829
    @fredbloggs4829 10 месяцев назад +1

    That drill bit has through coolant!! Just imagine. How did they drill the hole for the through coolant in the drill bit.

    • @mehmettemel8725
      @mehmettemel8725 10 месяцев назад

      Surely you know it's not drilled right?It's all powder metallurgy.

    • @fredbloggs4829
      @fredbloggs4829 10 месяцев назад

      I did realise it wasn't drilled, but I've got no idea how it's made.

  • @doughboy0506
    @doughboy0506 9 месяцев назад

    how bout a hole pop and wire edm?

  • @jgrimm0
    @jgrimm0 8 месяцев назад

    Coolest video!

  • @hamzanawaz7945
    @hamzanawaz7945 9 месяцев назад

    ❤❤❤ you the myth the man the legend #TitanGilroy

  • @bigboy4224
    @bigboy4224 10 месяцев назад

    Where did the holes come out?

  • @DJHeyl
    @DJHeyl 10 месяцев назад +1

    I have a few questions,
    how many holes or mm can you expect before failure/ resharpen?
    how many times can you resharpen the tool ? (i have in mind that you can resharpen it a lot but the inner structure is going to fail).
    much love from Germany and thank you for your education in this industry.

    • @sinchrotron
      @sinchrotron 10 месяцев назад +1

      One drill - one hole
      One size, one goal
      No going back....
      Or what should be (its a kind of magic)

    • @Glocke87
      @Glocke87 10 месяцев назад +2

      I´m use them and some other in 1.4404 (2 - 2,5 - 4 - 5 - 5,5 - 6mm up to 30xD) with feed and speed from Novo. Tool life is about 8m - 11m including some interrupted holes. Position is around 0,03mm at 100mm deep.

    • @DJHeyl
      @DJHeyl 10 месяцев назад

      thanks mate just asking last week i had to drill some alloy 50 or xm-19 some nasty shit, and broke one drill
      i used osg drill, tool breaks after 8m

  • @beerzerker8359
    @beerzerker8359 10 месяцев назад

    Deep hole drilling cycle, canned cycle with thru coolant drills. It's not terribly hard, but stainless steel is a nightmare to work with if you don't have coolant flooding.

  • @archie3537
    @archie3537 10 месяцев назад +2

    👍

  • @braydenbeeman861
    @braydenbeeman861 10 месяцев назад

    Was there some calculation or reason your spot depth was 1.2? Could a half round drill do this if you were able to get coolant at the bottom?

    • @scottgarrison1190
      @scottgarrison1190 10 месяцев назад

      He was more than likely using a 3xd drill so he buried it to get as deep a pilot as he could. He could have gone in after with an 8xd or whatever intermediate drill as well. Depends on how straight you need it.

  • @Dug6666666
    @Dug6666666 10 месяцев назад

    I take it these drills cut faster than a gun drill.
    How do they compare for, straightness of hole, surface finish, diameter accuracy.

  • @byVELTEN
    @byVELTEN 9 месяцев назад

    4:43 😂

  • @ardennielsen3761
    @ardennielsen3761 10 месяцев назад

    if your drilling holes deeper then 3 inches in many cases the base part its self needs to be rotating against the rotation of the drilling bit cutter. a physics law that forces self centering, one object rotating into another in apposing directions.

    • @teolynx3805
      @teolynx3805 10 месяцев назад

      Sometimes it's impossible because of the dimensions or shape of the part (angled holes in heavy parts as an example). But otherwise you are right.

    • @verakoo6187
      @verakoo6187 10 месяцев назад

      That only works with round stock doing center holes. U cant put 3 side by side holes in rectangle while its spinning lol.

  • @crazycooterMN
    @crazycooterMN 10 месяцев назад

    That'd be a big oops too fire that up 2k rpm un supported!

  • @GeorgeSmith-yl4ey
    @GeorgeSmith-yl4ey 10 месяцев назад

    Do all that with out thru coolent then well talk lol

  • @luisalfredo50
    @luisalfredo50 8 месяцев назад

    Sería bueno tuvieran canal de RUclips en español

  • @WilkoGuitar
    @WilkoGuitar 10 месяцев назад +1

    Now try with a CrazyDrill Cool SST-Inox from Mikron Tool and you’ll realise how slow this is 😅

    • @tink2805
      @tink2805 10 месяцев назад

      agreed, this should be 2-3 times faster.

  • @andrert2178
    @andrert2178 10 месяцев назад

    Now with a 1" diameter drill down to 6"

  • @steffelsnake79
    @steffelsnake79 10 месяцев назад +2

    TITEX Drill can 70×D ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @MrLegend139
    @MrLegend139 9 месяцев назад

    Not exactly new technology, did this back in 2011 with sandvik and their application engineer with a 6mm 40x D same method, stubby pilot, stop long series drill in at low rpm, spin up full speed and drill at around 800mm/min in stainless, was rapid, even I had my doubts