Cool! I've always used oil for dispersing heat when drilling steel, never water. I guess the big thing is keeping the bit cool. Once it's cooked, you are too; no temper, no edge, no go. Steve Tyree In a message dated 3/22/2005 7:53:36 AM Central Standard Time, fthrong@juno.com writes: Just an aside .... The trick to drilling stainless is to keep it wet while drilling either by a small stream of water from a garden sprayer for large parts or by being submerged in a water bath for small parts. (Some friends and I built a 55' x 14' houseboat for Lake Powell completely out of stainless ... just imagine how many holes were drilled! Once this trick was learned we never tried to drill stainless without water.) Fred Dulce M17 #300
I was thinking the same thing. To think that all these years I've been using that wacky product called "cutting oil". But I'll give the water a try. It can't do any worse (on stainless). Don't know about aluminum bronze. I've never tried to drill that. Howard On 3/22/05 10:18 PM, "IDCLLC@aol.com" <IDCLLC@aol.com> wrote:
Cool!
I've always used oil for dispersing heat when drilling steel, never water. I guess the big thing is keeping the bit cool. Once it's cooked, you are too; no temper, no edge, no go.
Steve Tyree
In a message dated 3/22/2005 7:53:36 AM Central Standard Time, fthrong@juno.com writes:
Just an aside ....
The trick to drilling stainless is to keep it wet while drilling either by a small stream of water from a garden sprayer for large parts or by being submerged in a water bath for small parts. (Some friends and I built a 55' x 14' houseboat for Lake Powell completely out of stainless ... just imagine how many holes were drilled! Once this trick was learned we never tried to drill stainless without water.)
Fred Dulce M17 #300
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IDCLLC@aol.com