Martin Walsh 1 | 07/06/2014 13:50:40 |
113 forum posts 2 photos | Hi I'm making a small boiler 2 Inches dia and I need to drill 3 holes 3/8 dia what is the best way to do this. As I have heard drilling holes in copper is a nightmare Thanks
Best Wishes Martin
|
MadMike | 07/06/2014 14:46:02 |
265 forum posts 4 photos | I would suggest either a 3/8 dia hole saw/tank cutter or trepanning the holes. |
JasonB | 07/06/2014 14:48:05 |
![]() 25215 forum posts 3105 photos 1 articles | The stepped drills work quite well or use successive sizes of milling cutters say 1/4" drill then 5/16" and 3/8" milling cutters |
Neil Wyatt | 07/06/2014 15:17:25 |
![]() 19226 forum posts 749 photos 86 articles | +1 for step drills. Aldis often sell them at stupidly low prices, but always in metric sizes. I don't think you'll find holesaws or trepanning cutters down to 3/8". If you are brazing bushes in the holes, you can [probably get away with using a cone drill. Otherwise, drill undersize and file to a good fit on the bush. Neil |
FMES | 07/06/2014 15:30:32 |
608 forum posts 2 photos | These work very well Martin **LINK** |
John Baguley | 07/06/2014 16:45:16 |
![]() 517 forum posts 57 photos | +2 for step drills. Centre drills work well as well. John |
Niloch | 07/06/2014 20:33:39 |
371 forum posts | +3; 'have drilled 84 x 12mm & 2 x 20mm holes in 10SWG copper with this |
Ian S C | 08/06/2014 12:24:31 |
![]() 7468 forum posts 230 photos | I have not got a photo of one. similar twist drills are sold for wood working, the end is ground so that the centre is a spur point, and the outer dia., is the point that cuts the hole, ideal for drilling sheet metal, no more triangular holes. It's easy enough to grind up an ordinary twist drill. Ian S C |
Roger Woollett | 08/06/2014 15:20:51 |
148 forum posts 6 photos | Assuming that the holes are in the flat end plates of the boiler iether a step drill or a cone drill will work fine. The sort of drill Ian S C describes are sold as bullet drills. They also work fine. Roger Woollett |
Ian S C | 09/06/2014 14:09:39 |
![]() 7468 forum posts 230 photos | I got taught to grind them when I was on an apprentice course at NAC(National Airways Corporation) This was before the days of Air New Zealand. Our airframe instructor learned of the drill type during WW2. Ian S C |
Robert Dodds | 09/06/2014 22:42:38 |
324 forum posts 63 photos | Martin, Just producing three holes doesn't justify spending a lot of money but in another age I used to use "slow helix drills" to produce holes in the copper pipes for urinals. Burrs on the inside from break through were not encouraged (you get sprinkles down the trouser leg) and the slow helix reduces the tendency to grab the thin wall copper tube. Bob D |
Neil Wyatt | 10/06/2014 09:51:32 |
![]() 19226 forum posts 749 photos 86 articles | These might help you get started: Neil |
Michael Gilligan | 10/06/2014 16:06:35 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | Posted by Martin Walsh 1 on 07/06/2014 13:50:40:
I'm making a small boiler 2 Inches dia and I need to drill 3 holes 3/8 dia what is the best way to do this. . I'm surprised to see that no-one has yet suggested 3/8" milling cutter [preferably 3-flute] ... which seems the obvious choice, to me. MichaelG. |
julian atkins | 10/06/2014 23:55:08 |
![]() 1285 forum posts 353 photos | i think you are all making things far too complicated! i drilled 14 holes each end in my current boiler project for 3/8" dia tubes, opening up in steps to 23/64" dia then reaming 3/8" dia, using ordinary drills. i have drilled and reamed another 8 of same size for boiler bushes and a further 3 of 7/16" dia same method. slow speed, and a bit of WD-40 sprayed on during same. cheers, julian Edited By julian atkins on 11/06/2014 00:06:12 |
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