I personally dont find the diamond bits working well for me for drilling vs a good cobalt bit. I do use the diamonds to smooth out the burs left in the inside though.
Good info, but high speed drilling will also generate heat which will weaken and dull the bit and probably end up causing it to snap anyway.Was in machine shop in high school and trade school and the smaller the drill bit, the faster the bit should spin. Slow speed with small bits can cause the bit to break off inside the piece. Always use lubricating oil.
If using a small drill bit at slow speeds, the drill bit has a tendency to act like a screw and burry itself into the metal, which snaps the bit. When the bit is moving at a fast speed it will do its job at cutting the metal.
How many times have you drilled through a thin piece of sheet metal with a small drill bit only to have the drill bit not cut the perfect circle, but "screwed" itself down the entire length of the drill bit and had to be reversed to remove the drill bit. Same principal applies to small bits drilling through solid metals.
Drill bit speed also varied depending on the metal being cut and drill bit type used.
Yeah I would not drill a new hole with it. But to open and existing one in stages its very easy to do with less risk of walking for those not used to drilling. If I was going straight to 5/64 I'd use a bit and drill.I personally dont find the diamond bits working well for me for drilling vs a good cobalt bit. I do use the diamonds to smooth out the burs left in the inside though.
Thats why i recommend using a punch a few times first. LoL.Yeah I would not drill a new hole with it. But to open and existing one its very easy to do with less risk of walking for those not used to drilling.
Was in machine shop in high school and trade school and the smaller the drill bit, the faster the bit should spin. Slow speed with small bits can cause the bit to break off inside the piece. Always use lubricating oil.
If using a small drill bit at slow speeds, the drill bit has a tendency to act like a screw and burry itself into the metal, which snaps the bit. When the bit is moving at a fast speed it will do its job at cutting the metal.
How many times have you drilled through a thin piece of sheet metal with a small drill bit only to have the drill bit not cut the perfect circle, but "screwed" itself down the entire length of the drill bit and had to be reversed to remove the drill bit. Same principal applies to small bits drilling through solid metals.
Drill bit speed also varied depending on the metal being cut and drill bit type used.
This diamond bit in a Dremel works great on SS. The advantage is it fits in the small hole and reduces the risk of a regular bit jumping or walking, Plus you can go up in size slowly to any size not just drill bit sizes.
![]()
I did it!!! Piece of cake. Two local hardware stores and all I could come up with was 1/16 cobalt drill bit. A drop of VG, slow steady pressure. Viola! Perfect. Thank you for the guidance.