What speed would be ideal for drilling 1/2" holes through heat treat 4130 3mm thick?
Not milling, but just straight up punching big vent holes type of thing?
Can't recall, my shop teacher would be PISSED.
Thanks - Garro.
What speed would be ideal for drilling 1/2" holes through heat treat 4130 3mm thick?
Not milling, but just straight up punching big vent holes type of thing?
Can't recall, my shop teacher would be PISSED.
Thanks - Garro.
Steve Garro, Coconino Cycles.
Frames & Bicycles built to measure and Custom wheels
Hecho en Flagstaff, Arizona desde 2003
www.coconinocycles.com
www.coconinocycles.blogspot.com
Steve- My Atlas lathe manual says 70 feet per minute for 4140, cromo. At 1/2" that's 500rpm. Don't know if this is the best but it's where I'd start. Andy.
Andy Stewart
10%
around 300 rpm. 40 x 12 / .5xpi = 305ish. That would be: surface feet per minute of alloy steel(40)times twelve divided by the tool diameter times pi= rpm.
Steve,
are you freehanding this with an electric drill or using a drill press?
In theory you're looking for about 60 surface feet per minute, so for a 1/2" bit that'd be 450 rpm. Drilling HT 4130 is a bit like drilling stainless though, if you don't cut a deep enough chip with each rev. of the bit you run the risk of work hardening the material. At that point I don't think even a carbide bit would work.
I would cut the theoretical drill speed in half, and press down hard to get the heavy feed that will get you good chip depth.
If you do end up work hardening the material around the hole you'll have to get the die grinder out and remove enough material to get back to stuff that's drillable. Or you could anneal it with your O/A torch.
Here's a link to a more detailed description, Drilling 4130 ("Johnny")
Good luck!
Alistair.
3mm is practically nothing. Use a good center drill and rpm won't matter (500 is probably ideal).
A brand new Grizzy heavy-duty drill press - I want to set it up as a dedicated venthole/big hole work station, freeing my mill to be permanently set up to well, mill.
I have been using nothing but either the mill or handdrills for ten years (go ahead, point & laugh)
and, since I have a 12-speed drill press now I was windering what the ideal speed is, since I can optimise that........
Great discussion, thanks guys!
- Garro.
Steve Garro, Coconino Cycles.
Frames & Bicycles built to measure and Custom wheels
Hecho en Flagstaff, Arizona desde 2003
www.coconinocycles.com
www.coconinocycles.blogspot.com
I'm scratching away with a #2 96 Grobet for a good chunk of today, no one's laughing Steve!
If it's a dedicated vent hoe machine, you may want to consider stepped center drills (or possibly a unibit if its of great quality).
I use these in a hand held air drill for my vent holes.
Last week I drilled a bunch of 1/2" holes in 3/8 1080 steel at 400rpm. Used a lot of tap oil and it worked really well. Not quite the same as what you are doing though.
I'd be very inclined to drill a pilot hole then use a unibit
^If you choose this route make sure it's short enough it doesn't poke through the backside of the tube. My 1/2" unibit has 1/16" steps and is about 1.5" long.
I use a lot of 300 series stainless which is common in my industry and which work hardens if you look at it wrong.
One technique which works well if you can't get the drill speed low enough is to "bump" drill: assuming your guide hole is larger than the chisel on the drill bit, get the bit a few mm above the work surface and bump it down hard enough to dig into the surface, peel off a strip of swarf for a few revs then back off again. Rinse and repeat.
The technique also seems to work on 400 series steels like KVA. Might be worth trying on CrMo.
Regardless of the material, spiral cut drills are less than optimum in thin materials. As others have mentioned, step drills (Unibit, etc) work much better than twist drills (they make round burr free holes.)
I wouldn't set up a drill press specifically for this operation. Do whatever it takes to drill a pilot hole, then chuck up a step drill in your handheld (corded or cordless) and enlarge to the desired size with a step drill.
Step drills ain't cheap (Lenox, Irwin, Klein, etc), but HF has some less expensive options. I never advocate the use of Harbor freight tools but sometimes they have just what we need in expendable tools. Titanium Nitride Coated Steel Step Drill Bit Set
BTW- HSS works fine for milling/drilling ops on most chomoly tubes that we know. Also... step drills are re-sharpenable (to a point.)
Drilling formula was tought to me as
4 * Cutting speed / Diameter * .75
Heat treated 4130's cutting speed is probably around 40-50
4 * 40 / .5 = 320 * .75 = 240
4 * 50 / .5 = 400 * .75 = 300
I know we are just talking about holes in tubes here but I want to second what Eric E said about the centering drills.
I use a 7/16" (smaller for chainstays) centering drill and it cuts the smoothest, roundest, fastest hole hole for me.
A 1/2" normal drill can go sorta choppy tri-corner on you without a pilot (especially on a tube )but the centering bits take it to full size really smoothly
The down side if it matters is that the shortness of the bit puts the chuck or spindle nose right down in the work.
The shortness also helps with not snapping bits and the aforementioned drilling through the back side of the tube. I've had longer spiral bits get caught and "screwed" down into the other side of the tube. That will drive you bat sh!t in a hurry. Not an issue with these. The cool thing about air drills is that they automatically stop spinning when you release the trigger.
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