Thread
:
air drill question
View Single Post
#
8
November 23rd 03, 06:25 PM
Del Rawlins
external usenet poster
Posts: n/a
On 23 Nov 2003 04:26 AM, Stealth Pilot posted the following:
On 20 Nov 2003 20:47:30 GMT,
(Lpmcatee356)
wrote:
Wow. I'm glad I just started reading this group. What a helpful bunch
here! I'll the the original poster would never have thought about
looking it up.
Not everything that you and I might take for granted is common
knowledge among some of the new builders - or even somewhat
experienced ones. And sometimes those of us that have been doing "it"
for a score+ years forget that not everybody knows the basics. To
answer the original post - the smaller the drill bit the faster you
can/should turn it.
In my experience:
for sheet metal work (drilling #30 holes) the fastest air drill you
can buy is none too fast. A sharp split point bit and an accurate
center-punch help too.
our experiences differ.
my experience is that most drills spin too fast, particualrly for
aluminium.
the speed of your average cordless battery drill is about right and
allows far better control for freehand drilling.
Stealth Pilot
I agree with the other guy, the faster the better. I don't see how
using a heavy electric drill with a heavy attached battery makes it
easier to control. My Sioux with a lightweight air hose is much easier
to work with than any cordless I have tried, for rivet hole sizes,
anyway. If I'm going to be using my unibit or a larger twist drill I
agree that an electric might be easier to work with.
----------------------------------------------------
Del Rawlins-
Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email.
Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website:
http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/
Del Rawlins