Drilling and milling exercises
Today I continued practicing drilling and milling screw heads made of steel.
Participants were:
A nameless SLR for practicing with steel cross-head screws in the bayonet ring.
- HSS cutter
- Diamond cutters
- Tungsten carbide cutters
- HSS cobalt drills
The cutters (Dremel) were used on the Dremel 4250 with 25,000 rpm.
The drills (right-handed, Bosch) were inserted in the cordless screwdriver Bosch GSR 12V-15 (max. 1,300 rpm) and used with cooling lubricant.
HSS cutter
Although it has the perfect shape for the job, it is not designed for milling steel.
The cutter obviously overheated and the cutting edges on the front became blunt.
Diamond cutters
The cutter with the conical tip removed steel well. It allows you to work in a controlled manner and is suitable for milling small volumes.
The smaller ball-head cutter had a weak grip and is better suited for engraving.
Tungsten carbide cutters
These cutters cut through steel like it was butter. But they are too big for the job and therefore remove material around the screw head. They also tend to bounce off when they are placed.
HSS cobalt drills
They cleanly remove the upper part of the screw head, leaving the surrounding area intact. But they do not separate the screw head from the thread.
Results
I had worked on the screw at nine o'clock with the drill and then with a tungsten carbide cutter, which slipped when I started to use it. But the screw head is completely removed.
I first worked on the screw at eleven o'clock with the drill too and then with the spherical tungsten carbide cutter. The cutter was too big for that.
But it also shows impressively on the bayonet ring what it can do with steel.
I worked on the screw head at seven o'clock, first with the drills (from small to large) and then with the diamond cutter. The screw head is off, a satisfactory result.
All other screws fell victim to various combinations of cutters and drills and I have not documented them here.
Conclusion
- The HSS cobalt drill bit enables a large part of the screw head to be removed precisely.
- The remaining work is done with the diamond cutter.
- The rest of the screw can be unscrewed with the Neji-Saurus (Engineer PZ-57 pliers); there must be a protrusion for this.
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