Posted by Bret4207 on November 16, 2014 at 05:26:54 from (64.19.90.196):
In Reply to: Drill bit sharpener posted by George Marsh on November 13, 2014 at 14:31:06:
Any device you can get that allows a more or less rigid way to hold the drill and still turn it will help produce a good sharp bit. After that the trick is to get the sides the same length. If they aren't precisely the same length, you get an over sized hole. A drill sharpening gauge used to cost a couple dollars, I don't know what they cost know but they are worth the money. Gross angle is much less important than cutting edge angle and length.
My Drill Dr was handy. It's got a lot of grinding on it and I need to tear into it and find out why it's not working right. The same company that makes the Drill Dr, Darex, makes some high dollar stuff that us home fixer stuff types can only dream of.
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Today's Featured Article - Fabricating Sidesheets - by Chris Pratt. The easiest and best first-time project for wanna-be sheet-metal workers like myself is flat or nearly flat metal cut and drilled to be a tractor's sidesheet. A sidesheet is sheetmetal to cover either the engine as in the case of early Oliver's, Massey-Harris' and many crawlers or the wiring and electrical components as in the case of the Massey-Harris Pony, Allis Chalmers' D Series (D-14, D-15, D-12, D-10, D-17, and D-19). The need for fabricating becomes obvious when you go to buy any of these
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