I need a 1 1/16" fostner bit for drilling salt/pepper grinder blanks. Do the carbide bits stay sharp for longer than the steel bits? What are you using that you find to be sharp, durable, and long lasting? Thanks.
Famag bits are what I use. They are German made and have a unique edge to reduce friction. Take a look......I need a 1 1/16" fostner bit for drilling salt/pepper grinder blanks. Do the carbide bits stay sharp for longer than the steel bits? What are you using that you find to be sharp, durable, and long lasting? Thanks.
Thanks for this. Every time I drill on the lathe, wished there was something better.Famag bits are what I use. They are German made and have a unique edge to reduce friction. Take a look......
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Famag Bormax 2.0 Forstner Bits Imperial Sizes 5/16" to 2-1/8" Individual Bits
These Famag Bormax forstner drill bits are the finest in the world. They drill the cleanest and fastest holes with the best chip ejection, generate the least amount of heat, require less toque and downward pressure and stay sharper longer than any other brand. They are made by Famag, a German...taytools.com
Yes but a $20.00 or less investment in a carbide bit will collect much less dust and be quicker for the beginning wood turner.There are many solutions. When faced with that issue, I just drilled using a 1" bit and widened the hole with a turning tool. You don't need to collect specialty tools that will collect "dust". Just how many pepper mills are you making? BTW I use diamond cards to sharpen my bits.
Alternatively, A 65-dollar investment for a mt2 boring headset will cover many woodturning drilling requirements as they come up. example: https://www.amazon.com/Yunnergo-Carbide-Optional-Milling-Machine/dp/B0CLGR2GKT/ref=sr_1_10?crid=3QFMGGTCMYE8Q&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.6brT9KgnBFmyN-KbBhrIEY8eyjIQM14hkv9uN5SBHgg1WwxCvghI7OcVpKiB40CmtKkwEhhGwSy1i4B4bVR9xRj7jmhdnj4cgA26bU8MwMDr99ugz8CjByzr_Y4_FKOWnIxonrbKP7GYjSlHaKv0gHpaTagfPet2oDctMUEw3Qe-qRCK_pSQxeILwNrR0pyDXPsGo2c4DI6PGMMHHtEjF3dkEjhWgfow6xxoq_pCr_1FaCX3KQYJOsvPyhvTp8lhnM34xm7YMhACDIx21EglPl2dkFqkR6s78ysSoKkubVQ.HYAJE_tMtXFHxe3sUG6oXioMK1A0T4BxEXzEfbKy1jg&dib_tag=se&keywords=2mt+boring+head&qid=1718373723&s=industrial&sprefix=2mt+boring+head+,industrial,86&sr=1-10&th=1
These here are available in the 1 1/16" size.I need a 1 1/16" fostner bit for drilling salt/pepper grinder blanks. Do the carbide bits stay sharp for longer than the steel bits? What are you using that you find to be sharp, durable, and long lasting? Thanks.
For what it's worth you can strip all the tracking and extraneous info (everything after the ?), and the text description, and cut that link way downThere are many solutions.
Possibly a handy tool for some given the price? I think I’d prefer HSS tool bits which are available, but provided the carbide ones supplied are nice and sharp they should last a long time.
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Bob,If you want clean and efficient holes, get a multi spur bit.
These guys still have them.
The Woodcut Mill Drill is for the Crush-Grind mechanisms. 1-1/16 drills or Forstners are for the traditional mechanisms with the adjustment knob at the very top. (A 27mm Forstner is only 0.0005 larger than a 1-1/16" drill, not enough to mess up assembly; carbide bits this size are available on eBay.)Of course carbide bits last longer than steel. Unless you find a supplier who has custom bits made, you won't find a 1 1/16". If you intend to make a few pepper mills, this is the tool to buy. https://woodturningtoolstore.com/product/woodcut-mill-drill/
If you want to go cheap; https://www.amazon.com/Penn-State-I...89c4474695bd32c88f5f206c221a707c&gad_source=1
I’ve been told not to do that since the Forstner needs that point in the wood so it won’t wander. Just use the big one and back it out to clear chips often.plan to drill through first with one of their 5/8" bit to reduced the load on the full-size pass.
If I'm drilling deep with the big forstners I tend to drill a a quarter inch or so with the large one to establish the hole, then drill out to depth with a smaller bit. Your big bit can then remove the bulk remainder without wanderingI’ve been told not to do that since the Forstner needs that point in the wood so it won’t wander. Just use the big one and back it out to clear chips often.
No, a "real" Forstner can drill a half hole on the edge of a board. This type confusion comes from multi-spur bits being identified as Forstner.I’ve been told not to do that since the Forstner needs that point in the wood so it won’t wander. Just use the big one and back it out to clear chips often.
I was under the impression that the point is only for initial location? It’s the sharp rim of the bit that stops it wandering. I’ve not looked for a Forstner bit without a point, but I know others have and not found one. In order to drill a true flat bottom hole they resorted to grinding off the point. The results I saw online looked pretty good to me.I’ve been told not to do that since the Forstner needs that point in the wood so it won’t wander. Just use the big one and back it out to clear chips often.