Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Power Tool Buying Guide For Drill Bits

Having the right drill bit will make all the world of difference. Also make sure the bit is sharp. Most drill bits will do the work themselves with only a small bit of pressure. If you find yourself having to use a lot of force to drill, then it is probably time to throw that bit away and get another. Using dull bits can ruin your work and put unnecessary wear and tear on your drill.

Power Tools

Drill Bit Materials

Steel Bits - cheap and good for softwoods. Will dull swiftly with hardwood and even break.

High Speed Steel Bits - Harder than steel blades and will stay shaper slightly longer.

Titanium Coated Bits - Cost more than High Speed Steel, but this is a tougher material and will stay sharper longer.

Carbide Tipped - More costly than the former bits but will stay shaper longer than any of them.

Cobalt Bits - very hard and great for applications with heat build up because it dissipates the heat. Good for Stainless Steel and other metals.

Drilling Tips

Use a twist bit for normal drilling. A high speed bit is the best.

When you drill concrete, brick, slate or plaster use masonry bits at low speeds.

When drilling tile or glass use the spear point at low speeds.

A hole saw is great to make large holes, but make sure the drill can deal with the extra force or your burn the motor out very quickly.

For metal, a step bit is best used at slow speeds.

The drill bit is what makes the cut or bore into your work. I would suggest spending a small more money and getting a better drill bit. It will last longer and cause less dissatisfaction in the long run.

Drill Bit Styles

Twist Bit - The most base to find and is used for normal drilling into wood, light metal and plastic.

Brad Point Bit - Great for drilling into wood. There is a point on the end to make sure the bit stays in place when you drill. They have extra wide flutes to help with wood removal.

Spade Bit - Great for drilling bigger holes from 1/4" to 1 1/12". If you need to drill bigger holes use the hole saw.

Adjustable Wood Bit - Not as popular, but drills large holes to adjustable widths from 3/4" to 3"

Auger Bit - Wood boring bit. Large wide flutes to help with wood removal.

Hole Saw - Large wood boring and light metal fluctuating from 1/2" to 6"

Forstner Bit - Boring flat lowest holes into wood. Great for drilling a flat hole and not going straight through the whole wood.

Drill Saw Bit - Cuts irregular contours and holes in wood or metal.

CounterBore, Countersink - The bit can be changed and is great for production the top of the hole a small wider so when you put the screw in, it is flush with the top of the board.

Installer Bit - Has a hole in the head and is used for pulling wire straight through the hole. Used for installing phone wire, Tv cable, protection wire and cat 5.

Left Hand Bit - For discharge stripped or broken right handed screws or bolts.

Step Bit - Drilling in steel, copper, brass, plastic, aluminum and wood.

Glass/Tile Bit - Used for drilling into glass or tile.

Masonry Bit - Used to drill into concrete or masonry. This is used with a hammer drill or rotary drill.

Scaling Chisel - Used to chip away at masonry and is primarily used in a rotary drill.

Power Tool Buying Guide For Drill Bits

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