• Scam Alert. Members are reminded to NOT send money to buy anything. Don't buy things remote and have it shipped - go get it yourself, pay in person, and take your equipment with you. Scammers have burned people on this forum. Urgency, secrecy, excuses, selling for friend, newish members, FUD, are RED FLAGS. A video conference call is not adequate assurance. Face to face interactions are required. Please report suspicions to the forum admins. Stay Safe - anyone can get scammed.

Sharpening drill bits

I ushually do it manually it isn't hard. The only drill sharpner I have used and like is the darex cnc drill sharpner. I have tried using manual drill shapeners and have never been satisfied that it was easy enough to use. The cnc drill sharpner is expensive so i just sharpen my bits by hand.
 
I ushually do it manually it isn't hard. The only drill sharpner I have used and like is the darex cnc drill sharpner. I have tried using manual drill shapeners and have never been satisfied that it was easy enough to use. The cnc drill sharpner is expensive so i just sharpen my bits by hand.
Expensive is an understatement. I keep trying to buy one at auction but they go for like 4k minimum if you find one..
I've got a drill doctor and it works up to half inch, made by darex as well.. it's underpowered but it does so the job well.
 
My eyesight is not good enough anymore to sharpen small drill bits by hand . I bought a Drill Doctor 750 and it works well but its time consuming. I buy bits up to 1/4" in 6 packs and when they are all dull sharpen them all at once. The Drill Doctor does a good job, very even chip size from both flutes after sharpening with it.

John
 
My free handing sucks. Well... grinding the 2nd face to match the first one sucks so I guess I'm only 50% bad :) I bought the same Drill Doctor 750 when KBC had a sale ~100$ as I recall. It does a decent enough job on the geometry. I find its not as polished as a new drill but end result cuts reasonably well. The setup & cam action is pretty straightforward, you cant really do much wrong. I thought I'd also use it for is switching back & forth between drill geometry for 'grabby' materials like brass so could just re-dress an existing drill & then revert back to typical steel geometry. I haven't sat down to figure this out 100% but I'm not sure it accomodates this aspect of the geometry. You can alter the point angle from 115-140 but not the ?whats the term - rake? I think is dictated by the cam action. So I do it by hand with a oil stone, no biggy. Its also not super speedy on larger drills & doesn't really lend itself as well to center drills if they are short. http://www.drilldoctor.com/drill-doctor-750x.html

In my utopian world of infinite hobby funds, I want a tool & cutter grinder. Then you can do the whole enchilada - drills, lathe bits, custom profiles, engraving tools... One day!
 
Back
Top