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Small drill press


 

I am looking for recommendations for a small drill press for the smaller
number drills.

--
Don Bowen --AD0NB--


 

Cameron drill press is excellent, but pricey.

Bill


-----Original Message-----
From: Don Bowen <don.bowen@...>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, Jun 2, 2022 12:37 pm
Subject: [Unimat] Small drill press

I am looking for recommendations for a small drill press for the smaller
number drills.

--
Don Bowen --AD0NB--


 

Beware of drills with collets - some of them (EG Poxxon) only hold a limited number of sizes. It's OK if you have drills with 3/32" shanks, or similar, but if you have plain number drills many will not fit. If you have ER collets the smallest you can hold is 0.5 mm - I have some very small drills (0.05 mm) which are on a 1 mm shank.


 

The Cameron drill press I found online
has a price tag of over $1600.00. I can¡¯t imagine what might make it so expensive.
I have been thinking of a way to to improve the Unimat spindle while increasing the travel and better depth control. I have been relying on a dial travel indicator which works well but adds more apparatus to the setup.

Dick


 

Micromark has a couple listed that may work for you...



 

I have a Cameron micro drill and a Vigor (Japan) watchmakers drill press.? The Cameron is a lot better with #60 to #80 drill bits.? Probably because the chuck is better (Albrecht Keyless).? The Vigor is OK up to about 1/16th.

Jim In Minnesota


 

Every time I see those sensitive drill presses at auctions, I think "now I can get one cheap", but they always go for way too much.? The last time, a few years ago, a local auction had about 15 of them with various options (don't recall the brand), and none of them went for less than $600.

-Dave

On Thursday, June 2, 2022, 05:33:46 PM PDT, OldToolmaker via groups.io <old_toolmaker@...> wrote:


The Cameron drill press I found online
has a price tag of over $1600.00. I can¡¯t imagine what might make it so expensive.
I have been thinking of a way to to improve the Unimat spindle while increasing the travel and better depth control. I have been relying on a dial travel indicator which works well but adds more apparatus to the setup.

Dick


 

Thank you.




On Thursday, June 2, 2022, 8:44 PM, Richard Burrows <bluerandonee@...> wrote:

Micromark has a couple listed that may work for you...



--
http://www.homemadetools.net/forum/?OFF-SET-tailstock-center-65965#post105972
?SMALL TURRET TOOL POST PLANS?
?LARGE TURRET TOOL POST PLANS
?MINI-LATHE CARRIAGE LOCK PLANS
?SMALL QC TOOL POST PLANS?
?QUICK CHANGE LATHE TURRET
?MINI LATHE COMPOUND PIVOT MODIFICATION


 

Why not just get a micro Jacobs chuck adapter? Amazon has this one that
fits 0.3mm-3.2mm bits (0.013"-0.128"). $9.99 with free shipping and free
returns.



Elliot


On 6/3/22 08:21, OldToolmaker via groups.io wrote:
Thank you.


<>

On Thursday, June 2, 2022, 8:44 PM, Richard Burrows
<bluerandonee@...> wrote:

Micromark has a couple listed that may work for you...


<>

<>
--
Elliot Nesterman
elliot@...
www.ajoure.net

"The finest jewel cannot disguise a flawed character."


 

I have one of these type of chucks which I use.
Unfortunately mine doesn't run perfectly true with used in a drill press.
If your using a very small drills it needs to be spot on.

Lez


 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Hi Gang:

My brother-in-law had one of these HF drill presses:

We did a lot of work with it and it did fine. The video show a cast iron base and table, but the photos show a formed sheet metal table. Get cast iron if you can. $90 isn't too bad.

For little holes, under 0.010" I would suggest any drill press / mill with high RPM and a sensitive drill chuck:

?? $39 not bad.

I found even the return spring interfered with the feel so I would disconnect it.

Carl.


On 6/2/2022 8:44 PM, Richard Burrows wrote:

Micromark has a couple listed that may work for you...



 

Dick, you might look at this too.


Carl Lantz


 

Carl,
That LMS model is quite interesting. I already have a sensitive drill chuck. It has an Albrect chuck 1/16¡± capacity. Like new.
Dick


 

On Fri, Jun 3, 2022 at 01:33 AM, OldToolmaker wrote:
The Cameron drill press I found online
has a price tag of over $1600.00. I can¡¯t imagine what might make it so expensive.
When you get into serious micro-drilling you can spend many thousands (?/$ - whatever). The last machine I saw (American made) did not have a spindle - drills were held in a sapphire vee block with the drive belt running over the shank to rotate them - all drills had to have an enlarged shank. I dimly recall it was by Najet. The belt was angled to push the drill into the work. My old boss made his own with a PTFE vee block, and the drill horizontal, to drill hundreds of 0.002" & 0.003" holes in dies used to extrude material for the earliest carbon fibres. He said it was slow but never snapped a drill.

With a Unimat consider mounting the job on the cross slide and using the carriage for the feed. It might be worth making a vertical slide if you have many of these jobs to do.

Note that micro drilling is considered (by some) to be using any drill under 0.1" and requires special care. Also drilling a depth more than 10 times the drill diameter is considered deep hole drilling, so when I was drilling 1.2 mm holes 30 mm deep I should have had all sorts of problems, but with the correct choice of drill it was OK. Also with the 0.9 mm holes 15 mm deep - all done on the SL with a bit of a special setup. I have yet to try a 0.05 mm (~ 0.002") drill - smallest I have - but the company who supplied it go down to 0.0002". However, their old catalogue says they do not offer a sharpening service below 0.0008". I'm not sure where I would start with something like that