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Proctologically Violated©®
 
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Default Countersinking with a too-fast drill press

If you are able to vary the voltage to your DP, you will at least have more
controllable torque at the motor, and can likely keep the speed constant at
a given pressure.
Proly not the greatest thing for the motor over prolonged periods, but for a
duty cycle of, say, 20%, it should be OK.
A variac would do, or a big-assed dropping resistor.
Or, perhaps just two motors in series--a spare motor in series w/ your DP
motor!
----------------------------
Mr. P.V.'d
formerly Droll Troll
"Joseph Gwinn" wrote in message
...
In June 2005, I was having problems because my little 12" Delta
variable-speed drill press has a minimum speed of 500 rpm, which was a
real problem, especially when countersinking.

I had found an interim solution for larger holes: Put the countersink
in the hole and turn power on, releasing the downward pressure before
the press gets up to speed.

This did not work with small holes, and the 1/4-inch severance
countersink, working in 6061 aluminum, flooded with a water-based
coolant. I would have thought that a small countersink would be OK at
500 rpm, but the holes became ragged and misshapen.

Countersinking with a hand drill did work, making pretty holes, but
yielded inaccurate countersinks because it's so hard to drill straight
by hand.

I was busily tearing metal and hair when it occurred to me that tapping
is an extreme kind of machining, and yet one can get clean threads, with
the right lubricant. So I tried LPS Labs' "Tap-All". It worked, even
at 500 rpm.

Haven't tried it in steel and/or for large holes yet.

Joe Gwinn