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Sonny Sonny is offline
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Default low power drilling

On Mar 12, 4:48�pm, wrote:
On Fri, 12 Mar 2010 07:11:15 -0800 (PST), Sonny
wrote:

A spade bit might have a rough punch-through, so go slow and have
patience at the end point. �Make sure the bit is sharp. �I think I
would try welding a spade bit onto a 1/2" pipe and make a separate
chuck insert (fitted/welded onto a 1/2" sleeve, for the pipe) for
fitting into the drill chuck. �A spade bit is a lot cheaper than an
auger bit for a one-time use (once welded).


If access space, in starting, is limited, also, the 1/2" pipe can be
in successive 24" - 36" sections. �Any connecting sleeves will pass
through the 1-1/2" holes and the chuck insert fitting can be moved
back, as each successive pipe section is attached. �Save the set-up
for future use (???, LOL) and use the pipe sections for pipe clamps.


Sonny


�I tried the spade bit first ( on a test piece, out in the open) and
the breakthrough was BRUTAL. The forstner is self guiding and worked a
real treat.


Glad the pipes/extensions worked. That seemed the logical approach.
I didn't think of using a forstner bit and I'll remember the lesson of
that big of spade bit. I've never had to use one that big. And you
still have the pipes for clamps!

Sonny