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Default What drill speed for a diamond core drill

Hi.

I've hired a drill (Metabo BDE 1100) and 127mm diamond core drill.

The drill has 2 speed settings. The handbook says the fast setting gives
0-1200rpm and the slow setting gives 0-640rpm. Does anyone know the best
speed for cutting through concrete and breeze blocks?

The plan is to drill my holes tomorrow a.m. and return the kit in the
afternoon. So any replies before then welcome. (I know not to use hammer
action before anyone tells me! - the drill doesn't have it anyway.)

Cheers


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Default What drill speed for a diamond core drill


"Steve" wrote in message
...
Hi.

I've hired a drill (Metabo BDE 1100) and 127mm diamond core drill.

The drill has 2 speed settings. The handbook says the fast setting gives
0-1200rpm and the slow setting gives 0-640rpm. Does anyone know the best
speed for cutting through concrete and breeze blocks?

The plan is to drill my holes tomorrow a.m. and return the kit in the
afternoon. So any replies before then welcome. (I know not to use hammer
action before anyone tells me! - the drill doesn't have it anyway.)


Use the slower speed and if the unit has a variable speed trigger slowly is
good, and withdraw frequently to allow the spoil to clear the core.
If drilling through a wall drill until the pilot *just* protrudes through
the other side and then finish off from the other side (Space and access
permitting) to produce a more clean finish at the break out point.
DON'T DON'T DON'T cool or lubricate with *anything* the core.


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Default What drill speed for a diamond core drill


"R" wrote in message
...

"Steve" wrote in message
...
Hi.

I've hired a drill (Metabo BDE 1100) and 127mm diamond core drill.

The drill has 2 speed settings. The handbook says the fast setting gives
0-1200rpm and the slow setting gives 0-640rpm. Does anyone know the best
speed for cutting through concrete and breeze blocks?

The plan is to drill my holes tomorrow a.m. and return the kit in the
afternoon. So any replies before then welcome. (I know not to use hammer
action before anyone tells me! - the drill doesn't have it anyway.)


Use the slower speed and if the unit has a variable speed trigger slowly
is good, and withdraw frequently to allow the spoil to clear the core.
If drilling through a wall drill until the pilot *just* protrudes through
the other side and then finish off from the other side (Space and access
permitting) to produce a more clean finish at the break out point.
DON'T DON'T DON'T cool or lubricate with *anything* the core.

Thanks R. I'll go slow.


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Default What drill speed for a diamond core drill

Steve wrote:
Hi.

I've hired a drill (Metabo BDE 1100) and 127mm diamond core drill.

The drill has 2 speed settings. The handbook says the fast setting
gives 0-1200rpm and the slow setting gives 0-640rpm. Does anyone
know the best speed for cutting through concrete and breeze blocks?

The plan is to drill my holes tomorrow a.m. and return the kit in the
afternoon. So any replies before then welcome. (I know not to use
hammer action before anyone tells me! - the drill doesn't have it
anyway.)


Nice & slow - and hang on to the bugger ;-)


--
Dave - The Medway Handyman
www.medwayhandyman.co.uk


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Default What drill speed for a diamond core drill

R wrote:
"Steve" wrote in message
...
Hi.

I've hired a drill (Metabo BDE 1100) and 127mm diamond core drill.

The drill has 2 speed settings. The handbook says the fast setting gives
0-1200rpm and the slow setting gives 0-640rpm. Does anyone know the best
speed for cutting through concrete and breeze blocks?

The plan is to drill my holes tomorrow a.m. and return the kit in the
afternoon. So any replies before then welcome. (I know not to use hammer
action before anyone tells me! - the drill doesn't have it anyway.)


Use the slower speed and if the unit has a variable speed trigger slowly is
good, and withdraw frequently to allow the spoil to clear the core.
If drilling through a wall drill until the pilot *just* protrudes through
the other side and then finish off from the other side (Space and access
permitting) to produce a more clean finish at the break out point.
DON'T DON'T DON'T cool or lubricate with *anything* the core.


One thing I would note, is that in some materials the core will drill
much faster than the pilot - so keeping the pilot in there will often
slow you down. I either drill right through with a 10mm SDS bit first so
the pilot bit only needs follow a hole rather than cut it, or take the
pilot bit out once the core has cut into the wall and can keep itself on
centre.

--
Cheers,

John.

/================================================== ===============\
| Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk |
\================================================= ================/


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Default What drill speed for a diamond core drill

In article ,
"Steve" writes:
Hi.

I've hired a drill (Metabo BDE 1100) and 127mm diamond core drill.

The drill has 2 speed settings. The handbook says the fast setting gives
0-1200rpm and the slow setting gives 0-640rpm. Does anyone know the best
speed for cutting through concrete and breeze blocks?


IME with a Tungsten Carbide one, it depends on the material being
drilled. With near-engineering bricks, I ended up on top gear top
speed, as there's so little bite. With softer commons, you can't
do that and need low gear.

Be prepared for the core to jam and try spinning the drill. Hold
it very firmly so that it can't spin, and then its inbuilt clutch
will slip and protect you from harm. Keep your face and anything
else well clear (a friend ended up in A&E having stiches in his
chin after a core drill spun and whacked him on the chin).

Watch the drill temperature -- it doesn't look like that Metabo has
thermal protection (my Metabo does, but it's a different model).
If you aren't running the drill near full speed, the air cooling
may not be enough and it might overheat. If you suspect it is
overheating, disconnect the core drill (which may itself be hot
enough to burn you) and then run the drill at top speed with no load
until it cools. Never just leave it switched off to cool on its own;
that's what often kills a hot drill.

The plan is to drill my holes tomorrow a.m. and return the kit in the
afternoon. So any replies before then welcome. (I know not to use hammer
action before anyone tells me! - the drill doesn't have it anyway.)


--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]
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Default What drill speed for a diamond core drill


"Steve" wrote in message
...
Hi.

I've hired a drill (Metabo BDE 1100) and 127mm diamond core drill.

The drill has 2 speed settings. The handbook says the fast setting gives
0-1200rpm and the slow setting gives 0-640rpm. Does anyone know the best
speed for cutting through concrete and breeze blocks?

The plan is to drill my holes tomorrow a.m. and return the kit in the
afternoon. So any replies before then welcome. (I know not to use hammer
action before anyone tells me! - the drill doesn't have it anyway.)

Cheers

The speed should be in the range 900 - 1300 rpm and where in that range is
down to experience. The size of the core would put the speed down towards
900 and the hardness of the material is also relevant - "harder = slower".
If you get excessive vibration try reducing pressure until you are happy
that the core is cutting at its "own speed" .

Peter K

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Default What drill speed for a diamond core drill

"Steve" wrote in message
...
Hi.

I've hired a drill (Metabo BDE 1100) and 127mm diamond core drill.

The drill has 2 speed settings. The handbook says the fast setting gives
0-1200rpm and the slow setting gives 0-640rpm. Does anyone know the best
speed for cutting through concrete and breeze blocks?

The plan is to drill my holes tomorrow a.m. and return the kit in the
afternoon. So any replies before then welcome. (I know not to use hammer
action before anyone tells me! - the drill doesn't have it anyway.)

Cheers

Thanks for the advice everyone.. I now how 2 round holes in my wall.


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