IanM
Journeyman Pro
- Joined
- May 18, 2009
- Messages
- 12,292
- Location
- Monmouthshire, UK via Guildford!
Got a new HSS drill bit… job done in 10 mins… funny how they work better than old blunt ones!
Don't let the drill get too hot so low speed and keep pulling the drill back every few seconds to clear away any swarf. As previously advised use a coolant like water or
Very impressive, glad you got it sorted!Got a new HSS drill bit… job done in 10 mins… funny how they work better than old blunt ones!
Very impressive, glad you got it sorted!
Yes they can, but drilling into metal lintels they don't stay sharp for very long. Also, if after going through the lintel and you catch a brick above, it will blunt the bit straight away.Drill bits can be sharpened !!
Drill bits can be sharpened !!
They will overheat and break if you try and push them through at high speed with no lubricant.Yes they can, but drilling into metal lintels they don't stay sharp for very long. Also, if after going through the lintel and you catch a brick above, it will blunt the bit straight away.
Yes they can. You need a grinding wheel with a fine grade stone in it. I can regrind a drill but it's a bit of a specialist skill.Drill bits can be sharpened !!
They will overheat and break if you try and push them through at high speed with no lubricant.
Similar issue recently with putting up a curtain pole except old house and real struggle getting rawlplugs gripping into old bricks and plaster. I dread fixing anything to our walls ?Donna had me putting up a blind this morning above a window. Can only fix the brackets above due to the position.
Sounding like the office boy I am, it must be a steel lintel as my masonry drill won‘t touch it.. I’ve got a bit box of my dads old drills I don’t actually know what a steel drill bit looks like.
Ive Googled it, and you’d have thought there’d be a visual comparison.
Any clues for duffers like me? I’ll have resort to embarrassing myself by asking next door!
Here's what I would do:Similar issue recently with putting up a curtain pole except old house and real struggle getting rawlplugs gripping into old bricks and plaster. I dread fixing anything to our walls ?
Apart from me having the hammer action on from word go this what I found myself doing…worked for most but a couple maybe hit the mortar. I can see how having the hammer action through the plaster caused the problem since as soon as the bit hit the brick, the resistance meant that I could not hold the drill steady and a wide hole resulted. Anyway good to know that by luck I did the right thing and havent missed the obvious ?Here's what I would do:
No. 8 sds drill bit, you can buy longer ones. Start drilling, without hammer action on, when you get to brick, hammer on and drill to about 3-4inches deep. Here's the important bit, tap plug all the way in, use a 2 1/2 "- 3" no. 8 screw and you should get a good tight fixing.
Doing it this way you avoid brittle crumbling plaster.