Looking for a micro drill set

Looking for a micro drill set

Author
Discussion

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

88,837 posts

279 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
quotequote all
I need to drill some accurate holes in the 0.4 - 0.6mm range.

I've tried these ones and find they're dreadful - even with the utmost care they just snap after a few holes, sometimes on the first hole: https://www.amazon.co.uk/sourcing-map-0-1mm-1mm-Tu...

These ones proved much better but don't stay sharp very long and I'm not sure the sizes are accurate: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Amtech-F0930-0-3-Micro-Dr...

Does anyone make higher quality micro drills? I found Dormer but the price is stupendous! https://www.arceurotrade.co.uk/Catalogue/Cutting-T...

dudleybloke

20,553 posts

200 months

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

88,837 posts

279 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
quotequote all
dudleybloke said:
Blimey. lots of stuff there! Thanks; will have to spend some time on that tomorrow.

Zad

12,850 posts

250 months

Monday 2nd December 2024
quotequote all
Search Ebay etc for PCB drills (similar to yours). The ones to look for are re-sharpened industrial drills that have fail the minimum-length test in their CNC and been refurbed for sale. They are usually pretty decent for home use. They go down to 0.1mm diameter or so - I can imagine how long they don't last in a Dremel...

I guess industrial ones may be harder and more brittle though?

ETA: Look for the shorter drills, they should be less prone to breakage.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

88,837 posts

279 months

Monday 2nd December 2024
quotequote all
Zad said:
Search Ebay etc for PCB drills (similar to yours). The ones to look for are re-sharpened industrial drills that have fail the minimum-length test in their CNC and been refurbed for sale. They are usually pretty decent for home use. They go down to 0.1mm diameter or so - I can imagine how long they don't last in a Dremel...

I guess industrial ones may be harder and more brittle though?

ETA: Look for the shorter drills, they should be less prone to breakage.
Thanks. In this case I'm using a Proxxon mill drill for precision and being super careful and slow - but the ones with the coloured bands still go ping after 0-5 uses. I think the metal is too cut away, ie the spirals are too deep.

tr7v8

7,414 posts

242 months

Monday 2nd December 2024
quotequote all
I use this one for R/c modelling. Mostly wood.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Precision-Delicate-Electr...

tr7v8

7,414 posts

242 months

Monday 2nd December 2024
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
Zad said:
Search Ebay etc for PCB drills (similar to yours). The ones to look for are re-sharpened industrial drills that have fail the minimum-length test in their CNC and been refurbed for sale. They are usually pretty decent for home use. They go down to 0.1mm diameter or so - I can imagine how long they don't last in a Dremel...

I guess industrial ones may be harder and more brittle though?

ETA: Look for the shorter drills, they should be less prone to breakage.
Thanks. In this case I'm using a Proxxon mill drill for precision and being super careful and slow - but the ones with the coloured bands still go ping after 0-5 uses. I think the metal is too cut away, ie the spirals are too deep.
That's what you're doing wrong. Small drills need high speed & careful support. e.g. clamped workpiece.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

88,837 posts

279 months

Tuesday 3rd December 2024
quotequote all
tr7v8 said:
That's what you're doing wrong. Small drills need high speed & careful support. e.g. clamped workpiece.
The workpiece is clamped and the drill is in a stand. It couldn't be more precise or controlled. By 'slow' I meant lowering the drill very slowly towards the work. I used a moderate speed thinking that a high speed would put more stress on the bit.

I'm drilling (trying to drill) through thin brass strip into wood

dom9

8,364 posts

223 months

Friday 6th December 2024
quotequote all
Good thread!

I have been looking for some micro drill bits in the 2mm range for holes in 316L.

Hoping to push fit a 2mm dowel into a 1.98/99 hole, for a friction fit.

Thinking that should work and 1.95mm (hole) will be too small/hard.

Whitefly Swatter

1,127 posts

213 months

Friday 6th December 2024
quotequote all
try these guys
https://www.cousinsuk.com/
watchmaking stuff

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

88,837 posts

279 months

Saturday 7th December 2024
quotequote all
Whitefly Swatter said:
try these guys
https://www.cousinsuk.com/
watchmaking stuff
That's a great site, many thanks.

I like Dormer drills so went for those first - then remembered that my chuck doesn't grip really tiny drills so I went for these ones instead (and half the price): https://www.cousinsuk.com/product/jewellery-drills


I did order a set of cheap drills from Amazon (the kind in the flat red box) but none of the ones I tried would drill a hole, and some skated. On close examination they were all broken!

hidetheelephants

29,930 posts

207 months

Sunday 8th December 2024
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
tr7v8 said:
That's what you're doing wrong. Small drills need high speed & careful support. e.g. clamped workpiece.
The workpiece is clamped and the drill is in a stand. It couldn't be more precise or controlled. By 'slow' I meant lowering the drill very slowly towards the work. I used a moderate speed thinking that a high speed would put more stress on the bit.

I'm drilling (trying to drill) through thin brass strip into wood
The right speed is very important in order to reduce the stress on the drill; having the wrong speed increases it. For a 0.5mm drill into brass the 'correct speed' is in the region of 30,000RPM, so unless you have quite specialist equipment you need to have them spinning at whatever your machine's maximum speed is. It's worth experimenting with a lubricant to see if that helps.

dom9 said:
Good thread!

I have been looking for some micro drill bits in the 2mm range for holes in 316L.

Hoping to push fit a 2mm dowel into a 1.98/99 hole, for a friction fit.

Thinking that should work and 1.95mm (hole) will be too small/hard.
You're not likely to get that level of precision from a twist drill, even a reamer will be doing well without some trial and error. What is the dowel doing? Could it be replaced with a spring pin or similar to reduce the need for a precise size/fit?

Edited by hidetheelephants on Sunday 8th December 10:24

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

88,837 posts

279 months

Sunday 8th December 2024
quotequote all
hidetheelephants said:
The right speed is very important in order to reduce the stress on the drill; having the wrong speed increases it. For a 0.5mm drill into brass the 'correct speed' is in the region of 30,000RPM, so unless you have quite specialist equipment you need to have them spinning at whatever your machine's maximum speed is. It's worth experimenting with a lubricant to see if that helps.
That makes sense because the diameter of the drill is very small so the speed of the cutting edge is lower for any given rpm.

Mine only goes to 6,000 rpm but the brass is only 0.4mm thick so it hasn't got far to go.

https://www.proxxon.com/en/micromot/20165.php

I have a Minicraft drill that claims 30,000 rpm but I need the accuracy of a stand, and I don't have one for it.

hidetheelephants

29,930 posts

207 months

Sunday 8th December 2024
quotequote all
Your work bench isn't a production environment, so just doing your best with the gear you've got is fine; as you've found drill bits that small are a pain in the bum. Increase the speed to 6k and try adding a bit of lubricant.

Geoff391

177 posts

72 months

Sunday 8th December 2024
quotequote all
Another possible supplier , lots of options if you scroll down

https://innocraftsman.com/products/mini-drill-bit-...

Tim O

613 posts

183 months

Sunday 8th December 2024
quotequote all
In a previous life when I worked in the precision machining industry my first port of call for any ‘small’ tooling was Drill Services. Huge range of drills, reamers, burrs, etc. etc.

https://www.drill-service.co.uk/products/drills/mi...


PS you want the highest speed you can get and a very, very fine controlled feed, something much more easily achieved on a machine tool. I don’t think the human hand is able to control feed rate of a 0.1mm dia drill without a very high failure rate.


Edited by Tim O on Sunday 8th December 18:16