Have you tried any of the new 12v drills they are really small and lend themselves well to fine wood working, or other fine work. The new Milwaukee installation drill pretty much replaces a pneumatic palm drill in terms of feel and size, and the d handle is much more natural feeling than the y handle which is common on cordless drills. Great video on countersinks though man. I wouldn’t not have thought the carbide router bite looking ones would be any good.
I enjoyed watching this video. I subscribed to your channel a few months ago. I really liked your video where you converted your contractor table saw into a cabinet table saw. I noticed that you mentioned that the countersink bits you purchased didn’t come with stop collars. Not sure if you have a Woodcraft store near you or not, but they carry stop collars made by Milescraft and also a set made by Woodriver if I am not mistaken. I noticed that Amazon also has the Milescraft brand and some by another company which are metric sized. Just thought I would share this information with you.
my Opinion Fuller makes the best Countersink for the Money i hav some i used everyday for more than35 years installing Architectual Woodwrking and CommercialGrade Cabnrtry Fuller does make HSS and Carbide Tipped versions and i personally like the HSS ones best for Woodworking BTW i dress the cutting edges up with a inexpensive set of Jewlers Files i bought either off Ebay or Harbor Freight years ago it’s just a Made InChina Set i keep in my main Toolbox just for that purpose i lao made a smallWoodenJig that holds my Countersinks and gives me a Guide to keep the same angle they come with fromBrand New i’ve mounted those Jigs on the Tops of several of my ToolChests
I have been wondering about an efficient way to sharpen them. Installing cabinets with melamine boxes they go dull so quickly. So you just built a jig that holds the jewelers files at the correct angle and can just spin the bit in reverse to sharpen the countersink?
I work with metal and countersink daily. This was interesting, as I know virtually nothing about woodworking.
thanks, about the most sure thing I can tell you is wood is softer. lol, thanks for watching
Have you tried any of the new 12v drills they are really small and lend themselves well to fine wood working, or other fine work. The new Milwaukee installation drill pretty much replaces a pneumatic palm drill in terms of feel and size, and the d handle is much more natural feeling than the y handle which is common on cordless drills. Great video on countersinks though man. I wouldn’t not have thought the carbide router bite looking ones would be any good.
I was surprised how well they worked, giving the price
Nice review, I was looking into these. I decided on the Bosch set. Liked and subscribed!
Thanks for the sub!
I enjoyed watching this video. I subscribed to your channel a few months ago. I really liked your video where you converted your contractor table saw into a cabinet table saw. I noticed that you mentioned that the countersink bits you purchased didn’t come with stop collars. Not sure if you have a Woodcraft store near you or not, but they carry stop collars made by Milescraft and also a set made by Woodriver if I am not mistaken. I noticed that Amazon also has the Milescraft brand and some by another company which are metric sized. Just thought I would share this information with you.
Thanks Charles
Is that pine your working on? How does it work with different types of hardwood.
I used on pine and hickory today and both worked great
my Opinion Fuller makes the best Countersink for the Money i hav some i used everyday for more than35 years installing Architectual Woodwrking and CommercialGrade Cabnrtry Fuller does make HSS and Carbide Tipped versions and i personally like the HSS ones best for Woodworking BTW i dress the cutting edges up with a inexpensive set of Jewlers Files i bought either off Ebay or Harbor Freight years ago it’s just a Made InChina Set i keep in my main Toolbox just for that purpose i lao made a smallWoodenJig that holds my Countersinks and gives me a Guide to keep the same angle they come with fromBrand New i’ve mounted those Jigs on the Tops of several of my ToolChests
Goo to know
I have been wondering about an efficient way to sharpen them. Installing cabinets with melamine boxes they go dull so quickly. So you just built a jig that holds the jewelers files at the correct angle and can just spin the bit in reverse to sharpen the countersink?