Pro tip- Use a ridiculous amount of oil when using annular bits. The drills Ive seen have a reservoir to drip it in. The pin in the bit releases the oil. Its the difference of using the bit 2 times or 50 times. Also, I literally screamed NO when you mentioned sand paper. But I didnt know about the chuck adaptor, so I gleaned a bit of of info anyway.
@@3dservicesllc it came with a coolant feed bottle. I don't use it. Just gets in the way and makes a mess. I just use a couple drips of thread cutting fluid. Unless I am drilling a 1" Plus plate. Also have a coolant paste that works well. Never had any problems with bits dying too early on me. Thanks for the tip tho. Definitely won't do the sandpaper. 🤣
Can you measure the shank size of the Vevlor cutters and see if they are 3/4" like the Hougen cutters are? The design is the same, I wonder if they are interchangeable.
The chuck is know as a "Morris taper". It really holds better if you seat it down using a block of hardwood.
@@jamessowards3822 I figured that out about halfway through the plates I needed to drill. Lol
The usual cutter is called an "annular cutter".
Pro tip- Use a ridiculous amount of oil when using annular bits. The drills Ive seen have a reservoir to drip it in. The pin in the bit releases the oil. Its the difference of using the bit 2 times or 50 times. Also, I literally screamed NO when you mentioned sand paper. But I didnt know about the chuck adaptor, so I gleaned a bit of of info anyway.
@@3dservicesllc it came with a coolant feed bottle. I don't use it. Just gets in the way and makes a mess. I just use a couple drips of thread cutting fluid. Unless I am drilling a 1" Plus plate. Also have a coolant paste that works well. Never had any problems with bits dying too early on me. Thanks for the tip tho. Definitely won't do the sandpaper. 🤣
Can you measure the shank size of the Vevlor cutters and see if they are 3/4" like the Hougen cutters are? The design is the same, I wonder if they are interchangeable.
@@jamessowards3822 the bits it came with are 3/4" maybe a hair smaller. I'll check it with a bit tomorrow.