like the content!. only thing on the drilling threw the stone.. Loved the plumbers putty idea.. its important to let that pool of water enter the hole well drilling.. (raise the bit and let the water enter hole, cool the stone that has been cored. you can have all that water pooled at the surface but it is doing very little to assist you on your drilling.
I am clearing a property and have to remove large granite boulders from the ground by drilling a series of holes in the rock and splitting them using a wedge and feather tool. I particularly like your idea of using plumbers putty and making a water pool.
I just drilled a hole in a large rock to act as the base to a floor lamp. The putty dam was a great idea. However, it left a stain/residue that stayed on the rock. Have you ever experienced this? If so, how did you remove it?
This is how you do a tutorial. Majority of UA-camrs spend 10 minutes asking you subscribe, what they are doing, why they are doing, blah blah blah. Just show me what the title says.
Thanks! I'm looking to make rock sculptures where they are stacked, so I was thinking holes big enough to fit rebar. But might be more drill bits than I can afford!
what would u use to drill a huge hole like if you want to make a tunnel underground and you be drilling in to rock not sure what kind of rock it is but it is kinda yellow like color maybe it is sandstone do not know it also could be limestone
I've saved myself a ton of cleanup (and avoided the ire of my fellow makerspace members) by cutting a 2' x 2' sheet of paper/poly dropcloth and putting it under the stone to absorb the water runoff.
Hey quick question! Can rocks have natural almost perfectly round holes on them? There’s this missing guy named Kenny Veach any knowledge would help on abt rocks.
Umm. Strange answer. I have a rock from Sedona- it’s 330 million years old- some guy gave it to me in a shape of a heart - I wanted to make it into a pendant.
@@katyaloban1870 Sorry, I thought you were joking :) I'm sure any local jeweller will be able to drill a small hole in your pendant. Thanks for checking out my channel.
thanks for the correction. I was informed at the masonry supplier that the water helps keep the bit cool and makes it last longer. Is the water more as a lubricant? I'm by no means an expert and will add an annotation to the video if I gather new information that will help other people with this type project.
Well i am just an engineering student, nothing fancy, but generally unless you try to cut something with it that can be alloyed with carbon (like alloys of iron) diamond will not be damaged below 700°C at which pint it can ignite in air. Without air its even less of an issue as it can take more than 1500°C in the absence of oxygen. (Of course different materials have differing needs for cooling, as steel drillbits can anneal themselves pretty easily, while wolfram carbide has less problems with extreme workloads) English is not my native language, so there can be some errors in my post :/
+Drawbridge Entertainment The purpose of the water is mainly to lubricate the non-cutting portion of the drill bit, but it also cools the edge and wash out all of the small pieces. Without the water, you will end up sanding down the bit. I personally prefer to use motor oil (though I work with metal, not stone, so I'm not sure if that makes the difference).
Cave man nets. I build them for the show "Alpha" which comes out later this summer. (sorry about the bad audio - i have improved it for my newer videos)
Love this channel
Elegant, excellent, to-the-point. The putty "dam" is an old trick but absolutely essential. I've done this to drill drain holes in ceramic pots.
like the content!. only thing on the drilling threw the stone.. Loved the plumbers putty idea.. its important to let that pool of water enter the hole well drilling.. (raise the bit and let the water enter hole, cool the stone that has been cored. you can have all that water pooled at the surface but it is doing very little to assist you on your drilling.
That is one wobbly drill bit.
I am clearing a property and have to remove large granite boulders from the ground by drilling a series of holes in the rock and splitting them using a wedge and feather tool. I particularly like your idea of using plumbers putty and making a water pool.
Thank you for showing how to do this quick and basic !!
Excellent video, i made it putting a stone inside a water bowl and works like a charm! Easy climbing holds made of rocks :D
great idea with the plumbers putty thank you for the info
You’re welcome!
I just drilled a hole in a large rock to act as the base to a floor lamp. The putty dam was a great idea. However, it left a stain/residue that stayed on the rock. Have you ever experienced this? If so, how did you remove it?
Fantastic tutorial, always had a faint wanting to try this for some reason, now I have to justification. thank you.
Well done - thank you!
Glad you liked it.
Awesome video!! Right to the point.
This is how you do a tutorial. Majority of UA-camrs spend 10 minutes asking you subscribe, what they are doing, why they are doing, blah blah blah. Just show me what the title says.
Right. Did anyone ever subscribe or like something simply because he was asked to? Not me...
Cool.
I would like to know if you make a home half way through?
Thanks! I'm looking to make rock sculptures where they are stacked, so I was thinking holes big enough to fit rebar. But might be more drill bits than I can afford!
can use with hollow saw?
very nice and efficient, but if you want to use a rock as a cabinet handle, you need to go halfway through, how we can do it please?
Just drill half way.
@@DrawbridgeProps but if you're using a core drill bit it won't work halfway.
what would u use to drill a huge hole like if you want to make a tunnel underground and you be drilling in to rock not sure what kind of rock it is but it is kinda yellow like color maybe it is sandstone do not know it also could be limestone
Shovel???
neato! Good videos. Thank you so much. I never knew about making the putty dam. :-)
it seems the bits you use are different than the ones in the link.
How did they do this at puma punka a ancient site thousands of years old can this perfect precision be done with hand tools ?
I've saved myself a ton of cleanup (and avoided the ire of my fellow makerspace members) by cutting a 2' x 2' sheet of paper/poly dropcloth and putting it under the stone to absorb the water runoff.
Great video.
How did they do this back before we had drills and diamond grinders?
+Matthijs de Rijk they used other sharp rocks attached to sticks to made crude drills.
What RPM speed?
:)
really smart!
Where's the hole? I thought you were going to show how to achieve the diameter needed at end stage with one pass. Did I miss something?
What drill press do you have?
Hey quick question! Can rocks have natural almost perfectly round holes on them? There’s this missing guy named Kenny Veach any knowledge would help on abt rocks.
Yes all over the coast. I have many rocks with tons of perfectly shaped holes on them
All natural holes
Hi, I need a hole in the rock, where are you located?
Haha
Umm. Strange answer. I have a rock from Sedona- it’s 330 million years old- some guy gave it to me in a shape of a heart - I wanted to make it into a pendant.
@@katyaloban1870 Sorry, I thought you were joking :) I'm sure any local jeweller will be able to drill a small hole in your pendant. Thanks for checking out my channel.
Will this work with masonry drill bits?
I tried with my cheap masonry bits and was splitting the rocks I was trying to drill.
Good to know, thanks!
water will boil (and steam) before the diamond drillbit will have problems just sayin
thanks for the correction. I was informed at the masonry supplier that the water helps keep the bit cool and makes it last longer. Is the water more as a lubricant? I'm by no means an expert and will add an annotation to the video if I gather new information that will help other people with this type project.
Well i am just an engineering student, nothing fancy, but generally unless you try to cut something with it that can be alloyed with carbon (like alloys of iron) diamond will not be damaged below 700°C at which pint it can ignite in air.
Without air its even less of an issue as it can take more than 1500°C in the absence of oxygen.
(Of course different materials have differing needs for cooling, as steel drillbits can anneal themselves pretty easily, while wolfram carbide has less problems with extreme workloads)
English is not my native language, so there can be some errors in my post :/
+Drawbridge Entertainment The purpose of the water is mainly to lubricate the non-cutting portion of the drill bit, but it also cools the edge and wash out all of the small pieces. Without the water, you will end up sanding down the bit. I personally prefer to use motor oil (though I work with metal, not stone, so I'm not sure if that makes the difference).
also helps mitigate dust, which depending on the type of rock be quite hazardous to breath
What did you make with those rocks with holes?
+Loui Rudy they were weights for a couple of hunting nets made for a movie.
Drawbridge Entertainment
May i know which movie?
The Solutrean (2017)
How long did each hole take?
Under 2 minutes as far as I can recall
That gnarly ass thumb fingernail. D:
i got a rock. that I found at the beach. it has holes
Ally Has No Jams I’m gonna puke 🤮
Cave man style what? i can't hear what you are saying
Cave man nets. I build them for the show "Alpha" which comes out later this summer. (sorry about the bad audio - i have improved it for my newer videos)
crap i need diamond dremel bit
Well, now I know why everything Hollywood puts out is pure garbage.
Thanks:)
What RPM speed?
Bit based but around 1000