Jump to content
SAU Community

Any Tips For Drilling A 1mm Hole In A Grubscrew?


Recommended Posts

As the title says, anyone got any tips for drilling a 1mm hole through a grubscrew? The only grubscrews I can find are hardened and are bloody tough to drill through - using a 1mm drill isn't helping, just keep snapping them off.

I have made a tool that the grubscrew screws into wihch then slots into another piece on the benchdrill, so it is dead centre and not moving at all.

Have also tried heating them up and then chucking them in a bucket of water which made it a little easier, but still hard.

Any hints greatly appreciated.

Cheers

As the title says, anyone got any tips for drilling a 1mm hole through a grubscrew? The only grubscrews I can find are hardened and are bloody tough to drill through - using a 1mm drill isn't helping, just keep snapping them off.

I have made a tool that the grubscrew screws into wihch then slots into another piece on the benchdrill, so it is dead centre and not moving at all.

Have also tried heating them up and then chucking them in a bucket of water which made it a little easier, but still hard.

Any hints greatly appreciated.

Cheers

maybe alternate between heating the little bugger, then drill till it cools, and repeat ??? maybe

how are you heating them?? gas Axe or blowtorch? white hot or just hot

why btw?

-Drilling and tapping a thread into a nipple that screws into a hydraulic cylinder, the grubscrew screws into the nipple and acts as a restrictor for the oil flow so that the ram doesn't open to quickly.

-Using a drill press but still breaking a shitload of drills.

most likely be a high tensile steel, which is a flamin mongrel to drill or cut. try find a 1mm high speed bit made by sutton or p&n, should go through it easy enough. and make sure your drill bit is installed in the chuck properly. make sure its clamped on the smooth surface. rookie error seen many a bits snap incorrectly installed in the chuck.

-Drilling and tapping a thread into a nipple that screws into a hydraulic cylinder, the grubscrew screws into the nipple and acts as a restrictor for the oil flow so that the ram doesn't open to quickly.

-Using a drill press but still breaking a shitload of drills.

Hi there, most quality cylinders have speed restrictors built in. Maybe source around for one that is more applicable for your purpose, (Suppliers/users like SMC, Pirtek, Fluidline etc.,) else get some titanium drill bits, a variable speed drill/lathe whatever that has minimal head/chuck slack & use that really nasty green stuff.....Trafelex as your cutting lube. Else stick a few plugs of base nipple thread size in an envelope & take to your local machine shop, along with your preferred final drill size.

Or; get yourself a couple of Whitey/Hoke needle valves & pipe them into the "extend/retract" hyd lines running to the cylinder, if your application allows the luxury of course.

Cheers GW

Hi there, most quality cylinders have speed restrictors built in. Maybe source around for one that is more applicable for your purpose, (Suppliers/users like SMC, Pirtek, Fluidline etc.,) else get some titanium drill bits, a variable speed drill/lathe whatever that has minimal head/chuck slack & use that really nasty green stuff.....Trafelex as your cutting lube. Else stick a few plugs of base nipple thread size in an envelope & take to your local machine shop, along with your preferred final drill size.

Or; get yourself a couple of Whitey/Hoke needle valves & pipe them into the "extend/retract" hyd lines running to the cylinder, if your application allows the luxury of course.

Cheers GW

-thanks for that, we use Vickers and Southcott cylinders have never seen them with a speed restrictor built in. Do you mean built into the nipple that screws into the inlet and outlet ports of the cylinder?

All our rams turn up with a female thread with a plastic plug in it. We screw a C3-0909 nipple into them and it is this nipple that we are tapping an internal thread into that a 3/8" grubscrew screws into. Don't want to use a needle valve as I want it to be 'set and forget' and not give clients the option of adjusting the extend/retract speed, with the internal grubscrew no-one will know it's there so won't be likely to fiddle with it.

I'll try a titanium drill tomorrow and try and grab some of that lube. Using Rocol at the moment which is generally pretty good.

Just a thought. i dont know what size your grub screw is but what about something like a jet from a holley carby with a small jet size.. do you know what i mean ?

Yeah, know exactly what you mean. Have been thinking of trying something similar. Only problem is the thread size is 3/8" so the carby jet won't do. Grubscrew is the best I can think of. Also has to be able to be screwed in with an allen key.

-thanks for that, we use Vickers and Southcott cylinders have never seen them with a speed restrictor built in. Do you mean built into the nipple that screws into the inlet and outlet ports of the cylinder?

All our rams turn up with a female thread with a plastic plug in it. We screw a C3-0909 nipple into them and it is this nipple that we are tapping an internal thread into that a 3/8" grubscrew screws into. Don't want to use a needle valve as I want it to be 'set and forget' and not give clients the option of adjusting the extend/retract speed, with the internal grubscrew no-one will know it's there so won't be likely to fiddle with it.

I'll try a titanium drill tomorrow and try and grab some of that lube. Using Rocol at the moment which is generally pretty good.

Rocol cutting oil should be satisfactory, I like that stuff, had good results. I only mentioned the green stuff as that is the meanest gear I have used, it allowed me to drill through rig drill rods ~ very hard material, (with ordinary high speed drills). Just need to find optimum drill speed with drill of either drill material/cutting fluid that will hack it.

Cylinder with the restrictors I refer to are not "set & forget" as the restrictors are readily accessible, installed in the "end blocks", adjacent drive-pipe port entry for ext/ret. Need screwdriver/allen key to adjust but still not "tamper-proof". Maybe your cylinder of choice is mostly used in applications where rate control is by external proportional speed valves? Dunno.

Cheers GW

depending on how long the grub screw is, drill into it with a 1/8 drill leaving approx. 2mm to go then use 1mm drill for the remainder. the 1/8 drill is used purely because it is stronger. rocol or trefalex will do. my 2 cents.

water jet? if you get can get somone to do such a small job. I've had parts cut to .75mm tolerance...

OR

Manufacure your own sloted set screw from mild steel. If its a hydralic application, mild should last a long time.

Justin

  • 3 weeks later...
does it have to be 1mm all the way through? if not ideally you'd start with a short starter drill or at least something bigger and stiffer. after you start should be much easier to drill the rest.

anneal the steel grub screw by heating it to cherry red and allowing to cool naturally,use the fastest speed on the drill,unfortunately to stop the bit from breaking you have to use momentum,lots of cutting fluid because the speed generates heat and blunts the bit

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • So stock ECU does not like anything above 10 psi?  That Nistune one is just for "try" if it will be any different, I know it need to be tune for that. I know but YOU may know about these problem but i/we dont. They few little Skylines here let alone people who know anything about tham so that is why iam asking here  
    • So now we have a radiator with no attachments whatsoever. It lifts up with a particularly tight spot between the drivers side air box mount and the lower radiator outlet, but if you've got this far you will sort that too. This is the lower mounts with the rad out so you can see where the rubber bushes go, it is a straight shot upwards Done! Assembly is the reverse of disassembly, with blood less likely to be shed.
    • Right, onto the second last trick. The Air Con condenser is mounted to the front of the radiator and stays in the car when the radiator is removed. There are 2x 10mm headed self tappers holding the top of the condenser to the radiator, remove those The bottom of the condenser is attached to the radiator with clips. You need to lift the condenser out of those clips and clear (up, then forward). f**ked if  could work out how to do that last bit with the front bumper on. I hope you can, and you share the trick.  Bumper removal probably deserves its own thread one day once I've recovered the will to live, but basically you need to remove the wheels, front inner guard liners (clips and 10mm headed bolts), the self tapper between the guard and the bumper at the rearmost point of the bumper (same as an R32 that bit), any remaining clips at the top/front of the grill, an absolute bastard design with a plate that holds the top of the bumper above the headlight each side (only 1 bolt which is tricky to get to, but the plate catches 2 places on the bumper and must be removed....carefully!) and push clips between the bumper and guard under the headlight. If you've done all that you will be faced with wiring for the fog lights on both sides and in ADM Q50 RS at least, 4 nasty tight plugs on the driver's side for the ADAS stuff. So, the clips at the bottom look like this on drivers side (looking from the front) And on the passenger side (also from the front), you can see this one is already out Clearance on both of these are super tight; the condenser needs to move up but the upper rad support mount prevents that, and the radiator can't move down far because it is (rubber) mounted. Once you achieve the impossible and drop the condenser off those mounts so it does not stop the rad moving, you are good to go
    • OK, next the shroud needs to come off and there are a couple of tricks. Firstly, there is a loom from near the passenger side headlight to the fans, coolant temp sensor etc and there is no plug to undo.  In my case I was OK to leave the shroud on top of the engine so I just undid the passenger side fan plug and about 10 of the clips which gave enough free wire to put it aside. The fan plugs were super tight, the trick I used was a small falt screwdriver to push down on the release tab, then a larger flat screwdriver to lever the plug out of the fan unit....be careful with how much force you apply! If you need to remove the shroud altogether for some reason you will have to deal with all the plugs (tight) and clips (brittle)....good luck. I removed all of the clips and replaced them with cable ties that I will just cut next time. Also, in the Red Sport / 400R at least, the intake heat exchanger reservoir hose is bolted to the shroud in 2 places with 10mm headed bolts; so remove them (the hose stays in the car; no need to undo it at the t fittings down at the radiator lower mount. Once you've dealt with the HX hose and the wiring loom, there are 3x 10mm headed self tappers holding the top of the shroud to the radiator; remove those.   The shroud then lifts out of the bottom mounts where it sits on the radiator, up and onto the engine out of the way. Simples
    • Ok, disregard my “rate them” comment, sorry for my unrealistic input
×
×
  • Create New...