Deep-hole drilling is among the most challenging of all metalworking operations, plagued by inadequate coolant flow, chip packing, drill walk and other problems that can challenge even the most skilled machinist.
Unfortunately, the mechanical world is replete with parts requiring such holes. Hydraulic cylinders and manifolds, aircraft landing gear, automotive fuel injectors, gun barrels and plastic injection molds are just a sampling of the everyday components that depend on a machinist’s ability to solve the deep-hole drilling riddle.
Depth vs. Diameter
The definition varies, but most industry experts suggest that any hole more than 10 diameters deep (10xD) requires a specialty drill designed for such work and, quite possibly, a complete change in holemaking strategy.
Options include the time-honored technique of gun drilling, invented more than two centuries ago for improving the accuracy of gun and cannon barrels; BTA or single-tube drilling (BTA is an acronym for its inventor, the Boring and Trepanning Association); ejector, also known as double-tube system (DTS) drilling; trepanning for humongous holes; and abrasive jet drilling for smaller holes in very hard materials.
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Each of these are mature, well-known drilling technologies, some of which can punch holes the size of a Sunday ham several hundred diameters deep, and all of them able to produce straight, round and smooth holes in the most common workpiece materials.
There’s just one problem: Unless your shop does a lot of deep-hole drilling and has invested in one of these dedicated systems, you’re stuck with sending parts out to a shop specializing in such work.
And even for those who already own the necessary equipment, drilling said holes requires a secondary operation, driving up part costs and increasing lead time.
Gaining on Gun Drills
While the lion’s share of deep-holes have long been produced using gun drills and the dedicated machinery just mentioned, that paradigm is beginning to shift in favor of solid carbide extended-length drills, says Frank Martin, the product manager for solid carbide drills at Kennametal.
“In the smaller diameters, gun drilling has historically been a favored process” despite its drawbacks, he says. “It requires a special machine with a series of bushings to guide the drill. And since the tool itself has only a single cutting edge, gun drilling also takes a long time.”
The landscape started to change around two decades ago, when Kennametal and other cutting tool manufacturers began producing coolant-fed, solid carbide drills in extremely long lengths.
Add to that the growing number of CNC machining centers equipped with high-pressure, through-the-spindle coolant and many machine shops have found themselves able to skip the trip to their gun-drilling subcontractor.
Pros and Cons
Drilling with these ultra-long tools presents its own challenges, however. As anyone who’s shopped for solid carbide drills knows, they’re significantly more expensive than their high-speed steel (HSS) and cobalt counterparts and the longer the drill, the higher the price tag.
Because of this, steps should be taken to avoid breakage and ensure that the drill produces the highest hole quality possible, which begins with drilling a pilot hole.
Kennametal’s approach is using a pilot drill of the same diameter as the deep-hole drill, but with a slightly larger H-value.
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