Why is spotting important before a hole is drilled?

Everyone has spot drilled at some point to start a hole. For a tight-tolerance hole, spotting is required to prevent the secondary drill from walking (the amount the tool deflects from a straight path). Spot drilling creates a location for the secondary drill to enter, acting as a guide.
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What is the purpose of spotting a hole before drilling?

A Spotting Drill's purpose is to create a small divot to correctly locate the center of a drill when initiating a plunge. However, some machinists choose to use these tools for a different reason – using it to chamfer the top of drilled holes. By leaving a chamfer, screw heads sit flush with the part once inserted.
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What is a spotting drill?

Spotting drill bits are used to start holes and accurately locate them. They create a shallow hole that helps prevent drill bits from walking, or moving, when starting to drill.
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Do I need to spot drill?

Is a spot drill necessary every time an accurate hole is to be drilled? It's purpose is to ensure the hole is accurately located. The short spot drill is very rigid, and the spotting motion is unlikely to deflect. However, if you use a carbide drill, or a screw machine length drill, spotting is typically not needed.
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How much should I spot for a drill?

You simply divide the diameter of the spot-drilled hole. If you have drilled a 0.25" diameter hole and want a 0.031" chamfer on the hole, the diameter to be spot drilled will be 0.312". The spot-drill depth, 0.156" is half of this.
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Centre Drill vs Spotting Drill



How do you know where a hole is drilled?

The narrower the spot angle, the more near the outside diameter of the twist drill first contact will be. If the twist drill's flutes aren't perfectly sharpened, one will contact the spot hole before the other and the drill will try to deflect.
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Can you drill a hole with a spot drill?

Spot drills are used to improve the accuracy of secondary drill operations but they can be used as a chamfering tool if the spot drill diameter is larger than the final hole size. Ideally, the spot drill diameter should be about 70% of the size of your final drill diameter.
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How deep should a spotting hole be drilled?

A long drill can deflect when it initially contacts a flat surface, making spot drilling necessary. Some drill makers agree that for holes more than 5 diameters deep, spotting is needed. Others say that threshold is 7 or 8 diameters deep or more.
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What is spot facing operation?

Spot facing is a mechanical drilling, or milling, process. After the initial hole is drilled, a larger well, or recess, is drilled into the material. The head of the screw or nail fits into this well. This allows the nail or screw to sit flush with the surface of the item that is drilled.
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What is the process of drilling?

Drilling is a cutting process that uses a drill bit to cut a hole of circular cross-section in solid materials. The drill bit is usually a rotary cutting tool, often multi-point. The bit is pressed against the work-piece and rotated at rates from hundreds to thousands of revolutions per minute.
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What is the difference between a spot drill and a center drill?

A spot drill does much the same as a center drill, but there are two differences. One is that the spot drill is thinner and does not have the conical ends that the center drill does. The second difference is it's accuracy. The spot drill tends to be more precise in drilling a starting point.
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What is a spot weld drill bit?

Spot-weld drill bits are used in handheld drills to drill out a spot weld that is holding two or more thin sheets of metal together. They are commonly used to separate spot-welded auto body panels without damaging the bottom panel.
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How do you find the angle of a drill?

The Drill Point Angle in for given Length Of Approach is a method to determine the angle made by the two major cutting edges of a drill bit at its head when the perpendicular height of the tip-cone is known is calculated using Drill Point Angle = atan(0.5*Diameter of drill bit/Length of Approach).
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What are the advantages of using spot facing operation?

Automatic back spotfacing enhances the machine/operator safety by automating manufacturing processes and eliminating a manual interface with the operator using a manual back spotface tool. The automatic process is also faster, which reduces machining time and improves profitability on the machining process.
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What is the difference between spot facing and Counterboring?

The difference between counterboring and spotfacing is that a counterbored surface usually has a shoulder at the bottom of the enlarged hole, while a spotfaced surface is flat and always at right angles with the axis of the hole.
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How deep is a spot face?

Spotface – The cutting of a shallow counterbore, usually about . 0625 deep (depth symbol is omitted). A spotface provides an accurate bearing surface for the underside of a bolt head.
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What happens when you drill too deep with a center drill?

The size of the center hole can be selected by the center drill size and then regulated to some extent by the depth of drilling. You must be careful not to drill too deeply (Figure I-174), as this causes the center to contact only the sharp outer edge of the hole, which is a poor bearing surface.
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What is the rpm formula for drilling?

R.P.M. = (3.8197 / Drill Diameter) x S.F.M.
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What do you use a reamer for?

reamer, rotary cutting tool of cylindrical or conical shape used for enlarging and finishing to accurate dimensions holes that have been drilled, bored, or cored. A reamer cannot be used to originate a hole.
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