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rsser
15th December 2011, 01:59 PM
I was sceptical about the Colt Maxicut Forstner bits as posted in the original group buy thread. But having ordered a couple with the MT2 Rotastop adaptor and 150mm extension, Brett (FenceFurniture) told me to get off my backside and try them.

So to test one at a demanding task I used a dense and cranky grained lump of redgum mounted on the lathe and bored endgrain with a 35mm bit down to 220mm. 1000 RPM. Colt suggest a speed range from 750 to 3500 and normally I'd run that size bit at about 250 in hardwood. The speed range for the Rotastop and extension is 500 - 1400 RPM.

I started without the extension and got nice chips to maybe 50mm depth. Then added the extension and proceeded apace. The result soon turned to dust but with cleaning out repeatedly the cut continued fairly quickly to the final depth.

Upsides: even with the extension which is fairly spindly (10mm OD cp. 3/4" on my custom-made job) the bit tracked straight and continued boring without apparent drama. The Rotastop and extension couplings entail an eccentric shaft and so are self locking. My existing MT extension fixes the bit with a grub screw and when bits approaching 50mm are used, slippage happens.

Downsides:

1. This test produced a big wear bevel on the chipping edges. Sharpening was required.

2. To clear shavings or dust in this application you either retract the bit or blow them out or use a wooden chopstick 'scoop' with the piece spinning (yeah, sounds odd but it works and is my preferred method). The retraction option was tried before adding the extension and the jam lock of the coupling failed leaving the bit to rotate in the work piece. Perhaps with more vigorous winding back, opposite lock would kick in. Whatever; after that I used the chopstick and blowout methods.

3. Half the edge, at the trailing end, of the two teeth were blued. Hadn't checked this before starting but don't expect they were there. And looking with a 30 X mag. loupe on the unused bit, the chipping edges are on the ragged side and of course there's no bluing. I could've just been hamfisted given the ease of progress.

Final judgement waits on more use. Certainly this was a tough test.

(And when I talked with Brett about the performance he told me I'd ordered HC steel bits, not HSS as I'd assumed :doh:. Well, I dips me lid to Colt cos at that it was punching above its weight. This test would likely have had a better outcome with slower speed and feed rate).

Past experience is shallow and deep endgrain boring on the lathe with sawtooth HCS and HSS bits from wherever. And some testing of a C/tec TCT bit.

With silica-rich or dense timbers, I wouldn't go back to HCS bits. Easy enough to sharpen but need it often. Conventional HSS lasts better but can generate of lot of heat depending on other factors as well. TCT puts up a good fight but leaves a poor finish which is not a problem boring pepper grinders but is a drawback doing stuff like napkin rings.

One big variable is the lathe tailstock quality. Affects bit tracking and so heat generation. Minimal play is best obviously. With experience of four brands of lathe, the Vicmarc tops the list and was used here.

After sharpening the bit I tried a second test on English Elm, a timber within the expected scope of HCS. The bit kept cutting chips down to the end at 160 mm. Clearance of chips through the flutes was efficient. RPM of 500. The bit got very warm but not hot and developed wear bevels just visible to my reading-glass assisted eyes. The self-locking couplers seemed to have seated somewhat and held more firmly this time around; getting them apart took a bit of effort.

Sharpening

It was about half an hour's work with diamond paddles to get the bit back in condition after the first test, working the chipping edge tops and putting some effort into the flutes. Starting with a medium grit paddle and then fine and super-fine. The nice feature about the bit is that the top of the chipping edge is co-planar with the dropped section of the rim so good registration of the paddle is easy to get. The flute on the other hand obviously involves a lot of steel, and it's not all that easy to keep a paddle flat so I ended up settling for an adequate rather than a good result there.

I haven't touched up the 'wings' (the raised part of the rim). Leonard Lee's sharpening book shows a jig for doing this to maintain the bevel angle. I'll have a shot at doing the bevel with a bit in a Dremel, inking the bevel first.

The included bevel angle (chipper top to flute) is about 50 degrees.

Summary

The cutting and chip ejection are better than garden variety saw tooth bits. Sharpening is easier. The quality of the HC steel is impressive.

For deep boring I favour an MT mount over a Jacobs chuck as there's less play. The Rotastop MT2 and the extension work well.

Heat is the enemy of Forstner bits and they have to be kept sharp. Leonard Lee recommends keeping them free of resin and applying dry lubricant before use.

I've put in an order for several Colt MaxiCut plus HSS Forstners. A 35mm bit will be about double the price of the same size unit from Carba-tec and that's quite a premium so I'm only ordering the sizes that will get regular use.

The geometry of the HSS bits differs from the HCS jobs so sharpening the chipping edge may not be as easy. They also have a pilot drill instead of a brad centre and that will be a disadvantage where a relatively flat bore bottom is needed.

Many thanks to Brett.

NeilS
16th December 2011, 11:57 AM
Thanks Ern for the review. That's the same (main) use I intend for my Maxicuts and Rotostop extensions. Never having used them, I hadn't anticipated that the Rotostops might let go and leave the bit beyond reach. That would be a real PTA when deep boring, which I was planning on doing.

Did you reverse the lathe when retracting the bits?
.

Harry72
16th December 2011, 12:27 PM
Jeez Ern that review was a bit of a bore:)

good job bloke :D

rsser
16th December 2011, 12:35 PM
No Neil. That may encourage unlocking of the coupling.

After the 2nd test though I'm more confident of the holding power of the system.

rsser
16th December 2011, 12:36 PM
Boom tish Harry ;-}

Jim Carroll
16th December 2011, 12:54 PM
Ern how would they have gone at the more sedate speed of say 250-300rpm which is where I would normally run any forstner bit.

The speeds colt recommended generally would generate more heat and burn the cut more than allow the cutter to work properly.

This is probably where you are getting your blueing from overheating more than abrasiveness of the timber. This in turn gives you the blunt edge so no more shavings but chips.

Tim the Timber Turner
16th December 2011, 01:13 PM
I agree with Jim.

Much too fast for a bit of that size, regardless of what maxicut say.

I have used my maxicut bits in redgum to 150mm without any sign of burning.

They would be no value to me if I had to spend 1/2 hour sharpening one after drilling only one hole.

Cheers

Tim:)

FenceFurniture
16th December 2011, 01:19 PM
Jim, in the light of Ern's findings, do you think a one letter change to the thread title is in order?

rsser
16th December 2011, 01:30 PM
Jim and Tim, yes, you're quite right and pondering this I decided to double check the lathe setup.

The speeds posted in the test report should be divided by about 3.

I was taking the EVS RPM read-out but the belt was on the high torque setting :-

Neil, to be clearer, after the 2nd test the components had to be separated by a decent tug on the spanners on the shaft flats.

And I should say that the lump of redgum I used in the first test was an A-grade pox. Dulls turning tools toot sweet and makes a Veritas A2 plane blade look like cheese. I'd chosen it thinking the bit was HSS, so all up, it was unwittingly testing to destruction.

And yes, can a mod change the post title to Colt? Was nowhere near cold :rolleyes:

FenceFurniture
16th December 2011, 01:37 PM
JThe speeds posted in the test report should be divided by about 3.

Ern, does that mean that the Elm test was around 160-180 rpm? Or had you changed the belt setting, and it was 500?

Cheers, Brett

rsser
16th December 2011, 01:39 PM
No Brett, divide all those RPM numbers by 3.

FenceFurniture
16th December 2011, 02:12 PM
I'm going to talk to Colt about a couple of ideas that I have, and also to find out how short the retracted pilot drill can be in the HSS MaxiCut plus Forstners (to get the minimum impact with blind holes). I imagine that if it can be retracted so that only 5-8mm is showing then it would be ok for most blind holes.

The other query I have (for here, not there) is what would happen if you started the hole with the pilot drill showing perhaps 20mm or whatever, and then remove it altogether when the hole was established a certain distance in? Would the forstner still track straight? I would have thought it would be pretty reasonable, given that there is the cylindrical wall of the forstner, and the rigidity of the RotaStop setup.

Another idea that I have for Colt is an HSS M2 Auger 3/4" by 230mm long, specifically for bench top dog'oles. Exit wounds would still be a concern (if unsupported). This has all sprung out of Groggy's Famous Hole Drilling Marathon. Groggy suggests that a Scotch pattern flute is best, but Colt use a Lewis pattern flute, so I'm not sure if they can do a Scotch. They did the British for a while there though.

Following on from that I want to see if I can get a 3/4" 5* FCE Brad Point made by them. I believe that the chip ejection going through a 100mm bench top should be ok, and it would definitely give a better exit wound. In fact, I've found that with a 10mm 5* I can get a very clean exit even using a hand held drill on an unsupported back. The trick is to know when you are about to exit and keep the revs up but with LIGHT pressure. Certainly the entry from a 5* is excellent - the hole edge is as sharp as.

rsser
16th December 2011, 03:01 PM
Yeah, it'd be good to know why the diffs btwn the HCS bit and the HSS bit. They're substantial as far as I can see from the poor pics around.

And for a blind hole in the only application I have where that's critical, even the added depth of a brad point is unwelcome.

In terms of your 'other query', what happens with the HCS bit is that first the brad point engages, then the wings (or teeth if you like) engage, and then the chipping edges.

The wings are rather different from conventional saw tooth bits but are clearly critical in the bit tracking and may account for much of the quality I found (and cos there's less mass in them, for the bluing as well). So speculating, I can't see that a pilot hole would add much and may detract from performance if the brad point wasn't properly engaged from the start.

For turners, at a guess, a 1" auger would be of more interest being the long hole diameter for Crushgrind pepper grinders and maybe other mechanisms. Brendan Stemp prefers an auger over a saw-tooth or Forstner bit for this purpose and he makes a living out of this kind of work.

FenceFurniture
16th December 2011, 03:16 PM
For turners, at a guess, a 1" auger would be of more interest being the long hole diameter for Crushgrind pepper grinders and maybe other mechanisms.

In for a penny, in for a pound. Augers come 230, 320, 460, 600mm lengths.
Pick a size.....I'm thinking 320

FenceFurniture
16th December 2011, 03:40 PM
A few pics and diagrams that will be slightly better in resolution, but not great.

MaxiCut Depth Stop
http://www.woodworkforums.com/members/62924-fencefurniture/albums/colt-maxicuts/7485-maxicut-depth-limiter.png


Maxicut Forstner
http://www.woodworkforums.com/members/62924-fencefurniture/albums/colt-maxicuts/7484-maxicut-forstner.png

http://www.woodworkforums.com/members/62924-fencefurniture/albums/colt-maxicuts/7483-maxicut-diagram.png


MaxiCut plus Forstner
http://www.woodworkforums.com/members/62924-fencefurniture/albums/colt-maxicuts/7482-maxicut-plus-forstner.png

http://www.woodworkforums.com/members/62924-fencefurniture/albums/colt-maxicuts/7481-maxicut-plus-forstner-diagram.png


VHW Carbide plate Hinge Bit
http://www.woodworkforums.com/members/62924-fencefurniture/albums/colt-maxicuts/7480-vhw-carbide-hinge-bit.png

http://www.woodworkforums.com/members/62924-fencefurniture/albums/colt-maxicuts/7479-vhw-carbide-hinge-bit-diagram.png




or go to the website and look at pages...forget it...they're no better.

rsser
16th December 2011, 03:55 PM
Re auger length for turners: a q. perhaps better posted on the woodturning sub-forum.

It's years since I did a pepper grinder and I gave it to my son who said, 'Er, it's a bit phallic'.

A number of ripostes sprang to mind ;-}

But to be serious, Brendan published an article in Aust. Woodworker on using the Crushgrind mechanism and he was using a 25cm unit.

I'm not sure how critical the 2cm diff. would be cp. the Colt 23cm in application; in price, with HSS it would be significant. Ask Brendan. He's a forum member. User name: brendan stemp

...

Thanks for the pics.

The plus or HSS version is clearly different from the HCS Forstner. Thinking of ease of sharpening here. It doesn't look like registration across the chipper top and rim is possible. But the bevel length of the chipper looks a bit longer. Whatever (as the kids say). For this application I can't see that the included bevel angle is all that critical; the cutting angle will remain the same however hamfisted you are with sharpening. A critical factor in cutting life performance will be to maintain even heights of the chipper edges ... as I've discovered.

Groggy
16th December 2011, 04:12 PM
If I was using a hand held drill and deep boring more than a few holes >80mm I'd get an auger into it.

My ideal would be:

1. A scotch pattern auger for strength and speed in hardwoods, perhaps with a twin land for clean sides (probably impractical in this design).
2. Double spur head for a clean hole - but short spurs so it does not chase the grain.
3. Uniform diameter to avoid leading off center, not a back-taper bit.
4. HSS for heat issues.
5. Hex shank for strong grip in the chuck.

rsser
16th December 2011, 04:44 PM
And to elaborate a little on my post about lathe deep boring, and this bears on and may qualify my comment about tracking with this gear ...

Going off centre will make more demands on the bit and generate more heat. Not desirable. The grain in the wood can encourage this as can the quality of the tailstock.

The VL175 tailstock and quill show very little play. In fact, once the hole is started you can loosen the tailstock clamp and just push the whole kit in to bore.

This is streets ahead of the Stubby and Teknatool lathes I've had.

FenceFurniture
16th December 2011, 04:48 PM
SHARPENING:
Colt Sharpening


600mm deep hole:

Drilling a log


On a lathe:

YouTube - Broadcast Yourself

FenceFurniture
16th December 2011, 04:52 PM
Errr, Groggy, what did I do wrong wuth that embedded video?

EDIT by Groggy: The link was wrong, press edit and see what it looks like now. A full screen link will not work.

FenceFurniture
16th December 2011, 04:58 PM
1. A scotch pattern auger for strength and speed

Try as I might, I can't get a good pic or diagram of a Scotch pattern. The clearest one was from China, so I'll be blessed if I trust that to be correct.

I had a Colt Lewis Auger pass through my hands, and I can't remember the design (I'm still waiting for mine). Is it just a spiral of DNA like steel, whereas the Scotch has the centre running right through. Then there's a Jennings pattern.......

EDIT:
LEWIS PATTERN AUGER DIAGRAM & PIC
http://www.woodworkforums.com/members/62924-fencefurniture/albums/colt-maxicuts/7487-auger.png


http://www.woodworkforums.com/members/62924-fencefurniture/albums/colt-maxicuts/7486-auger-diagram.png

FenceFurniture
16th December 2011, 07:27 PM
Sorry, seem to be hogging the posting atm.

While we're at it Ern, what's a good brand of diamond file/paddle? Got any links?

rsser
16th December 2011, 08:54 PM
Hog away my friend. You've earned the right ;-}

With diamond stuff, price is a good guide; there's no short cuts here.

I've used Ezelap paddle hones for quite a while for touch-ups of various tools. They cut well and last well. Downside is flex in the plakky substrate but you learn to deal with this.

Crumbs, think the last ones, a set of three, might actually have come from Bunnies.

More here (http://www.ezelap.com.au/allpurpose.htm)

NeilS
17th December 2011, 03:30 PM
Neil, to be clearer, after the 2nd test the components had to be separated by a decent tug on the spanners on the shaft flats.



Thanks, Ern. Difficult to separate is definitely better than prone to letting go.