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Thread: Possitioning screw holes.
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10th January 2006, 08:09 PM #16Originally Posted by GroggyBlowin in the Wind
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10th January 2006, 08:11 PM #17Originally Posted by Barry_White
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10th January 2006, 08:17 PM #18Originally Posted by redwood
Maybe I'm the one missing something (it's late, I'm tired and running on paint fumes (3rd repaint of daughters room).
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10th January 2006, 08:17 PM #19Originally Posted by redwood
No No No. You use the countersunk hole in the hinge to center the Vix Bit or the Posidrive bit to centre the hole where it is needed. You don't use blank hinges.
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10th January 2006, 08:23 PM #20Originally Posted by Barry_White
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10th January 2006, 08:25 PM #21Originally Posted by Barry_WhiteBlowin in the Wind
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10th January 2006, 08:32 PM #22.
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Originally Posted by Groggy
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10th January 2006, 08:32 PM #23Originally Posted by redwood
A quick search found they are available for sale (McMaster-Carr website).
So, if, in my experience, you need to clamp the hinge somehow, then drill a pilot hole in the wood (with or without a vix bit), with the associated bother of getting it dead center, and then possibly have to re-countersink the hole to the correct angle. Then, why NOT just get a blank plate, clamp, drill the pilot, countersink and be sure it is spot on.
That all it was folks, just thinking out loud - sorry.
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10th January 2006, 08:35 PM #24Originally Posted by GroggyBlowin in the Wind
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11th January 2006, 10:22 AM #25
Not sure about all this newfangled ironmongery, vix bits, etc.
For hinges, I put the hinge where it will go, then trace the inside of the holes with a sharp pencil, taking care to hold the pencil upright, so as not to bias the circle. Then by eye, I judge where the centres of the little circles are, and mark with an awl. What I do next depends on how meaty the wood is. For thin walled boxes etc., I'd use a brad point bit, and put the central spur on the marked centre. For thicker stock or rougher work, e.g. door hinges, I'd mark with a centre punch and use a twist bit, which self-centres in the conical depression left by the centre punch.Those are my principles, and if you don't like them . . . well, I have others.
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11th January 2006, 10:32 AM #26.
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Originally Posted by zenwood
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