Drilling limb bolt hole on a three piece takedown.

Started by Sharp Shooter, September 02, 2013, 08:40:00 PM

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Sharp Shooter

I may have asked this question before. I've been using a brad bit to drill the holes for index pins and limb bolts, they seem to work best for me, but I still damage the glass when the bit goes through. I use masking tape, it helps but doesn't stop it. What do some of you do? Thanks Tony

kennym

I either use a brad and just drill the point thru, then drill from other side or use a backer block clamped to the far side of limb.  Wish I knew a sure way to not get little splinters....
Stay sharp, Kenny.

   https://www.kennysarchery.com/

MoeM

I haven`t have built a 3piece jet but an overlay on the base shall solve the prob- drill smaller through it from the back and then desired dia from belly- I guess nothing can splinter then...

carpin'mark

I use an extra piece of tape or two where the bolt hole will come through, and a backer block like kenny said to support the glass. The extra tape seems to help hold the fibers down a little better, if I do get a tear, it tends to be small and usually easily fixed with a little dab of thin CA to wet it out.


Crooked Stic

If you do get little frizzy edges on the hole- I use a 45 degree grinding stone in a drill to chamfer it back a bit. And don't force the drill bit through.
High on Archery.

talkingcabbage

I've started using a cobalt bit instead of a regular hss. It stays sharper longer and seems to not do the fray thang quite so much. But like crookedstic says, you can't force the bit. Go slow.
Joe

"If your work speaks for itself, don't interrupt."

One of two things will happen; it'll either work or it won't.

Sharp Shooter

Thanks everyone! I experimented a little, added a 1/16" phenolic to the face and belly worked good. Tony

LittleBen

I've never tried to drill through glass but I'd guess that a tapered grinding stone in a dremel or drill would do the trick ...

I'd proibably try drilling a small pilot hole, then opening it up wiht the grinding stone through both layers of glass, then finish up with a drill bit of the desired size through the ramainder of the limb, through the pilot hole.

Saskquach

I use these with a hardwood backing. Use less pressure as you exit thru into the backing

http://www.leevalley.com/en/Wood/page.aspx?p=42352&cat=1,180,42240

Dean


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