View Full Version : How to drill gems?
Boyan Silyavski
01-04-2016, 01:36 PM
Hi,
could somebody point me to drill bits made for drilling gems, semi precious stones, may be crystals, in the 0.8-1mm range. I know a lot of Chinese bits and pieces on ebay. But not that. No Dremel tools.
This is for a friend, I need Pro quality tools that could be used longer, we are not talking drilling 2 stones here. A mini mill for that or +High Speed Spindle?
Any help will be appreciated! Thanks
lucan07
01-04-2016, 02:17 PM
Have a friend into jewellry not sure where she buys her drills but what you are looking for are "bonded diamond drill bits" if I can get hold of her I will try and find out her european suppliers and PM you the details, but I know she also imports a lot from from the States because its cheaper.
komatias
01-04-2016, 04:17 PM
google is your friend https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itMhq8js8qc
Boyan Silyavski
01-04-2016, 04:31 PM
Have a friend into jewellry not sure where she buys her drills but what you are looking for are "bonded diamond drill bits" if I can get hold of her I will try and find out her european suppliers and PM you the details, but I know she also imports a lot from from the States because its cheaper.
Great, it would be good to know what she is using exactly. So " bonded" is "METAL BOND (SINTERED) " right?
google is your friend https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itMhq8js8qc
Thanks. I googled but as i said so many China crap which confuses me. And the above are 50$ per bit (http://www.ukam.com/diamond_solid_thin_drills.htm) . So i would like to know what really works well . This one seems interesting as he says on ebay listing (http://www.ebay.es/itm/10-pcs-1-5MM-Lapidary-BITS-for-FAST-DEEP-DRILLING/160922278933?_trksid=p2045573.c100033.m2042&_trkparms=aid%3D111001%26algo%3DREC.SEED%26ao%3D1% 26asc%3D20140423084956%26meid%3Dcae28b0a656a434cbd 97c1bc33c68ea0%26pid%3D100033%26rk%3D1%26rkt%3D4%2 6mehot%3Dpp%26sd%3D160922278933) that this is the one that China factories use for bead drilling. They are cheap enough to try. Allright i will buy them. He sells 1.5mm and 2mm.
That still leaves to find the micro drills 0.8-1mm
I also saw some diamond micro twist drills?
phill05
01-04-2016, 04:41 PM
Have a look here http://www.ukam.com/micro_core_drills.htm
Phill
Boyan Silyavski
01-04-2016, 06:15 PM
i saw that at their page : Recommended Feed Rate: down or side feed: .010" per minute. :barbershop_quartet_
Clive S
01-04-2016, 06:19 PM
And 35,000 to 150,000 RPM that's some spnidle:barbershop_quartet_
lucan07
01-04-2016, 07:33 PM
Found a receipt with some drills I got from her last year and on that occasion she had purchased from covington-engineering.com in the states I know she travels to california regularly so a place to start they seem to stock most things related.
Sliding Head
02-04-2016, 11:40 PM
I drilled ruby balls with an NSK Planet air-spindle mounted in a machining centre (Cincinatti Dart). The holes were 1.6 mm diameter and 2.5 mm deep. I can't remember the feed rate downwards but the wear rate was awful. I picked up the project when one tool bit made one hole and slowly got it to 80 holes with a totally different setup. The NSK Planet was supposedly running at 60,000 rpm.
All holes were cut by circular interpolation.
The tool bits were dental drill bits that were plated with diamonds - I don't know what the plated matrix metal was. Compared to the picture in the link in a post above the diamonds are not plated in layers. The two variables were the depth of location of the diamonds ( which are not uniform in size or shape) and the friability of the diamond itself. In simple terms that means the ability of the diamond to fracture consistently. I tried to loosen the poorly plated diamonds to stop larger diamond fragments from deflecting the tool bits.
I tried one core drill once. It broke as soon as I got the air spindle running. It was too flimsy to support its own slightly non-uniform weight at those rpm - the tool stem was a tube.
To improve cutting I tried mist coolant directly into the NSK air turbine. It lowered the rpm but increased the torque. It was better but the bearings rusted over one weekend and at about £1000 each spindle that wasn't good. I also tested a spindle speed increaser for the Dart spindle and got better results. The whole setup was more rigid. In the end I got down to about 8,000 rpm, which although counter intuitive gave better results. Finally I ran a diamond cup wheel mounted on a milling arbour across the balls first to flatten the balls. This allowed the improvement to 80 holes.
Be careful about using coolant. The ruby produced a white powder in the cut which was so fine it became colloidal when wet and choked the tool bits. You have to cut/grind at the rate you can clear the debris from the hole, and that may not be at the rate indicated by the tooling suppliers.
This is from my memory of a project I did nearly 20 years ago. The machine I was trying to replace was slow but had four cutting spindles - I could cut only one at a time. Nowadays this type of hole is drilled with ultrasonic methods if the hole is blind, and lasers if it is a through hole. Watch jewels are through holes with separate end-stones if needed. I did trepann a blind hole in a 5mm ruby ball with a 65 watt DMG laser but had no idea of the depth or how to remove the central core cleanly every time. A previous attempt at a leading University resulted initially in the ruby being burnt to ash. Years later I got a hole produced by them with ultrasonics that was acceptable in finish and shape.
The lessons were:
1) spindle/tool rigidity is everything
2) the feeds and speeds that work reliably were not indicated by the tool suppliers at the outset
3) the most common advice was 'give it a try'
BTW that project took me about 4 months and was canned because of the tool wear and the taper in the hole which used all of the hole tolerance in about twenty holes. Even though I got tool life (it was still cutting up to 80 holes) the hole geometry was poor. The ultrasonics and laser methods weren't acceptable at the time.
Good luck
D
komatias
03-04-2016, 12:27 AM
Working for Renishaw by chance?
JAZZCNC
03-04-2016, 01:10 AM
BTW that project took me about 4 months and was canned because of the tool wear and the taper in the hole which used all of the hole tolerance in about twenty holes. Even though I got tool life (it was still cutting up to 80 holes) the hole geometry was poor. The ultrasonics and laser methods weren't acceptable at the time.
Good luck
D
So Boyan the Lesson I took from that excellent post was DONT BOTHER because your DIY machine and Spindle just aint going to cut the mustard. . . This is high precision work that requires high precision machine and not just good tooling.!
magicniner
03-04-2016, 01:22 AM
If the holes were bigger I'd have suggested the old low speed tubing & abrasive paste method, maybe sections of hypodermic needle & diamond paste would work but you'd need a system of regularly lifting & then reapplying drilling pressure
Boyan Silyavski
03-04-2016, 10:36 AM
Luckily precision is not the aim here but quantity. The holes have to be on a precise place, could be slightly tapered and sizes could slightly vary. This is not drilling rubies for watches. Just jewelry.
I spoke with my friend and he said 1.2 to 1.5mm holes are ok. So i will forget for holes below 1.2mm. So seems a china spindle with VFD will work right and have acceptable speed. May be even better will be one of the small Dc spindles. The question here is if that should be driven down by motor, lever or just counterbalanced and let its weight drill slowly the stone.
magicniner
03-04-2016, 11:10 AM
Its possible that weight or lever with straight down feed will both result in a hole jammed up with powder and shed diamond cutting debris with significant tool life reduction, if you combined one of those two with table moves to cut 1.5 holes with 1.2 cutters and air to clear dust you might be onto a winner
- Nick
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