| |
| | Register Now!It appears that you aren't a registered member, click below to instantly register and become a member of the RouterForums.com Community! ** Registration removes majority of the website advertisements ** | |
| | #1 |
| Registered User Forum Fanatic | Same deal as always, 100 points to whoever can explain why these two have different designs.... why wood (pun intended) you prefer one over the other ? Or why wood you use one and not the other ? Beats me, maybe the historians will know.. who's in the know now? |
| | Top - Reply with Quote |
| | |
| __________________ This advertising will not be shown in this way to registered members. Register your free account today and become a member on Router Forums | |
| | #2 |
| Forum Moderator Supreme Forum King | They are both wood bits the first one I wood prefer because it is faster becuse closer bitting surface the second one is the same as the first but would drill slower becuase the bit is more widely spaced. |
| | Top - Reply with Quote |
| | #3 |
| Senior Moderator Supreme Forum King | I think you will find the correct answer by looking at some Kreg pocket hole screws. These bits are designed for different types of wood!
__________________ Mike |
| | Top - Reply with Quote |
| | #4 |
| Registered User Supreme Forum King | Here is a little slow loading but interesting pages from a old time catalog http://www.roseantiquetools.com/id143.html Some even came in mm for all you metric people........ |
| | Top - Reply with Quote |
| | #5 |
| Senior Moderator Supreme Forum King | Page 81, paragraph 3 from the auger bit catalog verified that the double twist is for soft wood, the single twist is for hard wood, exactly the same as the Kreg Pocket hole screws.
__________________ Mike |
| | Top - Reply with Quote |
| | #6 | |
| Registered User Supreme Forum King | Quote:
Then they talk about "coarse" and "fine" screws being applied to either single or double twist..... Now for Kreg the fine thread vs the coarse is easy to see but we would not say that a fine thread is a double twist...... anyway I'm confused. I have both types pictured and I can not say I ever thought about which to use for want wood. I do know that my uncle had a hand drill press (you cranked it hand) and he had the bits with more twists per inch..... and the power ones you buy have the more twists per inch so maybe it has something to do with speed of rotation too?????? Ed | |
| | Top - Reply with Quote |
| | #7 | |
| Registered User Forum Fanatic | Quote:
ooooooooooooooooooooooo Winners ooooooooooooooooooooooo Its my party and this is the conclusion.... points to each of ya all.. 50 points to glenmore for being on the track 100 points to aniceone2hold for the first complete answer and 50 points to reible for the research Mark, please dole out the points, or else I will from my "pot". from the reasearch... "it should be clearly understood that the double thread bit is intended for soft wood, the single thread for hard wood, as the latter will not clog as readily as the former, while if the double thread were left course enough not to clog, it would make the bit bore too hard". I only have two of the double thread bits, was gonna go out in the shop later and try to drill some cedar and hardwood and see for myslef, but the shop is COLD. we in central IL got hammered last night with freezing rain and a snow cap. | |
| | Top - Reply with Quote |
New Reply |
| Bookmarks |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|