Posted by Hopper on 17/01/2020 00:05:53:
Even when drilling holes where you want to "float" the vice around so it can find the right position as you poke the drill tip into the centre punch mark etc, it's safest to have the vice bolted down but with the bolts/nuts left loose enough to allow some movement of the bolts in the slots etc.
Perhaps a point in favour of the notoriously sloppy, affordable, import cross vices! As I've said before mine is good enough to quickly bring the work under the drill in, hopefully, dead nuts alignment. However if it is a touch out there is sufficient slop for the drill to bring the workpiece exactly where it wants it with no risk of the whole kit and caboodle being slung across the workshop.
A very large drill running slowly can also wobble the table on my big Pollard 15AY floor standing drill. That machine has proper square section vertical ways for the table to run on and a double screw jack to lift it. My gibs are set so it lifts and falls without undue effort so clearances are very small. But a big drill on bottom speed can still wobble it. There is provision to use one adjuster as a table lock screw but I've never bothered to actually use it. Given that it appears to have been painted over in the factory around 1950 something when, I think, the drill was made Mr Pollard clearly didn't consider it very essential for normal folk either. But there for the just in case jobs.
I get the impression that most folk are far too tentative with drill feeds and speeds. OK the book values probably assume good lubrication but push it in firmly at something approaching the correct speed and it will settle in cleanly without wobble. If you pull back before the drill has reached full diameter and the cut surface has visible radial ridges running across it you are probably not feeding hard enough and quite likely running too slow. If the grind is a bit off centre or one cutting lip doing all the work this sort of thing is much more likely. Despite what the experts say hand sharpening drills properly is a considerable skill needing regular practice. A good jig system is far better for normal folk. Unfortunately all the affordable ones are, objectively, imperfect in greater or lesser degree. Often "crap". Some tools should just work. Properly. Its wrong that it takes Graham Meek or someone of equivalent skills to figure out how to rework a commercial product so it does what it said on the tin.
As Mike said a pilot hole the size of the chisel point is plenty. The more of the cutting edge actually engaged in the workpiece the more stable it will be. Nibbling a mm or a few tens of thou off the edge is a recipe for disaster, probably wrecking the drill in the process. I have a, fortunately, elderly and duplicated drill with approaching half an inch from the end down undersized by 80 thou due to being forced into a pretty hard workpiece to enlarge the hole. Needs must and sacrificed for the job but the final kick to getting my Clarkson drill grinder attachment sorted and fitted as being the only think I have capable of bringing it back to size with a truly central point.
Clive