Hi Gents
Thanks for the advice, many interesting comments much appreciated.
I thought I would give an update on this. I was looking around on eBay, and found many PCB drill sets on 3.175mm shanks. There are suppliers in China doing sets very cheaply, below £4 for a set of 10 drills typically in the 0.3 to 1.2mm range. Some sets go down to 0.1mm!
I bought a set from a UK seller, ‘Flux Workshop’, for a set for £5.09, and it was delivered on the second day after ordering, the postage label indicating a 24 hour service. The 0.3 to 1.2mm set was one of the available options under item 113799603202. They are of Japanese manufacture rather than Chinese.
Looking at them, they look well made, with the point ground reasonably symmetrically. There is some variation of the grinding angle on the tip between the various bits, but this of minor importance. The helix angle is quite fast as is usual for a PCB drill.
I briefly tried a 0.6mm bit on the lathe, going into a brass rod which had already been ‘pecked’ with a centre drill, it worked very satisfactorily.
I am not clear on the bit material, the description on this item does not give this, but many similar adverts mention ‘tungsten steel carbide’ which I assume relates not to tungsten carbide but a form of HSS? The bits are strongly magnetic (tungsten carbide is usually just weakly magnetic), and shiny like HSS. I would personally expect a fairly high breakage rate if they were tungsten carbide!
I am very pleased with them, especially at this price.
Martin Whittle
NB Pero asked about sharpening small drills. I have never tried this, but there is a simple jig on https://modelengineeringwebsite.com/Small_drills.html by Graham Howe, which may be worth looking at.