I need to drill holes at exact positions to affix large workpieces to my cnc for two-sided machining. My drill press is not large enough to reach all drilling positions, and drilling by hand often results in a non-90° angle. I know for metalworking there are magnet drill presses to drill holes in steel beams. But is there something similar for wood?
They’re a bit pricey, but if I understand your situation correctly, a drill guide sounds like the thing you’re looking for. I think you can get something decent for like $50. And of course, if you want to get stupid, you can spend as much as several hundred
I think that’s exactly what I need! At least this type of drill guide:
Why are very different kinds of tools named the same?
I commented further up, I guess I should have scrolled first. This is exactly the kind of store bought jig I meant; it should be exactly what you need, as long as the base isn’t too big for wherever you need to drill.
The really cheap (Princess Auto, <$20) ones are alright but not great, the more expensive ones are fantastic
I have this exact tool, and just as a warning, it is far from perfect but it does certainly help and I’ve used it for many things but if precision is what you’re looking for you might be better off buying a higher quality one or a chuck and building one at the angle you need.
Milescraft makes a slightly better one and then there’s the rockler one but you know, you get what you pay for.
Can you drill a thick ish square of wood in the drill press and then use that as a guide for the big piece? (Clamping it down). That’s about what I would do. (I might use a metal insert on the guide if it’s super super critical)
Note: I’m Not an experienced woodworker, I’ve used this before for drilling 3d printed pieces.
I mostly work with metal, but this is exactly what I’d do OP. If it’s not an option, then there are jigs you can buy that will work.
This type of guide would wear out too fast, I think. It would also take away from the drill length, which I need to drill relatively deep holes (high depth to Diameter ratio).
Then you likely want a hard drill bushing. That’ll let it be thinner than a wood jig, but still tool steel to not wear out. (Wood to support the bushing)
Yes, making a jig is the way.
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