glycerine
Member
For those of you using the 5mm Bocks in your pens, what size drill bit do you use on the section for the feed housing to fit into. Not the threaded portion, but the rest of the housing body...?
This is what Justin Short (Timebandit) uses :
For the threads for the #6 use a Letter L drill bit and for the #5 i use a #2 drill bit. For the housingsi use a Letter P for the #6 and a Letter L for the #5
For those of you using the 5mm Bocks in your pens, what size drill bit do you use on the section for the feed housing to fit into. Not the threaded portion, but the rest of the housing body...?
6.8mm bit .96" deep.
7.2mm bit 0.1" deep.
I have a metric set that has bits for every 0.1mm so I can get fairly accurate....Pricey though......
For those of you using the 5mm Bocks in your pens, what size drill bit do you use on the section for the feed housing to fit into. Not the threaded portion, but the rest of the housing body...?
I use what Roy stated above:wink:
6.8mm bit .96" deep.
7.2mm bit 0.1" deep.
I have a metric set that has bits for every 0.1mm so I can get fairly accurate....Pricey though......
Fred, i think you may have misread the question. He wants the size drill bit for the housing not the threads. From what you stated, a 7.2mm drill is smaller than the size bit needed for the tap for the #6 bock feed(7.3mm) i use an L, so this in theory couldnt work, as the housing is larger than the threaded portion. Plus you would be drilling way to deep if you were only drilling the depth of the housing, not the threads![]()
For those of you using the 5mm Bocks in your pens, what size drill bit do you use on the section for the feed housing to fit into. Not the threaded portion, but the rest of the housing body...?
I use what Roy stated above:wink:
6.8mm bit .96" deep.
7.2mm bit 0.1" deep.
I have a metric set that has bits for every 0.1mm so I can get fairly accurate....Pricey though......
Fred, i think you may have misread the question. He wants the size drill bit for the housing not the threads. From what you stated, a 7.2mm drill is smaller than the size bit needed for the tap for the #6 bock feed(7.3mm) i use an L, so this in theory couldnt work, as the housing is larger than the threaded portion. Plus you would be drilling way to deep if you were only drilling the depth of the housing, not the threads![]()
I didn't include anything for the #6 bock. Those are the dimensions needed for the 3 different diameters on the #5 bock feed. The 7.2mm is the very small outer ring on the feed.
The feed housing has 3 different diamters. The threads (5.8mm bit needed). Then there are two diameters leading to the threads....6.8mm and 7.2mm.
Maybe I misunderstood or I am not understanding the question but when you make the front section, you have 3 different bits you have to use if you drill the stepped hole to match the actual feed housing.
For those of you using the 5mm Bocks in your pens, what size drill bit do you use on the section for the feed housing to fit into. Not the threaded portion, but the rest of the housing body...?
I use what Roy stated above:wink:
6.8mm bit .96" deep.
7.2mm bit 0.1" deep.
I have a metric set that has bits for every 0.1mm so I can get fairly accurate....Pricey though......
Fred, i think you may have misread the question. He wants the size drill bit for the housing not the threads. From what you stated, a 7.2mm drill is smaller than the size bit needed for the tap for the #6 bock feed(7.3mm) i use an L, so this in theory couldnt work, as the housing is larger than the threaded portion. Plus you would be drilling way to deep if you were only drilling the depth of the housing, not the threads![]()
I didn't include anything for the #6 bock. Those are the dimensions needed for the 3 different diameters on the #5 bock feed. The 7.2mm is the very small outer ring on the feed.
The feed housing has 3 different diamters. The threads (5.8mm bit needed). Then there are two diameters leading to the threads....6.8mm and 7.2mm.
Maybe I misunderstood or I am not understanding the question but when you make the front section, you have 3 different bits you have to use if you drill the stepped hole to match the actual feed housing.
I don't like bumping old threads but can the feed housing hole size be clarified further? The current answers seem to be contradicting.
For the #5 Bock feed housing clearance hole Justin uses a letter L bit which is 7.366 mm; Fred uses 6.8 (7.2 for the upper ring). Which is it? These are nowhere close.
Also, Justin uses a #2 drill bit (which is 5.613mm) for the threads on the #5 feed ... the tap is a M6.4x.6. Based on the rule of thumb the bit should be a 5.8mm (6.4 - 0.6). Isn't a #2 too small?
Thanks!
I don't like bumping old threads but can the feed housing hole size be clarified further? The current answers seem to be contradicting.
For the #5 Bock feed housing clearance hole Justin uses a letter L bit which is 7.366 mm; Fred uses 6.8 (7.2 for the upper ring). Which is it? These are nowhere close.
Also, Justin uses a #2 drill bit (which is 5.613mm) for the threads on the #5 feed ... the tap is a M6.4x.6. Based on the rule of thumb the bit should be a 5.8mm (6.4 - 0.6). Isn't a #2 too small?
Thanks!
I don't like bumping old threads but can the feed housing hole size be clarified further? The current answers seem to be contradicting.
For the #5 Bock feed housing clearance hole Justin uses a letter L bit which is 7.366 mm; Fred uses 6.8 (7.2 for the upper ring). Which is it? These are nowhere close.
Also, Justin uses a #2 drill bit (which is 5.613mm) for the threads on the #5 feed ... the tap is a M6.4x.6. Based on the rule of thumb the bit should be a 5.8mm (6.4 - 0.6). Isn't a #2 too small?
Thanks!
Thanks Andrew I caught that as well - But Justin makes wonerful pens. Justin - is there a reason you went smaller that the "rule of thumb"? like Andrew stated?
Thanks for the clarrification.
By the way, a 6.8 probably makes sense as most of the housing body is slimmer than the top ring. But, I've found simply drilling the whole hole large enough to fit the upper ring works just fine. YMMV and all that stuff.