Tonight was a proud night for me as a father. Adam's skills have been really coming along. Saying this, there is still a large difference between the skills you have when you have been doing something for 6 months as compared to decades. The good thing with sheetmetal and rivets, they are forgiving. Drill through 2 pieces of .025 a little off perpendicular, and they will still rivet together fine. Going through the .050 of material there isn't enough time for the hole to get too out of whack. The rivet expands and will make up for some of those sins. This is good, I still make those mistakes sometimes. For a critical bolted fitting, just good enough for rivets and sheetmetal is not really good enough. You need good perpendicularity and roundness of holes. The skills, especially when you have an army of clamps that preclude using a drill press, must be good. You have to feed it perpendicular. You have to not put side load on the drill. The feed is important. Sometimes it is hard to juggle being a father and a builder. The builder in me wants to get down and do everything. I like to build and have spent a lifetime working on the skills. The father in me wants to see my own kids surpass me in all things. My initial thought was a compromise. I figured I would have Adam run the holes to #30, then #21 and I would take over. The last passes are always the most critical. When he was drilling to #30, there was still some sideload on the drill, partly because he was trying to push it through rather than let the drill do the work. So, we talked about it. I coached him on the techniques again. I shot the first #21 hole, showing him the slow feed, and the alignment. Each flute was happily cutting out long spiral chips. On his first #21, he got the feed good, still a little sideload. I explained how the chatter was feedback to him that he was sideloading the bit, rather than trying to run it in straight. I also noticed he tended to hold the drill high each time, and had him make a small correction. When he hit it the first time, and I saw him making that nice pair of spiral chips, we both knew he had it. The drill broke out the other side smoothly and his feed speed didn't even change. A couple more small corrections on a couple more holes and he had it. He had let that drill find its happy place, and in turn found his own happy place. I think this is part of what drives many homebuilders, or craftsmen of any discipline. The feeling of accomplishment of not just doing something well, but really well, is the therapy that brings inner calm and confidence. We didn't get to finish tonight. Tomorrow I'm going to let him take all those holes up to 3/16".
Drilling a #21 hole:
- Y fitting 1.jpeg (127.01 KiB) Viewed 37252 times
Ready to drill slightly undersize - probably 11/64
- Y fitting 2.jpeg (131.65 KiB) Viewed 37252 times
PS Happy Pi day