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Drill Choice: Solid-Carbide or Replaceable-Insert?

Rob Brown
By Rob Brown Engineering Trainer, Allied Machine & Engineering Corp.

Holemaking is a common procedure in any machine shop, but selecting the best type of cutting tool for each job is not always clear. It is best to have a drill that caters to the workpiece material, produces the specs required, and provides the most profit for the job at hand.

Fortunately, the process can be simplified by considering four criteria when choosing between solid-carbide drills and replaceable-insert drills.

1. Next Contract: Long-Term or Short Run?

If the answer is running a long-term, repeatable process, invest in a replaceable insert drill. Commonly referred to as a spade drill or replaceable-tip drill, these drills are engineered so that machine operators have the ability to change out the worn cutting edge quickly.

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Spade (aka replaceable-tip) and solid-carbide drills each offer a unique set of benefits in holemaking applications, depending on the application. Pictured here are Allied Machine’s Superion solid-carbide drills and the T-A series of replaceable-insert drills. (All images provided by Allied Machine)

This reduces the overall cost per hole in high-volume production runs. The initial investment cost of the drill body (insert holder) is compensated quickly by the reduction of cycle time and cost of replacing inserts versus the cost of new solid-carbide tooling. Simply put, speed of changeout, coupled with a lower long-term cost of ownership, makes replaceable-insert drills the better choice for high-volume production jobs.

If the next project is a short-run job or custom prototype, then a solid-carbide drill is the better choice due to the initial low cost. Since it is not likely that the tool will wear out while machining smaller jobs, the ease of cutting edge replacement is irrelevant.

For a short run, the replaceable-insert tool is likely to have a higher initial cost than a solid-carbide drill, so it may not pay dividends to invest. Lead time can be better for a solid-carbide tool as well, depending on the source for these products. With solid-carbide drills, efficiency and cost savings can be maintained when machining a wide range of holemaking applications.

2. How Much Stability is Required?

Consider the dimensional stability of a reground solid-carbide tool versus replacing the worn cutting edge with a fresh blade. Unfortunately, with a reground tool, the diameters and lengths of the tool no longer match the original version; it is smaller in diameter, and the overall length is shorter.

The reground tool is used more often as a roughing tool, and a new solid-carbide tool is needed to meet the required finished dimensions. By using the reground tool, another step is added to the manufacturing process to make use of a tool that no longer satisfies the finished dimensions, thus increasing the cost per hole in each part.

3. How Important is Performance?

Machine operators know that solid-carbide drills can be run at higher feeds than replaceable-insert tools of the same diameter. Solid-carbide cutting tools are stronger and more rigid as they have no connection to fail over time.

Machinists opt to use uncoated solid-carbide drills in order to reduce time invested in regrinds and lead times on reorders. Unfortunately, the lack of a coating reduces the superior speed and feed capabilities of a solid-carbide cutting tool. At this point, the performance gap between solid-carbide drills and replaceable-insert drills is almost negligible.

4. What is the Overall Cost Per Hole?

The job size; initial cost of the tool; downtime for changeouts, regrinds and touch-offs; and number of steps in the application process are all variables in the cost-of-ownership equation.

Solid-carbide drills are a smart choice for short runs due to their lower initial cost. Generally, small jobs do not wear a tool out before they are complete, meaning there is no downtime from changeouts, regrinds and touch-offs.

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Replaceable-tip drills can provide quick changeover for high-production jobs, resulting in notable cost savings and reduced cycle times.

Replaceable Cutting Edges Lower TCO

A drill designed with replaceable cutting edges can offer a lower total cost of ownership (TCO) over the life of the tool for long-term contracts and high-production runs. The savings start when the cutting edge is worn or damaged because there is no need to order the whole tool—only the insert (aka blade).

Another cost savings variable is the amount of machine time saved or spent when changing out cutting tools. The replaceable-insert drill’s diameter and length are not affected by changing out the cutting edge, but since the solid-carbide drill needs to be reground when it is worn, solid-carbide tools should be touched off when replaced. This represents time when parts are not being produced.

The last variable in the cost-of-ownership equation is the number of steps in the holemaking process. Replaceable-insert drills can usually complete the process to spec in a single operation. Many applications that incorporate solid-carbide drills add a finishing operation after using the reground tool to meet the job’s requirements, creating an unnecessary step that adds machining cost to the part being produced.

Good Selection of Drill Types

Overall, most machine shops need a good selection of drill types. Many industrial tooling suppliers offer expert guidance on the selection of the best drill for a particular job, and tooling manufacturers have free resources for determining the cost per hole to help aid in the decision-making process.

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