I hope you are serious.....because here it is.
Take the drill apart and drill holes iin the plastic casing from the inside.
Use, L angle brackets to mount the drill to the side of a table.
Use wood screws and a 1 inch piece of MDF mounted at a Tangential angle to the drill on the table about four inches from the end of the bit. The drill should be mounted securely and level using the level. It should be level at the bit, not the housing. (this wood will be the main guide.)
Use a conical 90 degree bit with a half inch shank in the drill.
Determine how long you want the points to be and how wide you like them to be. measure the depth of the bit at the point on the bit that is as wide as you want the points to be. (They will actually end up being a little narrower because you'll wear them narrower in the turning down process.)
Then you measure and cut a triangular piece of wood at the length and depth at the wide end that you determined in the previous steps.
You use a small I bracket attached to the end of the triangular piece of wood to hold the forearm square in place.
Place the forearm square on the front of the triangular wood and place both against the mounted guide.
Use a velcro band to hold the drill button to the on position.
Slowly bring the forearm square forward holding it in place against the other woods and through the bit. You'll have to go back and forth about an inch at a time and work your way farther back along the forearm to keep the drill from bogging down.gradually taking it down through the back of the forearm.
Is that sufficient or should I give an entire process, or explain how to manually do such things as floating points that are spliced with curved ends etc...?????
I wouldn't tell you how to do that on here I was just joshing ya.
I really don't know how this thing got blown so far out of proportion. All I said was that CNC work is best for those intricate designs that can't be done very easily with hand techniques. I never said I was a CNC expert, Although I could probably make a CNC system for a Standard LAthe/Mill. I do unserstand the idea behind them and I do or have known cuemakers that use them.
And to that person who said they could give me access to their entire shop and don't think I could make a golf tee? Well, we'll just see what we see.... Won't we? I don't need access to your shop BTW I have my own. And "NO, the aforementioned way of using a drill is not the method I use...."
I don't use this method, I solely said that I could....
I have specific tools for cutting the V grooves.
ScottR said:Please educate me by showing the results of this 1/2" drill, scrap wood, level and misc. hardware method. I am open minded and would love to learn something new. Seriously.
Take the drill apart and drill holes iin the plastic casing from the inside.
Use, L angle brackets to mount the drill to the side of a table.
Use wood screws and a 1 inch piece of MDF mounted at a Tangential angle to the drill on the table about four inches from the end of the bit. The drill should be mounted securely and level using the level. It should be level at the bit, not the housing. (this wood will be the main guide.)
Use a conical 90 degree bit with a half inch shank in the drill.
Determine how long you want the points to be and how wide you like them to be. measure the depth of the bit at the point on the bit that is as wide as you want the points to be. (They will actually end up being a little narrower because you'll wear them narrower in the turning down process.)
Then you measure and cut a triangular piece of wood at the length and depth at the wide end that you determined in the previous steps.
You use a small I bracket attached to the end of the triangular piece of wood to hold the forearm square in place.
Place the forearm square on the front of the triangular wood and place both against the mounted guide.
Use a velcro band to hold the drill button to the on position.
Slowly bring the forearm square forward holding it in place against the other woods and through the bit. You'll have to go back and forth about an inch at a time and work your way farther back along the forearm to keep the drill from bogging down.gradually taking it down through the back of the forearm.
Is that sufficient or should I give an entire process, or explain how to manually do such things as floating points that are spliced with curved ends etc...?????
I wouldn't tell you how to do that on here I was just joshing ya.
I really don't know how this thing got blown so far out of proportion. All I said was that CNC work is best for those intricate designs that can't be done very easily with hand techniques. I never said I was a CNC expert, Although I could probably make a CNC system for a Standard LAthe/Mill. I do unserstand the idea behind them and I do or have known cuemakers that use them.
And to that person who said they could give me access to their entire shop and don't think I could make a golf tee? Well, we'll just see what we see.... Won't we? I don't need access to your shop BTW I have my own. And "NO, the aforementioned way of using a drill is not the method I use...."
I don't use this method, I solely said that I could....
I have specific tools for cutting the V grooves.
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