10-06-2014, 09:18 AM
I had a need to drill some holes in the edges of rectangular pieces of plastic. The holes had to be precisely placed, dead-center of 1/2" thick polycarbonate (which actually measured .487" thick).
The holes also needed to be located 1" in from the corners.
Because the pieces were approx. 4" x 6", setting the fence on the drill press table was problematic because I'd have to adjust the table during the operation (when switching from the 4" sides to the 6" sides), which means the stop block on the fence can move. Also a fence that works well for 4" high material isn't great for 6" high work, support at the top edge of the workpiece works best to maintain registration.
So I came up with a fence that mounts to the column of my drill press. The first version used a single piece of t-track and worked well. But I knew two pieces of t-track would make it even more rigid. And I figured that as long as I was screwing around, I may as well do it right.
There are two 6" carriage bolts and some knobs that squeeze the "collar" to the column. The t-track is held to the collar with four t-bolts and some knobs from underneath (four is probably overkill but...). The fence itself is a piece of 1" plywood that I routed t-slots into (both the front and back) and it is held with some little blocks that are t-bolted to the t-track.
The resulting final version is very solid, any movement is transferred to the column and the head, so my drilled holes will always be where I expect them.
So now I can setup to drill the edge of rectangular workpieces and adjust the table from the shorter side to the longer, and I don't lose the fence or stop block registration.
I will likely normally have my more standard fence on my table, I doubt I'll mount this unless I have a need. It only takes about thirty seconds to get it mounted and ready, though, so it will come in handy.
The holes also needed to be located 1" in from the corners.
Because the pieces were approx. 4" x 6", setting the fence on the drill press table was problematic because I'd have to adjust the table during the operation (when switching from the 4" sides to the 6" sides), which means the stop block on the fence can move. Also a fence that works well for 4" high material isn't great for 6" high work, support at the top edge of the workpiece works best to maintain registration.
So I came up with a fence that mounts to the column of my drill press. The first version used a single piece of t-track and worked well. But I knew two pieces of t-track would make it even more rigid. And I figured that as long as I was screwing around, I may as well do it right.
There are two 6" carriage bolts and some knobs that squeeze the "collar" to the column. The t-track is held to the collar with four t-bolts and some knobs from underneath (four is probably overkill but...). The fence itself is a piece of 1" plywood that I routed t-slots into (both the front and back) and it is held with some little blocks that are t-bolted to the t-track.
The resulting final version is very solid, any movement is transferred to the column and the head, so my drilled holes will always be where I expect them.
So now I can setup to drill the edge of rectangular workpieces and adjust the table from the shorter side to the longer, and I don't lose the fence or stop block registration.
I will likely normally have my more standard fence on my table, I doubt I'll mount this unless I have a need. It only takes about thirty seconds to get it mounted and ready, though, so it will come in handy.
"Links to news stories don’t cut it." MsNomer 3/2/24