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Mark all as readHPR Drill | Solid Carbide Drill for Cast Iron
Look at this beautiful bronze colored drill. This is the HPR Drill, a solid carbide drill series for cast iron. Made for high-speed, high-feed precision drilling. Let's take a closer look at the drill.
A Closer Look at the HPR Drill
It comes with a low thrust drill point design, giving you the option to run it crazy fast. That’s what it’s made for – high speed, high feed drilling with maximum hole straightness and maximum hole quality. Good for any large volume production when high metal removal rates, lowest cost-per-part, and more capacity on the shop floor are required. But you can also apply this drill as a solution provider when the spindle power is the limiting factor or when you have unstable conditions, such as unstable workpiece clamping or pin wall components. No matter how you apply the HPR drill, it’s available up to 8xD and comes with standard through coolant supply.
Let’s take a look on the other side of the drill. It’s MQL-ready. All shanks fulfill two DIN norms for minimum quantity lubrication, so you can run it either with flood coolant or with minimum quantity lubrication. The new features on the shank provide a leak-proof system.
Back to the front side, we see the:
- Patented corner radius – enabling long tool life and excellent hole quality. Workpiece chipping during the hole exit is being eliminated by this feature.
- The patented point fitting. This provides excellent self-centering capabilities with low thrust and enables excellent hole straightness.
- Four-margin lands ideal for cross holes and incline exits. These four margin lands provide maximum stability.
- The short chisel edge allows the drill to dig right into the cast iron material and significantly influences the chip formation.
- And finally, the ultra-high polished chip flutes – providing minimum friction, efficient chip evacuation, and the highest possible tool life.
The HPR Drill in Action
Okay, now let’s see the HPR drill in action. We’re going to take the 8.5-millimeter diameter drill and create a 5xD through hole in this block of GG40 cast iron at 130 meters per minute and applying a feed rate of 0.24 millimeters per revolution. Right after that, we’re going to drill into the block perpendicular to the previous hole, drilling through the hole we created in the first step, creating a cross hole at the same rate. We’re also going to show the incline exit capabilities of the HPR drill on this pass by coming out of the block at an inclined exit.
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