Posted by Dave S on 31/07/2021 23:01:04:
Suspect it's a combo drill/ mill bit for PCB manufacturing.
Dave
I like Dave's theory best.
- Has a drill tip, so can plunge.
- 4 flutes, which are for rapid swarf removal and side cutting,
- Made of carbide, which is good for abrasive materials.
- Secondary edges are good for removing wisps of fibrous material; some wood drills are like this.
Printed Circuit Boards are made of a highly abrasive insulator, such as fibre-glass, bonded at high pressure in resin. The boards typically make short work of HSS, which is too soft, and are drilled and milled with carbide cutters run at very high speed – 20000rpm or more.
Two mill-drill features are common on PCBs: mounting holes and anti-tracking/isolating slots
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Not an obvious example compared with many but the bottom left mounting hole above, one of four otherwise drilled cleanly, has been widened and ovalled slightly by waggling the cutter. The purpose is allow slack during assembly, rather than go to the trouble of precisely aligning four pillars with four holes.
In the next example, the cutter has made four long slots, which are used to prevent high-voltage tracking or to improve signal isolation via an opto-coupler. No whiskers allowed.
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I think these requirements are met well by Steve's cutter. The fibre trimming feature won't add any value but otherwise I think it should cut metal OK. Try and see. Looks OK in Steve's picture, but if it's been used on PCB, the cutting edge might be blunt.
Dave