CA1251348A - Drill tip and fastener employing same - Google Patents
Drill tip and fastener employing sameInfo
- Publication number
- CA1251348A CA1251348A CA000476754A CA476754A CA1251348A CA 1251348 A CA1251348 A CA 1251348A CA 000476754 A CA000476754 A CA 000476754A CA 476754 A CA476754 A CA 476754A CA 1251348 A CA1251348 A CA 1251348A
- Authority
- CA
- Canada
- Prior art keywords
- axis
- drill
- screw
- cutting edge
- shaft
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Expired
Links
- 238000005520 cutting process Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 36
- 238000005553 drilling Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 19
- 239000002184 metal Substances 0.000 description 18
- 238000009413 insulation Methods 0.000 description 14
- 229910000831 Steel Inorganic materials 0.000 description 10
- 239000010959 steel Substances 0.000 description 10
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 description 4
- 229910000975 Carbon steel Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 238000009435 building construction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000010962 carbon steel Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000007796 conventional method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000003780 insertion Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000037431 insertion Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000009434 installation Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000002674 ointment Substances 0.000 description 1
Landscapes
- Drilling Tools (AREA)
Abstract
Abstract of the Disclosure A drill screw having primary and secondary cut-ting edges on opposite sides of its longitudinal axis, with the primary cutting edge offset so that it contacts the work-piece first, at a position displaced laterally from the screw axis, and produces initial very rapid drill-ing of an opening through the work-piece, followed by a period of drilling by both cutting edges. A conical portion is also preferably provided on the screw which extends divergingly from the cutting edges toward the head end of the screw until its diameter matches the root diameter of the screw.
Description
3f~&~
DRILL TIP AND FASTENER
EMPLOYING SAME
This invention relates to drill tips and to fasteners employing same; it relates especially to drill screws suitable for use in holding insulation to the walls or roofs of buildings using metal decks and walls.
Background of the Invention There are a variety of applications in which it is desired to form an opening through a sheet of metal, 10 rapidly and without requiring excessively large pressures.
It is often desirable to do this in con~unction with the insertion of a threaded drill screw into the opening so formed in the work-piece.
For example, in the building construction indus-15 try it is often desirable to secure material, such asthermal insulation, to the sheet metal which forms the walls or roofs oE met~l buildings. To do so, it is com-mon to employ a so-called drill screw which, when rota-tionally driven by a drill tool9 pierces the insulation 20 and sheet metal and then screws itself into and partially through the hole formed in the sheet metal, until a large washer-like plate under the head of the drill screw is pulled tightly against the exterior of the insulation to secure it in place.
The sheet metal used for this purpose is usually of #18 to #~6 yauge steel, corresponding to sheet thicknesses of from about .050 to .030 inch. While steel sheet having a thickness near the lower end of this range (e.g. #22 gauge) can usually be drilled and the drill screw inserted and seated quite easily and quickly, the time and force necessary to insert a drill screw properly in thicker steel, e.g. ~18 gauge steel, are often much greater than is desirable, and with some drill screws this cannot be accomplished at all.
One type of drill screw which has been employed for such purposes is similar to that shown in USA Patent No. 3,221,588 of G. L. Wieber issued December 7, 1965.
While such a drill screw will generally pierce the steel sheet and seat itself in ~22 gauge steel in about 3 to 4 seconds with an applied force of about 30 pounds, in the case of #18 gauge steel it may more typically require about 6 to 8 seconds, and in some cases it may not succeed in piercing the metal at all.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a new and useful drill tip and a fastener employing same.
Another object is to provide a drill tip and drill screw employing same which operate quickly and well, even in relatively thick steel sheets.
l3~
Summary of the Invention These and other objects of the invention are achieved by the provision of a drilling device comprising a shaft having a driving end adapted to be rotat:ionally driven to rotate the shaft about its longitudinal axis~
a drill tip ~ormed on said shaft at the end thereof op-posite from the driving end, and a conical portion extend-ing from the drill tip and diverging outwardly to merge at its larger end with the main shaft. The drill tip com-prises an initial work-piece contacting end portion which is displaced to one side of the axis, and a back-relieved primary cutting edge defined by a first slot in said drill tip and extending obliquely outwardly from said end portion on said one side of said axis, so as to provide initial rapid, eccen-tric drilling of the work-piece by the primary cutting edge.
Also provided is a back-relieved secondary cut-ting edge defined by a second slot in the drill tip and extending obliquely outwardly with respect to said axis on the opposite side of said axis from said primary cut-ting edge, so as to assist in drilling the work-piece after drilling has been started by the primary cutting edge.
L3~
The conical portion is preferably symmetrical with respect to the longitudinal axis, and extends from the portion of the drill tip containing the primary and secondary cutting edges divergingly towarcl the driven end of the screw, so that the conical portion serves to enlarge the opening made in the work-piece by the primary and secondary cutting edges as the d~illing device is rotated and forced further into the opening~
Preferably the conical portion diverges out-wardly and terminates at the diameter of the adjacentshaft, and when the device is a drill screw having threads on the shaft, the conical portion preferably diverges outwardly to and terminates at the root diameter oE the threads on the shaft. In the preferred form, each of ]5 the slots extends substantially throughout the length of the drill tip, and each slot defines a pair of slot faces extending substantially radially and substantially at right angles to each other.
With this arrangement, drilling an appropriate 20 enlargement of the opening in the work-piece may be ac-complished as much as ten times Easter than with o-ther commercially used drilling tips, without requiring ad-ditional pressure during the drilling operation. This makes it possible, for example, for one installing thermal 25 insulation on the exterior of a metal building to pass ~S~3~
the tip of the drill screw through the insulation and the underlying sheet metal, and to thread the screw into the thus Eormed opening and bring the washer-like plate tightly down against the insulation, easily and very quick-ly, thus saving time of installation and making the jobof the installer much easier.
Brief Descri~tion of Fi~ures These and other objects and features of the invention will be more readily understood from a consid~
eration of the Eollowing detailed description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure l is a front elevation view of a drill screw embodying the present invention, with the portion of the screw adjacent the driven or head end omitted for convenience and exposition;
Figure 2 is a top view of the screw of Fig.
l) taken along lines 2-2 of Fig. l;
Figure 3 is a side view of the screw of Fig.
l, as viewed along lines 3-3 of Fig. l;
Figure 4 is a side view of the device of Fig.
l; taken along lines 4-4 of Fig. l;
~5~
Figure 5 is a side v;ew of the device of Fig.
4, taken along lines 5-5 of Fig. 4;
Figure 6 is a perspective view of the drill tip of the device shown in the other figures;
Figure 7 is a vertical sectional view showing an assembly of thermal insulation, roof decking, fastener and holding plate, illustrating one particular use of a drill screw made according to the present invention;
and Figure 8 is a front view of a headed cylinder and a pair of opposed dies which are brought together to form the drîll point shown in the other figures.
~ ` b~=~
Referring now to the embodiment oE the inven-tion specifically shown in the drawings by way of exam-ple, in Fig. 7 a drill screw 10 having a driving head 12 extends through a holding plate 14 of metal or plastic, and urges the latter plate against the upper surface of a layer of thermal insulation 16 so as to secure it tight-ly to an underlying steel sheet 18 constituting a portionof the roof of a metal building. The screw is held secure-ly to the metal sheet 18 by the threads 20 of screw 10, f.~
which engage in a corresponding opening in sheet 18 which has been formed by the drilling action of the screw as it was installed. That is, with the insulation in place the installer places the screw 10 in a rotary drilling device and presses the working tip of the screw against the top of the insulation with the plate 14 in position under the head 1~; with the drilling tool turned on, the operator then presses directly downwardly normal to sheet 18, so that the screw drills its way through the layer of insulation and through the underlying metal sheet 18 until plate 14 is clamped tightly against the upper sur-face of thermal insulation 16 and the screw held by en-gagement of the threads 20 in the opening of plate 18 as mentioned above. While the drill tip of the invention, and the drill screw embodying it, represent particularly effective embodiments of the present invention, the in-vention may be embodied in other devices where appropriate.
Referring now to the other figures, it will be seen that the extreme forward end 30 of the drill tip which first engages the work-piece during the drilling operation is displaced laterally on one side of the longi-tudinal axis 32 of the screw, by the distance A. This initially-contacting end portion represents the beginning of a primary cutting edge 34 which extends obliquely out-wardly from the end portion 30 as shown in Fig. ~, forexample, and is back relieved to provide an effective cutting operation, as shown by the back-relief area 40 in Fig. 6, for example~
Upon initial contacting of the rotating end portion 30 oE the screw with the work-piece, the la~erally displaced end portion 30 rotates eccentrically, i.e. at a position displaced from the axis of rotation 32, an action which has been found to provide extremely rapid cutting of the metal and perforation thereof in a very short period of time. Typically, the depth B of the end portion 30 for which the primary cutting edge alone is providing the cu~ting action may be slightly larger than the thickness of the sheet metal being cutr so that per-Eoration is accomplished during the eccentric drilling operation. ~rom that point onward, both the primary cutting edge 34 and a secondary cutting edge 44 are op-erative to accomplish enlargement of the opening by cut-ting. Cutting edge 44 is on the opposite side of thelongitudinal axis from cutting edge 34, and is provided with back-relief 45.
The conical portion 50 oE the drill tip extends from the ends of the cutting edges positioned nearest the head end oE the screw to the adjacent end of the cy-lindrical portion of the shaft of the screw. That is~
the conical portion diverges from the ends of the primary and secondary cutting edges until it reaches a diameter substantially equal to that of the shaft. In this case, in which the shaft is threaded, the diameter achieved by the diverging conical portion is preEerably substan-tially equal to the root diameter oE the screw.
~ ~ 5 ~
The primary cutting edge 34 is formed not only by the back-relief portion but also by the substantially planar face 64 of slot 66/ the other face 68 of which slot lies in the plane substantially at right angles to face 64. Similarly, the secondary cutting edge 44 is formed by the planar face 72 of a slot 70, the other face 74 of which slot is substantially at right angles to face 72.
In operation then, as described above the screw is rotated and urged against the work-piece; the off-center end of the drill tip accomplishes initial extremely rapid drilling and perforation of the work-piece, after which the primary and secondary cutting edges both cut so as to enlarge the hole; the conical portion of the screw thereafter causes a further widening of the hole to the desired diam~ter of the shaft of the screw, primarily by a reaming or extruding type of widening actionO
As an example of the efficacy of the device of the invention, screws of the general type known in the prior art and de~cribed in the above-identiied patent typically require about 3 seconds to about 4 seconds to drill through and seat properly when the metal sheet being drilled is #22 gauge steel o -the type commonly used for metal buildings; with the device of the inven-~25~ B
tion, on the other hand, such drilling and seating ofthe screw is typically accomplished in from about 0.5 to 0.8 seconds in the specified ~18 gauge material.
The drill screw shown may be made by conven-tional techniques. Thus, a cylindrical shaft having aconventionally formed head thereon may, as shown in Fig.
8, be positioned between a pair of dies 80 and 82 in a pinch-pointing machine such that the two dies are auto-matically banged together to form the desired point; extra material extruded from the two halves of the dye will generally fall off by itself, but if not may be readily broken off. The shape of the cavities in the dies of course corresponds to the desired external shape of the drill tip. In the preferred form of the invention, the two surfaces ~2 and 94 of the dies are positioned so that they strike each other, and prevent urther closing of the dies toward each other, before the remainder of the dies strike each other, thereby leaving a narrow web such as 96 between the two formed halves of the drill tip.
The drill screw is thereafter heat treated in conventional manner to harden it.
Because of the increased speed of operation of the drill screw, an operator who is, for example, in-stalling thermal insulation on the roof of a metal build-ing may accomplish his task much more quickly, and muchmore easily.
~ ~ 5 ~
In one .representative example of a drill screw in accordance with the present invention~ a headed screw blank .157 in diameter is pinch-pointed between the two dies to form the drill tip. The end port.ion 30 of the drill tip is centered about .010 -~ .005 inch from the long.itudinal axis 32 of the screw blank. Both the primary and the secondary cutting edges are at 60 to the axis 32. The conical portion extends at an angle of 12.5 to the axis 32, and the slot edges 98 and 99 extend at 22.5 to the axis 32. The length oE the primary cutting edge is about 035 inch, and oE the secondary cutting edge about .040 inch. The thickness of the web may be about .008 inch. The threads may be rolled after pinch-pointing, with a major diameter of .215 inch and a minor diameter of .122 inch. The screw material may be carbon steel.
The drill ~ip configuration of the invention is useful in some cases where there are no threads adjacent the tip, or even no threads at all.
Thusl while the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments thereof in the interest of complete definiteness, it will be understood that it can be embodied in a variety of forms diverse from those specifically shown and des~ribed, without 25 departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claimsO
DRILL TIP AND FASTENER
EMPLOYING SAME
This invention relates to drill tips and to fasteners employing same; it relates especially to drill screws suitable for use in holding insulation to the walls or roofs of buildings using metal decks and walls.
Background of the Invention There are a variety of applications in which it is desired to form an opening through a sheet of metal, 10 rapidly and without requiring excessively large pressures.
It is often desirable to do this in con~unction with the insertion of a threaded drill screw into the opening so formed in the work-piece.
For example, in the building construction indus-15 try it is often desirable to secure material, such asthermal insulation, to the sheet metal which forms the walls or roofs oE met~l buildings. To do so, it is com-mon to employ a so-called drill screw which, when rota-tionally driven by a drill tool9 pierces the insulation 20 and sheet metal and then screws itself into and partially through the hole formed in the sheet metal, until a large washer-like plate under the head of the drill screw is pulled tightly against the exterior of the insulation to secure it in place.
The sheet metal used for this purpose is usually of #18 to #~6 yauge steel, corresponding to sheet thicknesses of from about .050 to .030 inch. While steel sheet having a thickness near the lower end of this range (e.g. #22 gauge) can usually be drilled and the drill screw inserted and seated quite easily and quickly, the time and force necessary to insert a drill screw properly in thicker steel, e.g. ~18 gauge steel, are often much greater than is desirable, and with some drill screws this cannot be accomplished at all.
One type of drill screw which has been employed for such purposes is similar to that shown in USA Patent No. 3,221,588 of G. L. Wieber issued December 7, 1965.
While such a drill screw will generally pierce the steel sheet and seat itself in ~22 gauge steel in about 3 to 4 seconds with an applied force of about 30 pounds, in the case of #18 gauge steel it may more typically require about 6 to 8 seconds, and in some cases it may not succeed in piercing the metal at all.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a new and useful drill tip and a fastener employing same.
Another object is to provide a drill tip and drill screw employing same which operate quickly and well, even in relatively thick steel sheets.
l3~
Summary of the Invention These and other objects of the invention are achieved by the provision of a drilling device comprising a shaft having a driving end adapted to be rotat:ionally driven to rotate the shaft about its longitudinal axis~
a drill tip ~ormed on said shaft at the end thereof op-posite from the driving end, and a conical portion extend-ing from the drill tip and diverging outwardly to merge at its larger end with the main shaft. The drill tip com-prises an initial work-piece contacting end portion which is displaced to one side of the axis, and a back-relieved primary cutting edge defined by a first slot in said drill tip and extending obliquely outwardly from said end portion on said one side of said axis, so as to provide initial rapid, eccen-tric drilling of the work-piece by the primary cutting edge.
Also provided is a back-relieved secondary cut-ting edge defined by a second slot in the drill tip and extending obliquely outwardly with respect to said axis on the opposite side of said axis from said primary cut-ting edge, so as to assist in drilling the work-piece after drilling has been started by the primary cutting edge.
L3~
The conical portion is preferably symmetrical with respect to the longitudinal axis, and extends from the portion of the drill tip containing the primary and secondary cutting edges divergingly towarcl the driven end of the screw, so that the conical portion serves to enlarge the opening made in the work-piece by the primary and secondary cutting edges as the d~illing device is rotated and forced further into the opening~
Preferably the conical portion diverges out-wardly and terminates at the diameter of the adjacentshaft, and when the device is a drill screw having threads on the shaft, the conical portion preferably diverges outwardly to and terminates at the root diameter oE the threads on the shaft. In the preferred form, each of ]5 the slots extends substantially throughout the length of the drill tip, and each slot defines a pair of slot faces extending substantially radially and substantially at right angles to each other.
With this arrangement, drilling an appropriate 20 enlargement of the opening in the work-piece may be ac-complished as much as ten times Easter than with o-ther commercially used drilling tips, without requiring ad-ditional pressure during the drilling operation. This makes it possible, for example, for one installing thermal 25 insulation on the exterior of a metal building to pass ~S~3~
the tip of the drill screw through the insulation and the underlying sheet metal, and to thread the screw into the thus Eormed opening and bring the washer-like plate tightly down against the insulation, easily and very quick-ly, thus saving time of installation and making the jobof the installer much easier.
Brief Descri~tion of Fi~ures These and other objects and features of the invention will be more readily understood from a consid~
eration of the Eollowing detailed description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure l is a front elevation view of a drill screw embodying the present invention, with the portion of the screw adjacent the driven or head end omitted for convenience and exposition;
Figure 2 is a top view of the screw of Fig.
l) taken along lines 2-2 of Fig. l;
Figure 3 is a side view of the screw of Fig.
l, as viewed along lines 3-3 of Fig. l;
Figure 4 is a side view of the device of Fig.
l; taken along lines 4-4 of Fig. l;
~5~
Figure 5 is a side v;ew of the device of Fig.
4, taken along lines 5-5 of Fig. 4;
Figure 6 is a perspective view of the drill tip of the device shown in the other figures;
Figure 7 is a vertical sectional view showing an assembly of thermal insulation, roof decking, fastener and holding plate, illustrating one particular use of a drill screw made according to the present invention;
and Figure 8 is a front view of a headed cylinder and a pair of opposed dies which are brought together to form the drîll point shown in the other figures.
~ ` b~=~
Referring now to the embodiment oE the inven-tion specifically shown in the drawings by way of exam-ple, in Fig. 7 a drill screw 10 having a driving head 12 extends through a holding plate 14 of metal or plastic, and urges the latter plate against the upper surface of a layer of thermal insulation 16 so as to secure it tight-ly to an underlying steel sheet 18 constituting a portionof the roof of a metal building. The screw is held secure-ly to the metal sheet 18 by the threads 20 of screw 10, f.~
which engage in a corresponding opening in sheet 18 which has been formed by the drilling action of the screw as it was installed. That is, with the insulation in place the installer places the screw 10 in a rotary drilling device and presses the working tip of the screw against the top of the insulation with the plate 14 in position under the head 1~; with the drilling tool turned on, the operator then presses directly downwardly normal to sheet 18, so that the screw drills its way through the layer of insulation and through the underlying metal sheet 18 until plate 14 is clamped tightly against the upper sur-face of thermal insulation 16 and the screw held by en-gagement of the threads 20 in the opening of plate 18 as mentioned above. While the drill tip of the invention, and the drill screw embodying it, represent particularly effective embodiments of the present invention, the in-vention may be embodied in other devices where appropriate.
Referring now to the other figures, it will be seen that the extreme forward end 30 of the drill tip which first engages the work-piece during the drilling operation is displaced laterally on one side of the longi-tudinal axis 32 of the screw, by the distance A. This initially-contacting end portion represents the beginning of a primary cutting edge 34 which extends obliquely out-wardly from the end portion 30 as shown in Fig. ~, forexample, and is back relieved to provide an effective cutting operation, as shown by the back-relief area 40 in Fig. 6, for example~
Upon initial contacting of the rotating end portion 30 oE the screw with the work-piece, the la~erally displaced end portion 30 rotates eccentrically, i.e. at a position displaced from the axis of rotation 32, an action which has been found to provide extremely rapid cutting of the metal and perforation thereof in a very short period of time. Typically, the depth B of the end portion 30 for which the primary cutting edge alone is providing the cu~ting action may be slightly larger than the thickness of the sheet metal being cutr so that per-Eoration is accomplished during the eccentric drilling operation. ~rom that point onward, both the primary cutting edge 34 and a secondary cutting edge 44 are op-erative to accomplish enlargement of the opening by cut-ting. Cutting edge 44 is on the opposite side of thelongitudinal axis from cutting edge 34, and is provided with back-relief 45.
The conical portion 50 oE the drill tip extends from the ends of the cutting edges positioned nearest the head end oE the screw to the adjacent end of the cy-lindrical portion of the shaft of the screw. That is~
the conical portion diverges from the ends of the primary and secondary cutting edges until it reaches a diameter substantially equal to that of the shaft. In this case, in which the shaft is threaded, the diameter achieved by the diverging conical portion is preEerably substan-tially equal to the root diameter oE the screw.
~ ~ 5 ~
The primary cutting edge 34 is formed not only by the back-relief portion but also by the substantially planar face 64 of slot 66/ the other face 68 of which slot lies in the plane substantially at right angles to face 64. Similarly, the secondary cutting edge 44 is formed by the planar face 72 of a slot 70, the other face 74 of which slot is substantially at right angles to face 72.
In operation then, as described above the screw is rotated and urged against the work-piece; the off-center end of the drill tip accomplishes initial extremely rapid drilling and perforation of the work-piece, after which the primary and secondary cutting edges both cut so as to enlarge the hole; the conical portion of the screw thereafter causes a further widening of the hole to the desired diam~ter of the shaft of the screw, primarily by a reaming or extruding type of widening actionO
As an example of the efficacy of the device of the invention, screws of the general type known in the prior art and de~cribed in the above-identiied patent typically require about 3 seconds to about 4 seconds to drill through and seat properly when the metal sheet being drilled is #22 gauge steel o -the type commonly used for metal buildings; with the device of the inven-~25~ B
tion, on the other hand, such drilling and seating ofthe screw is typically accomplished in from about 0.5 to 0.8 seconds in the specified ~18 gauge material.
The drill screw shown may be made by conven-tional techniques. Thus, a cylindrical shaft having aconventionally formed head thereon may, as shown in Fig.
8, be positioned between a pair of dies 80 and 82 in a pinch-pointing machine such that the two dies are auto-matically banged together to form the desired point; extra material extruded from the two halves of the dye will generally fall off by itself, but if not may be readily broken off. The shape of the cavities in the dies of course corresponds to the desired external shape of the drill tip. In the preferred form of the invention, the two surfaces ~2 and 94 of the dies are positioned so that they strike each other, and prevent urther closing of the dies toward each other, before the remainder of the dies strike each other, thereby leaving a narrow web such as 96 between the two formed halves of the drill tip.
The drill screw is thereafter heat treated in conventional manner to harden it.
Because of the increased speed of operation of the drill screw, an operator who is, for example, in-stalling thermal insulation on the roof of a metal build-ing may accomplish his task much more quickly, and muchmore easily.
~ ~ 5 ~
In one .representative example of a drill screw in accordance with the present invention~ a headed screw blank .157 in diameter is pinch-pointed between the two dies to form the drill tip. The end port.ion 30 of the drill tip is centered about .010 -~ .005 inch from the long.itudinal axis 32 of the screw blank. Both the primary and the secondary cutting edges are at 60 to the axis 32. The conical portion extends at an angle of 12.5 to the axis 32, and the slot edges 98 and 99 extend at 22.5 to the axis 32. The length oE the primary cutting edge is about 035 inch, and oE the secondary cutting edge about .040 inch. The thickness of the web may be about .008 inch. The threads may be rolled after pinch-pointing, with a major diameter of .215 inch and a minor diameter of .122 inch. The screw material may be carbon steel.
The drill ~ip configuration of the invention is useful in some cases where there are no threads adjacent the tip, or even no threads at all.
Thusl while the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments thereof in the interest of complete definiteness, it will be understood that it can be embodied in a variety of forms diverse from those specifically shown and des~ribed, without 25 departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claimsO
Claims (4)
IS CLAIMED ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS:
1. A drill device comprising:
(a) a shaft having a driving end adapted to be rotationally driven to rotate said shaft about its longitudinal axis;
(b) a drill tip formed on said shaft, comprising (1) an initial work-piece contacting and portion which is displaced to one side of said axis;
(2) a back-relieved primary cutting edge defined by a first slot in said drill tip and extending obliquely outwardly from said end portion on said one side of said axis and at a predetermined first angle with respect to said axis, so as to provide initial eccentric drilling of the work-piece by said primary cutting edge;
(3) a back-relieved secondary cutting edge defined by a second slot in said drill tip and extending obliquely outwardly at a predetermined second angle with respect to said axis and opposite said primary cutting edge with respect to said axis, so as to assist said primary cutting edge in drilling said work-piece after drilling has been started by said primary cutting edge;
and (c) a conical portion symmetrical with respect to said axis and diverging in the direction toward said driving end at a third angle to said axis smaller than said first and second angles, said conical portion extending from the portion of said drill tip containing said primary and secondary cutting edges to the diameter of said shaft, whereby said conical portion serves to enlarge the opening made in said work-piece by said primary and secondary cutting edges as said device is rotated and forced further into said opening.
(a) a shaft having a driving end adapted to be rotationally driven to rotate said shaft about its longitudinal axis;
(b) a drill tip formed on said shaft, comprising (1) an initial work-piece contacting and portion which is displaced to one side of said axis;
(2) a back-relieved primary cutting edge defined by a first slot in said drill tip and extending obliquely outwardly from said end portion on said one side of said axis and at a predetermined first angle with respect to said axis, so as to provide initial eccentric drilling of the work-piece by said primary cutting edge;
(3) a back-relieved secondary cutting edge defined by a second slot in said drill tip and extending obliquely outwardly at a predetermined second angle with respect to said axis and opposite said primary cutting edge with respect to said axis, so as to assist said primary cutting edge in drilling said work-piece after drilling has been started by said primary cutting edge;
and (c) a conical portion symmetrical with respect to said axis and diverging in the direction toward said driving end at a third angle to said axis smaller than said first and second angles, said conical portion extending from the portion of said drill tip containing said primary and secondary cutting edges to the diameter of said shaft, whereby said conical portion serves to enlarge the opening made in said work-piece by said primary and secondary cutting edges as said device is rotated and forced further into said opening.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein said device is a drill screw having threads on said shaft and said conical portion diverges outwardly to and terminates at the root diameter of said threads on said shaft.
3. The device of claim 1, wherein each of said slots extends substantially throughout the length of said drill tip.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein each of said slots extends substantially axially of said tip, and each defines a pair of slot faces extending substantially radially and substantially at right angles to each other.
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| CA000476754A CA1251348A (en) | 1985-03-18 | 1985-03-18 | Drill tip and fastener employing same |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| CA000476754A CA1251348A (en) | 1985-03-18 | 1985-03-18 | Drill tip and fastener employing same |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| CA1251348A true CA1251348A (en) | 1989-03-21 |
Family
ID=4130049
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| CA000476754A Expired CA1251348A (en) | 1985-03-18 | 1985-03-18 | Drill tip and fastener employing same |
Country Status (1)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| CA (1) | CA1251348A (en) |
-
1985
- 1985-03-18 CA CA000476754A patent/CA1251348A/en not_active Expired
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| Date | Code | Title | Description |
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