farmer56 here... hey guys has any one drilled and counter sunk side plate holes on penn 60, 155, 160,or other reels .... some i think, but every time i think ,i get in trouble, are bakelite ..... i will buy any bit ,end mill bit what ever it takes ......need sizing style brand.... maybe im nuts but i though about adding extra posts to some of my reels....will the side plates only chip ...farming this year has been challenging but then i think about the challenges texas and florida are golng threw now .... really puts things in perspective farmer56 out
My concern would be the plate cracking. It is thinnest there.
farmer56 here hi shark hunter ........ my thought was the factory drilled the side plates why cant we ... or do the age of the plates make them brittle.... someone out there must have tried it... if not once fall work is over ...mid. nov. i will try drilling and counter sinking extra holes in a crappie junk side plate farmer56 out
The age of the plates will definitely make them more brittle.
I concentrate more on the gears, frame, drivetrain, drags and handle upgrades.
On the 155's, I upgrade the screws to socket head stainless.
I'm not deterring you. JMO
farmer56 here . shark hunter you are not deterring me i really like seeing multiple posts , has that look of pure power ....
I think you could do it with low speed and lubrication to keep it from over-heating. The screws will tell you what bit and countersink to use.
-steve
I also think it can be done with the same caveats that Steve mentioned. Use a drill press. They're all bakelite, but I know it can be drilled, and I don't know for sure that old bakelite is any more brittle than new bakelite, it's pretty stable stuff. Drill press, slow speed, and lubrication should do it. Let us know how it goes.
farmer56 here me being a non-machinist thought super high speed drilling ..thanks for advice...farmer56 out
Start with the smallest bit you can and work your way up to the right size. Drilling too fast will heat up and possibly burn the plate
I use to drill and mill lots of bakelite. I would purchase solid carbide drills (not carbide tipped). This is because bakelite dulls tooling very quickly but for just one or two plates high speed steel will probably be okay. Just use nice fresh quality bits to avoid small chips around the edges of the holes. If you have some old plates practice on those first. You'll likely be counter-boring for the screw heads. I always had the cleanest cuts with solid carbide end-mills with spiral or twisted flutes rather than the straight flutes with carbide inserts. Sharpness, speed and a solid clamp or fixture are your friends.
Mike
And maybe try running standard bits in reverse to start the hole so they don't grab a chip.......
farmer56 here thanks for all the advise , once fall harvest is over i will attempt on broken plate ... by mid. nov. i will give report farmer56 out