Whether you are drilling the cannon's bore or a carriage hole for one of those long bolts, you should be able to drill a straight hole. Here is a method which
will not fail to produce a straight, correctly sized hole.
A Method for Drilling a Straight Hole
By the Seacoast Artillery guys Ever since I was a kid, I always wondered how a gunsmith could drill a hole of the required straightness to accept a long ramrod under a Kentucky Longrifle barrel. When Mike and I attended the Colorado School of Trades in 76 and 77, we found out. A straight hole can be drilled most easily when it is drilled with a bit that is designed NOT TO CUT on its sides. Twist drills cut on their sides and are notoriously ineffective for producing long, straight holes in wood. In a gundrill, only the material ahead of the drill bit is removed. The drill, itself, must be straight as well. Only a Gundrill works this way, and it is the tool we always choose when long, straight, precisely located holes are needed. We measured some of the gundrilled holes we recently drilled in the white oak, upper carriage pieces for the 7 Treble-Banded Brooke Rifle we are currently building. The results with photos are below.
First, these holes are .161 Dia. and approx. 10 long, interrupted by a 1.25 gap. The grain of the separate pieces of white oak drilled is NOT oriented parallel or square to each other, but at a 45 deg. angle. This grain orientation WILL bend a twist drill
The matrix below is the result of our surface plate inspection using a transfer stand and a .0005 test indicator. All the carriage piece-parts sets are numbered to avoid confusion during assembly and to help in data collection for quality assurance.
Part No. Deviation from .760 +/- .005 (Deviation from centerline of vertical pc.)
Left
Middle
Right
.
1 .764 .763 .762
2 .759 .763 .760
3 .764 .763 .764
4 .765 .762 .763
5 .760 .764 .761 .76
6 .761 .761 .764
7 .763 .765 .762
8 .757 .761 .758
The matrix below is a measurement of the distance from the base of the vertical pc. to the breakout of the gundrilled hole with the front of the vertical support pc. Measured directly with a 6 Caliper.
Part No. 2.365 +/- .005 (Base to breakout distance)
1 2.365
2 2.360
3 2.364
4 2.367
5 2.364
6 2.361
7 2.361
8 2.366
Professionally produced, carbide tipped, metal-drilling, gundrills produce holes of incredible straightness; usually, we have found, the 17 to 22 holes we drill in 4150 ordnance steel are from .002 to .003 of the .005 total allowed on our straightness specifications.
The very large 1.5 gundrill shown in the collection photo was produced in our shop for very long gundrilling in oak and the straightness of those large holes is very consistent at .010 to .020. It has a compressed air hole off-center at the tip.
The odd looking gundrill is a 15 degree per side tapered chamber gundrill which has a small hemisphere at the bottom and a cylinder at the top for the Brooke rifle chamber.
For accurate results you need to orient the parts to be drilled carefully and clamp securely without damaging the wood. A centerdrill to start the hole is a very good idea.
The small gundrills were made in our shop from drillrod and are milled carefully to duplicate professional metal-drilling gundrills, although they drill carriage wood, white oak, for us. The same angles work for metal or wood.
We would be happy to answer any questions you may have.
Regards,
Tracy and Mike