Dne'
Well-Known Member
Hi! I learned from a Restoration guy here in Houston, Surefire restoration(Bruce), he uses a cordless drill on slow speed. He states with a high speed drill you will drill through both panels most of the time and burn your bit up as well! I used the bit from HF with the agressive looking teeth and pilot tip, and that's what he uses as well. But I would drill a small pilot divot so the pilot guide would stay in place so it wouldn't walk, or I didn't drill all the way through both panels. I was always fooled a bit by the spotwelds, and would be off by a fraction and have to do more prying to separate the panels. I know better now! Hope this helps! ; )
ps: would it be possible to devise a "depth stop" on the bit? like a piece of vacuum line or something that wouldn't give too much. you just need something to guide the depth of the bit! ; )
ps: would it be possible to devise a "depth stop" on the bit? like a piece of vacuum line or something that wouldn't give too much. you just need something to guide the depth of the bit! ; )
"Robs66Coupe" said:Thanks. Any tips? I'm trying to save as much as I can, but we keep drilling through both panels. Is there a trick to only drilling through the top half?