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First impressions in the shop floor
Deep Hole Drilling pulls the job apart and puts it back together with real precision. The trick isn’t only the machine, but how paths are set and guards aligned. A compact rig with a sturdy spindle can eat tough steel, yet a misaligned quill will chatter and dent the work. Operators watch the drill’s entry, the way coolant swirls up the flute, and how the workpiece clamps under pressure. Tiny decisions—tool nose radius, feed rhythm, even the noise level—these matter. In practice, a calm checklist beats improv every time, because it maps the chain from entry to exit and keeps the hole true to size and straight as a laser line.
