Today, twist drills are made on computerized grinders
Go back pre computers - picture a horizontal mill/grinder with a wheel the thickness of the Flute spinning
The table of the mill is set so the the wheel sits at the angle of the flute, and the drill blank is in a rotary fixture on the table, so that when the table is moved (in what is called the X axis) the drill blank rotates at the appropriate rate
You lower the wheel a .001 or so, traverse the table, and repeat - either between passes, or at the end, index the blank 180 degs to do both flutes, OR in a production setting (aka you're a drill bit company), your grinder will actually have two wheels, with the wheels offset to the table, but the bit still rotates as the table traverses, so you gring BOTH sides of the bit at once
A twist drill is a drill that has deep helical grooves from the point going up the shank and is used for medal cutting.
In wood work, a twist drill would be used for making small holes where an ordinary wood drill (auger) would probably split the wood.
A Twist Drill, could be used on a number of machines, normally a Drill Press, but also on either a Lathe or Milling machine. for certain applications.
A standard drill bit.
The parts of a twist drill include the shank, neck, flutes, land, body clearance, and cutting edge. The cutting edge is the point of the drill bit and does the actual cutting.
i dont know tbh
From 0.3mm upwards
118 DEGREE
The land on a twist drill is located between the flutes. It is the raised ridge or surface that extends along the length of the drill bit. The main purpose of the land is to provide stability and support to the cutting edges of the drill bit.
It drills straight holes. In other words it is a perfectly normal drill bit.
It's a plain old ordinary drill that will fit in a conventional drill chuck.They specify that now so it doesn't get confuse with all the new types. (Hex, SDS, splined etc.)
to auger the chips out of the hole.