Required conical and countersunk holes in wood to be joined for storm blinds. Matching the pan heads to the stainless steel pan head screws I used was easy. I've never had a countersink that didn't need cleaning every few holes. (Wood dust is clogging the sink area and causing an incorrect depth.) I guess someone will eventually invent a device that cleans itself, but so far it's the best I've used.
I used this drill bit to drill and countersink many of the screws in custom kitchen cabinets. You can tell right away that this is an excellent beat. The workmanship is perfect and the quality is very high. The tapered bit makes a big difference β it allows you to get the strongest "biteβ out of the screw while making screw insertion easier than with a non-tapered bit. You can also easily adjust the depth of the drill. It's perfect for what it was designed for. I would unreservedly recommendβ¦
I built a wooden boat and drilled hundreds of holes with this drill. Now I've built a second small boat using the same tool. By my count I've drilled a few thousand holes with this bit. Now he's dead. The tip is broken and one of the hex set screws has snapped off. I'll buy the same beat again because I feel it did a good job. I haven't been kind to it in normal use and have dropped it on the concrete floor more times than I can count.