How to Drill Hardened Steel (Without Burning Your Bit)

Author Zhonghuan Performance Lab
Published 2025-10-05
Reading Time 6 min read
How to Drill Hardened Steel (Without Burning Your Bit)
HSS Cobalt
Figure 1.0: How to Drill Hardened Steel (Without Burning Your Bit) Overview

Key Specification / Takeaways

  • 01. Professional technical insights and practical recommendations
  • 02. Best practices based on real engineering experience
  • 03. In-depth analysis of materials science and manufacturing processes

Why Ordinary Bits Die Instantly

Burnt HSS drill bit tip

Hardened steel (like Grade 8 bolts, knife blades, or leaf springs) has a high Rockwell hardness. When you try to drill it with a standard HSS black oxide bit, the friction generates massive heat immediately.

Because standard HSS loses its hardness at around 500°C, the cutting edge literally softens and rounds off. You aren't cutting anymore; you are friction welding.

M35 (5%) vs. M42 (8%) Cobalt

M35 vs M42 Cobalt Drill Bit

The solution is Cobalt. Cobalt increases the "Red Hardness" of the steel, allowing it to stay hard even when glowing hot.

M35 Cobalt (5%)

The Pro's Choice.

  • Can drill stainless, cast iron, and medium-hard steel.
  • Tough enough to use in a Hand Drill without snapping easily.
  • Easier to sharpen than M42.

M42 Cobalt (8%)

The Machinist's Choice.

  • Drills the hardest metals (Inconel, Titanium, Hardened Steel).
  • More Brittle: Avoid using in a hand drill if possible. Any wobbling effectively snaps the cutting lips.
  • Best for Drill Presses.

Technique: Pressure, Speed, and Heat

Drilling hardened steel is not a race. It is a slow, heavy push.

  1. Center Punch: You MUST use a center punch to keep the bit from walking.
  2. Slow RPM: Consult our Speeds & Feeds Chart. Think "Low Gear".
  3. High Pressure: You need to push hard enough so the bit creates continuous chips, not dust. If you see dust, you are rubbing (work hardening).
  4. Coolant: Keep it wet. Heat is the enemy.

When to Upgrade to Carbide

If "Cobalt" isn't working, the steel might be fully hardened (60+ HRC). In this case, HSS (even M42) will fail.

You need a Solid Carbide or Carbide Tipped drill bit. Use these only in a drill press. They are extremely hard but shatter like glass if you tilt them.

#Hardened Steel #Cobalt Drill Bits #M35 vs M42 #Metalworking