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Choosing the Right Drill Point Angle: How Geometry Determines Hole Quality, Tool Life, and Productivity

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Drilling may appear to be one of the simplest machining operations, yet it remains one of the most misunderstood.

Why do some drills cut smoothly while others chatter?
Why do identical drills perform differently on different materials?
Why does one drill last thousands of holes while another fails prematurely?
In many cases, the answer starts at the tip.

The drill point angle—together with the point geometry behind it—largely determines cutting forces, chip formation, heat generation, centering behavior, and ultimately the success of your drilling operation.

There is no universal “best” point angle. Instead, optimal performance comes from selecting the right combination of point angle and point geometry for a specific material, machine setup, and production objective.

This article explains how drill point angles work, how modern geometries improve performance, and how to select the right configuration for your application.

What Exactly Is a Drill Point Angle?

The drill point angle is the included angle between the two main cutting lips at the tip of the drill.

It directly influences:
  • How quickly cutting edges engage the workpiece
  • Distribution of cutting forces
  • Chip thickness and shape
  • Strength of the cutting edge
  • Heat concentration at the tool tip

 

However, the point angle alone does not define performance. Modern drills combine the angle with engineered point geometries that modify the chisel edge, rake angles, and clearance surfaces.

In practice, drill performance is defined by:

Point Angle + Chisel Edge Geometry + Lip Relief + Web Thickness + Coating

Why Does Point Angle Matter So Much?

The point angle determines how aggressively a drill penetrates material and how loads are distributed across the cutting edges.

General trends:
Smaller angles (sharper point)
  • Lower thrust force
  • Faster penetration
  • Weaker cutting edge
Larger angles (flatter point)
  • Stronger cutting edge
  • Better wear resistance
  • Higher thrust force
Choosing incorrectly can lead to:
  • Edge chipping
  • Premature flank wear
  • Built-up edge
  • Poor hole roundness
  • Burr formation
  • Excessive heat

Which Point Angles Are Most Common in Metal Cutting?

Two angles dominate industrial drilling:
  • 118°
  • 135°

 

They remain popular because they provide broad application coverage and work well with modern multi-facet geometries.

Basic Characteristics

Point Angle

Edge Strength

Thrust Force

Typical Materials

118°

Moderate

Lower

Aluminum, mild steel, plastics

135°

High

Higher

Stainless steel, alloy steel, titanium

Why Is 118° Still Widely Used?

The 118° point angle produces a relatively sharp cutting edge. This allows easier penetration into softer materials and reduces required thrust force.

Typical advantages:
  • Good cutting sharpness
  • Lower axial load
  • Smooth cutting action
  • Economical to manufacture

 

Typical applications:
  • Aluminum alloys
  • Copper alloys
  • Low-carbon steels
  • Plastics
  • Thin sheet materials

 

For general-purpose HSS drills and entry-level carbide drills, 118° remains a cost-effective solution.

However, traditional 118° conical points suffer from a wide chisel edge, which generates extrusion rather than cutting. This increases heat and reduces accuracy.

Modern 118° drills almost always incorporate split-point or multi-facet geometry to eliminate this weakness.

Why Has 135° Become the Industry Standard for Harder Materials?

A 135° point angle produces a flatter cutting face, which strengthens the cutting edge and improves resistance to micro-chipping.

Advantages:
  • Stronger cutting lip
  • Better wear resistance
  • Improved edge stability
  • Suitable for higher cutting speeds

 

Typical applications:
  • Stainless steels
  • Alloy steels
  • Tool steels
  • Titanium alloys
  • Nickel-based alloys

 

Most premium carbide twist drills for steel machining today are built around 135° geometry combined with advanced split points.

Recommended Point Angles by Workpiece Material

Material Group

Typical Hardness (HB)

Recommended Point Angle

Aluminum alloys

40–120

118°

Copper / Brass

60–120

118°

Mild steel

120–180

118°

Medium carbon steel

180–220

120°–130°

Alloy steel

200–300

135°

Stainless steel

180–260

135°

Cast iron

180–240

120°–135°

Titanium alloys

300+

135°

Nickel alloys

300+

135°

These values are widely referenced in tooling catalogs and machining handbooks.

Is Point Angle Enough? Why Geometry Matters More Than Ever

Early twist drills relied on a simple conical point. This design creates a wide chisel edge at the center.

The chisel edge:
  • Does not cut
  • Pushes material
  • Generates heat
  • Requires high thrust force

 

Modern point geometries modify the chisel edge to:
  • Create true cutting action
  • Reduce thrust force
  • Improve centering
  • Enhance chip evacuation

 

Today’s performance gains come primarily from geometry design rather than angle alone.

What Is a Split Point (S-Point) Geometry?

Split point drills feature a thinned web and divided chisel edge.

Key benefits:
  • Self-centering behavior
  • Reduced thrust force
  • Easier penetration
  • Less walking
  • Better hole position accuracy

 

Split points are extremely common on:
  • 118° carbide drills
  • 135° carbide drills
  • Cobalt HSS drills

 

Most modern CNC drills use split-point geometry as a baseline.

What Is a Multi-Facet (Polygonal) Point?

Multi-facet points use multiple planar surfaces rather than a smooth cone.

Benefits:
  • Shortened chisel edge
  • Controlled rake angles
  • Lower heat generation
  • Stable cutting action

 

Compared to traditional conical points:
  • Thrust force can drop by ~40–50%
  • Heat generation can drop by ~50–60%

 

These values are frequently cited in tooling manufacturer performance studies.

What Is a Helical (Curved) Point Geometry?

Helical or S-shaped points create a curved cutting profile at the center.

Advantages:
  • Excellent self-centering
  • High hole roundness
  • Close-to-nominal cutting diameter

 

Often used in:
  • Precision drilling
  • Thin-wall parts
  • Applications without spotting

What Is Racon®-Type Geometry?

Racon-style points use continuously varying point angles from center to periphery.

Benefits:
  • Very low cutting forces
  • Smooth chip formation
  • Extended tool life

 

Limitation:
  • Not self-centering
  • Requires guide bush or pilot hole

 

Often applied in deep-hole drilling systems.

What Is Bickford™-Type Geometry?

Bickford-style geometry combines:
  • Split point characteristics
  • Racon-style load distribution

 

Advantages:
  • Self-centering
  • High feed capability
  • Long tool life
  • Burr-free breakthrough

 

Used in high-volume production drilling.

Geometry Comparison Overview

Geometry Type

Self-Centering

Thrust Force

Typical Use

Conical

No

High

Low-cost general drills

Split Point

Yes

Low

Universal CNC drilling

Multi-Facet

Yes

Very Low

High-performance drilling

Helical Point

Yes

Very Low

Precision holes

Racon-Type

No

Very Low

Guided drilling

Bickford-Type

Yes

Very Low

High-feed production

How Should Point Angle and Geometry Be Combined?

Effective combinations:
  • 118° + Split Point→ Aluminum, mild steel
  • 135° + Split Point→ Stainless steel, alloy steel
  • 135° + Multi-Facet→ High-speed steel machining
  • 135° + Helical Point→ Precision applications
  • 135° + Bickford-Type→ High-feed CNC production

How Does Coating Interact with Point Geometry?

Geometry determines cutting mechanics. Coating determines thermal and wear behavior.

Common pairings:
  • AlTiN or AlCrN + 135° split point → Stainless steel
  • TiB2 + 118° split point → Aluminum
  • Nanocomposite coatings + multi-facet point → High-speed machining

 

Coatings cannot compensate for incorrect geometry, but correct geometry allows coatings to reach full potential.

What Role Does Web Thickness Play?

As drill diameter increases:
  • Web thickness increases
  • Chisel edge widens

 

Modern drills use:
  • Web thinning
  • Split-point thinning
  • Central thinning

 

These features directly improve performance more than changing point angle alone.

How Does Point Angle Affect Tool Life?

Higher point angles:
  • Reduce edge chipping
  • Lower micro-fracture risk
  • Improve wear uniformity

 

Lower point angles:
  • Sharper edge
  • Higher wear rate

 

For carbide drills, 135° is generally preferred for tool life stability.

Typical Failure Modes from Wrong Point Selection

Symptom

Likely Cause

Chipping

Point angle too small

Burning

Too much thrust / poor geometry

Walking

No self-centering geometry

Poor roundness

Conical point

Burrs

Wrong angle or geometry

Product-Level Perspective: What Should Buyers Look For?

When evaluating carbide drill product series:
  • Clearly specified point angle
  • Clearly specified point geometry type
  • Optimized web thinning
  • Coating matched to material group
  • Dedicated aluminum vs steel series

 

High-end manufacturers usually offer:
  • Aluminum series → 118°, polished flute, TiB2
  • Steel series → 135°, split/multi-facet, AlTiN
  • Stainless series → 135°, reinforced edge, AlCrN

Practical Selection Workflow

1.Identify workpiece material

2.Choose point angle from material group

3.Choose geometry for centering and thrust control

4.Match coating

5.Set correct cutting parameters

 

This sequence produces far more reliable results than angle-first thinking alone.

Final Thoughts

While almost any drill can create a hole, only the correct combination of point angle and geometry can create holes efficiently, repeatedly, and economically.

Modern drilling performance is no longer defined by angle alone—it is driven by geometry engineering.

Selecting the right point design will:

  • Increase tool life
  • Improve hole accuracy
  • Reduce cycle time
  • Lower cost per hole

 

In high-performance machining, geometry is not a detail—it is the foundation.

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