Drill It. Ream It. Done.
Hole Making & Reaming Tools UAE
Twist drills, cobalt drill sets, step drills, U-drills, machine reamers, hand reamers, countersinks, counterbores and drill chucks — YG1, Tooltech and San Tools brands stocked in Dubai for CNC, manual machine and toolroom hole-making operations.
YG1 Multi-1 HSS Jobber Drill
DIN 338 · 2–13 mm in 0.1 mm steps
Premium HSS jobber drill ground to DIN 338. Self-centering point, 30° helix flute — the workhorse for general steel, alloy, and aluminium drilling.
YG1 Cobalt M35 Jobber Drill Set
DIN 338 · HSS-Co M35 · 1–13 mm
25-piece cobalt set, 0.5 mm increments. 700°C red-hardness for stainless, hardened steel, and Inconel where plain HSS glazes.
YG1 Step Drill HSS 4–32 mm
15 steps · TiN-coated · 10 mm parallel shank
Single tool covers 4–32 mm in sheet metal, plastic, plywood and thin-wall tube. Self-deburring; leaves a 90° chamfer ready for countersunk fasteners.
YG1 HSS 90° Countersink Set
DIN 335 Form C · 5 pcs · 6.3–25 mm
Three-flute 90° countersinks for chatter-free chamfering. Covers screw heads M3 through M16 in steel, cast iron, aluminium and plastic.
YG1 Machine Reamer Set H7
DIN 212 · HSS-Co · 6 / 8 / 10 / 12 / 14 / 16 mm
6-flute chucking reamers ground to H7 for press-fit bearing and dowel-pin bores. Ra ~0.8 μm N6 finish in steel and cast iron.
YG1 Hand Reamer Set H7
DIN 206 · HSS · 4 / 6 / 8 / 10 / 12 / 16 mm
Square-drive hand reamers for tap-wrench operation. Long taper lead for forgiving alignment in toolroom and field repair.
CNC Indexable U-Drill 13–50 mm
3D / 4D length · SP indexable inserts
High-precision indexable U-drill for CNC mills and turning centres. Replaceable inserts; runs at 4–6× HSS speed with through-coolant flute.
HSS Center Drills A-Type Set
60° · Double-headed · 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6 mm
Six-piece centre-drill / spotting-drill set, 60° included angle. Used to start a precision pilot before drilling, or to spot a centre for lathe tailstock work.
Microstop Countersinks
Aerospace fastener prep · depth-stop body
Adjustable depth-stop countersinks for aerospace fastener installation and any application where consistent countersink depth is critical across many holes.
Counterbores
Pilot-guided · flat-bottom seat for SHCS heads
Pilot-guided counterbores for socket-head cap-screws (SHCS) and flat-head bolts. Cuts a flat-bottom recess so the screw head sits flush with the surface.
Keyless Drill Chuck
3-jaw · 1–16 mm capacity
Hand-tightened keyless chuck for fast tool changes on bench drills, mag drills, and CNC machines. Three-jaw scroll provides secure grip without a key.
Drill Chuck Arbor (MT/JT)
Morse Taper to Jacobs Taper adaptor
Mounts a Jacobs-taper drill chuck to a Morse-taper spindle. Standard sizes for MT2/MT3/MT4 spindles paired with JT3/JT6/JT33 chucks.
What every spec on a drill bit actually means
Pick the wrong point angle or coating and a drill takes 10× the time — or burns up after one hole. Here is how to read the four numbers that matter.
HSS-Co M35 · DIN 338 · 135° SP · TiAlNMaterial grade
HSS is plain high-speed steel (M2). HSS-Co M35 adds 5% cobalt — lifts red-hardness from ~600°C to ~700°C. Use cobalt for stainless, mold steel, titanium, Inconel. Plain HSS is fine for mild steel and aluminium.
Length series
DIN 338 is jobber length (general-purpose). DIN 1897 is short/stub length (rigid, less wander). DIN 340 is long-flute. Choose stub for thin parts and CNC; jobber for everyday drilling.
Point angle
118° is the standard general-purpose tip — needs a centre punch to start. 135° split-point self-centres without punching, ideal for hard or work-hardening materials.
Split point
SP grinds a secondary relief into the chisel edge so the drill self-starts on a flat surface. Eliminates centre-punching in production drilling. Almost always paired with 135° tips.
Coating
Bright = uncoated, for aluminium/brass. TiN (gold) for general steel, doubles tool life. TiCN (purple-grey) for cast iron. TiAlN (violet-black) for hardened steel and stainless — runs hot.
Helix angle
Slow helix (~15°) for brass and short-chipping materials. Standard 30° for general steel. Fast helix (~40°) for aluminium and soft alloys to clear long stringy chips.
Web thickness
The central core of the drill where the chisel edge sits. Thicker web = more rigid, less wander, but needs more thrust. Long-flute drills have a thinner web.
Flute design
Standard two-flute is universal. Parabolic deep-flute clears chips on long holes (>5×D). Three-flute drills give a rounder hole on flat-bottom and step features.
Reamer Selection Guide
Match your operation, tolerance, and how the hole was started to the right reamer type.
| Reamer Type | Best For | Typical Tolerance | Surface Finish | Setup Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Machine reamer (chucking) DIN 212, straight shank |
Production CNC and manual finishing of pre-drilled holes | H7 (±0.018 mm at 10 mm) | Ra 0.8–1.6 μm | Fast |
|
Machine reamer (taper shank) DIN 208, MT shank |
Drill press / manual mill with taper-shank quill | H7 | Ra 0.8–1.6 μm | Medium |
|
Hand reamer DIN 206, square drive |
Toolroom, field repair, delicate workpiece, single-piece work | H7 (manual feel) | Ra 0.8 μm if rotated steadily | Slow |
|
Adjustable hand reamer Expanding blades |
Bridging non-standard sizes, opening worn bushings | ±0.05 mm typical | Ra 1.6–3.2 μm | Slow |
|
Spiral-flute reamer Helical flute, machine |
Reaming through cross-holes, slots, or interrupted cuts | H7 | Ra 0.8 μm | Fast |
|
Taper-pin reamer 1:48 or 1:50 taper |
Cutting standard taper-pin seats (toolroom, fixture work) | Per pin standard | Ra 1.6 μm | Medium |
|
Solid carbide reamer For hardened material |
Hardened steel, cast iron, abrasive composites | H7 (~3× tool life) | Ra 0.4–0.8 μm | Fast |
|
Shell reamer Mounted on arbor |
Large diameters (25 mm+) where solid reamer is uneconomical | H7 | Ra 0.8–1.6 μm | Medium |
|
Counterbore reamer Pilot + flat-bottom cutter |
Cutting flat-bottom seats for SHCS heads after drilling | +0.1 / +0.3 mm head clearance | Flat to Ra 3.2 μm | Fast |
Why buy your hole-making tools from San Tools
Trusted by UAE workshops since 2019.
Genuine YG1
Authorised UAE distribution — not parallel imports.
Same-day pickup
Stocked in Al Quoz, Dubai. Walk-in welcome.
Spec advice on call
Tell us your material & machine — we recommend.
Free UAE delivery
Same-day Dubai · next-day Abu Dhabi & Sharjah.
Need a specific drill, reamer, or set?
Tell us your material, hole diameter, tolerance, and machine — we'll quote the right tool from stock.
Browse the full catalogue below
Scroll on for the complete view of every drill, reamer, countersink, counterbore and chuck in stock.
Frequently asked questions
Specifications, selection, and use across the hole-making range.
What's the difference between HSS and HSS-Co cobalt drills?
Plain HSS (M2) softens at around 600°C. HSS-Co M35 contains 5–8% cobalt, raising the red-hardness threshold to about 700°C, letting the drill keep cutting in stainless, mold steel, titanium, and other work-hardening alloys. Cobalt drills cost ~50% more than plain HSS but last 3–5× longer in hard materials.
118° vs 135° point angle — which should I use?
The 118° standard point needs a centre punch or pilot hole to start without wandering. The 135° split-point self-centres on flat or inclined surfaces with no centre punch. Use 135° SP for production drilling, hard materials, or any time setup speed matters; 118° is fine for casual hand drilling.
What is H7 tolerance and why does it matter for reamers?
H7 is the ISO standard tolerance band for a basic-hole fit. At 10 mm nominal, an H7 hole is +0.018 / 0 mm — between 10.000 and 10.018 mm. It's the default fit for press-fit bearings, dowel pins, and bushings paired with a k6 or h6 shaft. A reamer ground to H7 size will produce that tolerance band with correct pre-drilling, speed, and feed.
How much smaller should the pilot drill be before reaming?
Leave 0.2–0.4 mm of stock on diameter. Example: drill 9.7 mm before a 10 H7 reamer. Too little and the reamer rubs oversize. Too much and it chatters and risks chipping. For carbide reamers, leave 0.1–0.2 mm.
Can a step drill replace separate drill + countersink + deburr?
For sheet metal and thin stock up to about 4 mm thick, yes — a step drill produces a clean hole, deburrs the entry, and leaves a 90° chamfer ready for a countersunk fastener in a single pass. It is not designed for hard materials or solid stock above ~4 mm depth.
What's a U-drill and when do I use one over a jobber?
A U-drill (indexable insert drill) uses two replaceable carbide inserts instead of a ground HSS body. It runs at 4–6× the surface speed of an HSS jobber and replaces inserts rather than the whole tool when worn. Best for CNC machining centres with through-coolant capability in diameters above 13 mm. For one-off work or small diameters, an HSS jobber is cheaper; U-drills shine in production volume.
Do I need a centre drill before every twist drill operation?
Always for lathe centre work or any time you need a precise hole position. For 135° split-point drills on flat surfaces, you can often skip it. For 118° drills on round stock, inclined surfaces, or when hole position tolerance is tight, a centre-drilled spot prevents the drill tip from wandering.
What does DIN 338 / DIN 1897 / DIN 340 mean on a drill bit?
These are DIN standards for drill length. DIN 338 is the universal jobber length. DIN 1897 is short/stub length — more rigid, better for precise hole position and CNC. DIN 340 is long-flute — for deep holes (5×D and beyond) or stacked workpieces.
What's the difference between a countersink and a counterbore?
A countersink cuts a conical recess (typically 90°) so the head of a flat-head screw sits flush. A counterbore cuts a flat-bottom cylindrical recess so the head of a socket-head cap-screw (SHCS) sits flush. The screw head shape determines which one to use.
How do I prevent chatter when reaming?
Three rules: run at 50–70% of drill RPM (not faster); feed steadily at 2–3× drill feed-per-rev; use cutting fluid even on aluminium. Spiral-flute reamers chatter less than straight-flute on cross-holes and interrupted cuts.
Do you stock larger drill sizes, special grades, or YG1 OEM cuts?
Yes — we keep YG1 Multi-1 and Cobalt drills in stock for the common 1–13 mm sizes. Larger sizes (14–30 mm), parabolic flute, taper-shank (DIN 345), MT shank, special coatings, and OEM ground-to-print drills are available on order with 2–3 week lead time from YG1 Korea.
Can I bring back blunt drills and reamers for re-grinding?
Yes. We send drills and reamers to our partner re-grinding service in Sharjah. Typical turnaround is 5–7 working days at roughly 25–40% of the cost of a new tool. Solid carbide drills above 6 mm and machine reamers above 8 mm are usually worth re-grinding; smaller HSS drills are typically cheaper to replace.