by Chad » Tue Jun 07, 2011 4:56 pm
Using that jig:
Buy an extra long drill bit- something over a foot long. Doesn't need to be your finished hole diameter, but at least 1/4" / 6mm or so, preferably 3/8" / 9mm.
Use the jig tight to the end of the foil to start your holes in the end of the foil. Use the long bit for the holes in the template, and these starter holes. 1/2" deep is plenty.
Move the jig further out and clamp it as shown in the pic you found above, checking with straight edges that it aligns nicely.
Using your long drill bit, drill through the template's guide holes, into the starter holes in the end of the foil, and as deep as you need to go. Use your drill's full RPM, drill slowly, and pull out frequently to clear the chips from the drill- all steps to minimize any tendency of the drill bit to wander as it encounters grain features in the wood.
Remove the jig, re-insert the drill bit into each hole, and use a straight edge to extend the visible portion of the drill bit and draw a line on the foil representing the center of the holes. Now you know where to drill the cross-holes to accurately intercept the bolt holes.
Drill the bolt holes at least 1/16" / 2mm bigger than your bolt diameters. I would NOT recommend filling these holes with epoxy with the idea of re-drilling them to size- no drill bit/jig will do that accurately enough. Much better to cast the bolts in the epoxy. Use a sharp drill to cut these holes, and cut them quickly with as little hole burnishing as possible- you want the hole sides to be rough and not polished at all before placing the epoxy.
Also, do not cut square corners at your cross-holes, no matter how tempting it is to give your washers a flat seat to bear against. Better to build up a seat of epoxy inside the hole than to create such a stress-riser. Make the cross-holes as small as you can. At 8" of hole depth, they can easily be omitted if you cast the bolt in epoxy over this length, but I understand that it gives folks an intuitive sense of security to know there is a mechanical connection holding the keel on, rather than "just glue". Which is fine...