Drilling
3D Printing, At a glance, was published by BSRIA in September 2017. It defines drilling as: ‘…a cutting process that uses a drill bit to cut or enlarge a hole of circular cross-section in solid materials.’
See also:
- Diamond stitch drilling.
- Pneumatic drill.
- Drill and blast.
- Drill pipe material selection for horizontal directional drills.
--BSRIA
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- 3D printing.
- Additive manufacturing (structural and non-structural).
- Advanced construction technology.
- Advanced manufacturing.
- At a glance - 3D printing.
- BSRIA articles.
- BSRIA definitions.
- Building services.
- Computer aided manufacturing.
- Milling.
- Stereolithography.
- Sintering.
- Subtractive manufacturing.
Featured articles and news
The history of building regulations
A story of belated action in response to crisis.
Moisture, fire safety and emerging trends in living walls
How wet is your wall?
Current policy explained and newly published consultation by the UK and Welsh Governments.
British architecture 1919–39. Book review.
Conservation of listed prefabs in Moseley.
Energy industry calls for urgent reform.
Heritage staff wellbeing at work survey.
A five minute introduction.
50th Golden anniversary ECA Edmundson apprentice award
Showcasing the very best electrotechnical and engineering services for half a century.
Welsh government consults on HRBs and reg changes
Seeking feedback on a new regulatory regime and a broad range of issues.
CIOB Client Guide (2nd edition) March 2025
Free download covering statutory dutyholder roles under the Building Safety Act and much more.
AI and automation in 3D modelling and spatial design
Can almost half of design development tasks be automated?
Minister quizzed, as responsibility transfers to MHCLG and BSR publishes new building control guidance.
UK environmental regulations reform 2025
Amid wider new approaches to ensure regulators and regulation support growth.
The maintenance challenge of tenements.
BSRIA Statutory Compliance Inspection Checklist
BG80/2025 now significantly updated to include requirements related to important changes in legislation.