Harvey's, 390 Shawville Blvd SE, Calgary, AB T2Y 3S4, CA - harvey's hours
Shaper – you need a bigger one than I have. Slitting saw – reach is the problem… I’d certainly have to come at it from both ends. It is 30mm thick so I could just clamp it vertical in the vice, but still, not sure reach gets me to the middle.
Just a though, but would a slitting saw work, with the job mounted on an angle plate? A little clamp shuffling might be needed.
I was excited to open my package from ArcEuro containing new carbide 2mm stub 2 flute….. aaargh! The stub cutters have 3mm shank and I got a 6mm collet. Frustrating!
Router Bits · SKIL. 30-Pc Router Bit Set w/Plastic Case · Fleming Supply. 24-Piece Carbide-tipped Router Bit Set · SKIL. 3-Piece Carbide-tipped Router Bit Set.
With this project I got to use some features that finally justified my tool purchase – 5000rpm, and wet-grinding six largish surfaces.
Your speeds seems to be OK. There is a nice calculator here. There is another calculator that gives both speeds and feeds here. I always machine Cast Iron dry, Bernard’s suggestion of using vacuum is good.
How flat is ‘optically flat’? If you are looking for something that is better than a few fringes, then it is a bit of an art!
Fulfillment Specialist/Office Manager · $20 - $21 · Customer Service and Package Shipping Associate · $18 - $22 · Mailroom Courier/Distributor On-Call · UPS package ...
2) Re-grind to a finer grit. Ideally the blank should be ground finely enough that it has a waxy sheen before you start polishing.
In this case, material is cast-iron so a further correction may be needed. A little complicated because cast-iron is a family of alloys with different cutting properties, not a single standard metal. Generally, I halve RPM when cutting cast iron, so:
As has been said above, speed isn’t critical although ‘as fast as possible’ probably isn’t bad advice for 2mm on a standard mill.
Using a small diameter cutter on an unpredictable metal is high-risk. The cutter might happily plough through before suddenly hitting an occlusion or hard spot, blunting the edge or suddenly increasing the side load to breaking point. Rapid swarf clearance is important, because it adds to side-loading and causes blunting. Only the operator can judge, and I’d expect to break a few cutters before finding a safe optimum. A steady hand is important too – bumping is likely to break a small cutter. (You can guess how I know!)
Thread pitch of screws used on Stihl equipment Strange drilling situation Creworks Lathes on Amazon UK – some big price drops for Black Friday Week What is (Traditional) Model Engineering? FreeCAD version 1.0 released EN8M FLAT modifying Schaublin collets A blast from the past What did you do Today 2024 Traction Engine Identification Help Please….
21 HSS Black & Gold KFD Split Point Jobber Length Drill Bit, Killer Force Drill Bit. Find this item and other cutting tools on DrillsandCutters.com.
To (almost) finish off the story, I now have three lapping plates and surface plates. Now with a whole days experience, I’m not so keen on the grooved side – it can easily cause scratches, either because the grooves are difficult to clean and retain largest grit sizes, or because the edges can cause scratches.
For this job I would use a 2mm, 3 flute, stub cutter; 0.5mm DOC, 9500rpm and a chip load of 0.01mm/tooth, giving a feedrate of ~285mm/min. Running at 5000rpm would give a feedrate of 150mm/min.
1/ machine cast iron dry and use a gentle air blast to clear swarf. The graphite and chippy nature of CI makes lubrication unnecessary. 2/ calculate the cutting depth of each blade on each revolution – you need to avoid rubbing so your slow feed at high rpm was blunting the cutter. 1 thou min per bite per blade every revolution. 3/ yes a high feed rate will put a lot of sideways strain on the small cutter so you will have to reduce the vertical depth. 4/ a better bet is to make an engraving V cutter as the form is designed for doing lots of thin lines. 5/ without a shaper you can still improvise by mounting the work on the lathe saddle and making a non rotating between centres boring bar to hold the cutter. Or on the mill table and non rotating cutter.
2 & 3-flute Carbide you will be limited to your 5000rpm max but chip load can be increased due to stronger tool say 0.006 so 90mm/min feed
While I would agree with the 1 thou (0.025mm) chip load for most cutters when you get down to the very small you have to take their strength into account and reduce the load on them hence the 0.003mm I suggested which is almost 1/10th the loading. Keep the 1 thou for 6mm and above dia cutters.
14-15K rpm would be a reasonable speed for 2mm carbide in CI but as said will be limited to the 5000rpm top speed of the SX3.5. Three times HSS speed is a common rule of thumb when going up to carbide.
Step 1Remove Old Flute Head CorkRemove the crown, exposing the mounting screw. Using an old drumstick or dowel (with a hole drilled in the end to allow the ...
I have made similar plates which were used to lap the face of levers for aircraft controls. This was before CNC was around. To find hard spots they were surface ground and then laped on a granite surface plate with fine wet and dry paper and hard spots would usualy show up as shiny spots or area’s and discarded. They were eventually cut on a horizontal mill with a slotting saw cutter.
2-flute HSS use all your 5000rpm but you need a small chipload on a 2mm cutter so around 0.004mm which equates to a feed of 40mm/min which is prossibly slower than the power feed will run at. Cut the full 0.5mm depth in one go and do it dry with air or vac to clear swarf.
I forgot I had an ER 32 – R8 chuck! Another tool justified, Hurrah! 5000rpm, carbide stub mill, dry…. smooth like butter (I listen to Kpop in the workshop). And the mill seems to have ‘worn in’ a bit at the 5000rpm now.
Is it possible that using cutting fluid allowed swarf to get jammed under the cutter, shouldn’t you machine it dry and use a vacuum.
A better approach if you can manage it is to use a suitable width of slitting saw on a horizontal mill. Saw speed should be about 50 rpm with a good steady feed, cut each run in one pass.
I can then get shiny glass with cerium oxide, but it is still a bit milky so I’ve got some learning to do still. And I don’t think the glass is coming out ‘optically flat’.
Search for: Home › Forums › Beginners questions › Topics Viewing 25 topics - 1 through 25 (of 25 total) Topic Voices Posts Last Post Thread pitch of screws used on Stihl equipment Started by: Bill Phinn in: Workshop Tools and Tooling 2 3 24 November 2024 at 20:24 Bill Phinn Strange drilling situation Started by: gerry madden in: Workshop Techniques 15 17 24 November 2024 at 20:19 Michael Gilligan Creworks Lathes on Amazon UK – some big price drops for Black Friday Week Started by: Lee Cooper in: Manual machine tools 8 12 24 November 2024 at 19:51 Lee Cooper What is (Traditional) Model Engineering? 1 2 Started by: Martin Kyte in: General Questions 23 43 24 November 2024 at 19:40 bernard towers FreeCAD version 1.0 released Started by: Russell Eberhardt in: CAD – Technical drawing & design 9 18 24 November 2024 at 19:21 Andy Stopford EN8M FLAT Started by: Dougie Swan in: Materials 3 5 24 November 2024 at 19:00 JasonB modifying Schaublin collets 1 2 Started by: Ken Weeks in: General Questions 14 26 24 November 2024 at 18:10 vic newey A blast from the past Started by: Michael Gilligan in: The Tea Room 13 18 24 November 2024 at 17:43 Nigel Graham 2 What did you do Today 2024 1 2 … 18 19 Started by: JasonB in: The Tea Room 68 475 24 November 2024 at 17:02 Dalboy Traction Engine Identification Help Please…. Started by: Bill Morgan in: Traction engines 8 11 24 November 2024 at 16:07 Dave Halford Subscription via pocketmags Started by: chris hammerton in: Subscription issues and Digital magazines 2 2 24 November 2024 at 15:56 Michael Callaghan Choosing a suitable fine point capacitive phone stylus Started by: Greensands in: The Tea Room 5 6 24 November 2024 at 12:50 Weary Co-ordinate positioning for circle of holes (not all equally spaced) Started by: Zebethyal in: Help and Assistance! (Offered or Wanted) 7 17 24 November 2024 at 12:49 John Haine Bronze Started by: Garry Coles in: Materials 6 6 24 November 2024 at 12:25 Mick Bailey Westbury Cam Turning Jig Started by: Clive Brown 1 in: I/C Engines 5 7 24 November 2024 at 10:56 Graham Meek ML10 questions Started by: 1957jmh in: Beginners questions 15 25 24 November 2024 at 10:34 Howard Lewis chenery 9 cylinder gnome Started by: charlie9cyl in: I/C Engines 7 10 24 November 2024 at 10:02 noel shelley Measurement history Started by: JohnF in: The Tea Room 6 12 24 November 2024 at 09:39 JohnF maid of kent valva gear Started by: wireman in: Introduce Yourself – New members start here! 2 2 23 November 2024 at 22:13 Nigel Graham 2 Colchester/Harrison VS Lathe Started by: Brad White in: Workshop Tools and Tooling 1 1 23 November 2024 at 17:27 Brad White A couple of ‘soon to be available in the UK’ lathes that look interesting 1 2 Started by: Lee Cooper in: Manual machine tools 11 32 23 November 2024 at 16:50 Michael Gilligan Twin mill engine progress Started by: AStroud in: Work In Progress and completed items 3 4 23 November 2024 at 16:19 AStroud BLACKMAIL Started by: Howard Lewis in: The Tea Room 11 18 23 November 2024 at 15:36 Michael Gilligan 775 Motor based Dynamo ? Started by: JasonB in: Miscellaneous models 5 9 23 November 2024 at 14:58 duncan webster 1 Lathe vibration in workshop 1 2 Started by: Mark Salzedo 1 in: General Questions 19 37 23 November 2024 at 14:32 Howard Lewis Viewing 25 topics - 1 through 25 (of 25 total)
Manufacturer of 4196 Ansi Pumps, Self Priming Trash Pumps, Gear Pumps, Diaphragm pumps, Slurry Pumps, Vertical Turbine and Submersible pumps.
You may well be seeing ‘short finish’ where the glass between the grinding pits is shiny, but the pits remain – you should be able to see this with a loupe, etc.
The flat side is used to flatten a pitch lap. I can then get shiny glass with cerium oxide, but it is still a bit milky so I’ve got some learning to do still. And I don’t think the glass is coming out ‘optically flat’.
DCGW and DCMW heavy turning CBN inserts is throughly welded and tipped CBN inserts with carbide blank for heavy turning applications,E-mail for inquiry or sample : sales@cbncut.com ,we will reply you as soon as possible.
Diamond Drilling & Sawing Company experts in concrete saw cutting, demolition and core drilling since 1959 located in Denver, CO area. We understand the de.
This is perhaps not a good time to have money, this is a time to have things that will hold their value. Things like shapers ?
Jul 13, 2023 — Plyable technology works with all types of composite manufacturing process, RTM, prepreg or wet lay as examples. The signed off tool design is ...
Home › Forums › Beginners questions › Speeds/feeds for 2mm mill in cast iron This topic has 32 replies, 15 voices, and was last updated 3 March 2024 at 19:32 by Michael Gilligan. Viewing 25 posts - 1 through 25 (of 33 total) 1 2 → Author Posts 5 February 2024 at 09:29 #711850 jaCK HobsonParticipant @jackhobson50760 I wanted to cut some groves in 6″ dia cast iron plates like this: I had a couple of small HSS end mills so thought that milling would be easiest for me. Grooves are 1/16″ or 2mm, 0.5 mm deep. My mill goes up to 5000 rpm – this is the first time I used the high range, hurrah! It’s noisy at 5000rpm so I dropped speed down a bit. I have power feed – I went about as slow as it will go. 1/16″ 2 flute lasted just over one plate maybe up to 4000 rpm. 2mm three flute maybe did one and two thirds of a plate maybe 2800 rpm. They snapped off when they got a bit dull. I used cutting fluid applied with brush. What life should I expect from small cutters and what speeds/feeds would be best? To finish, I’ll be getting a carbide 2 flute and run it at 5000 unless advised otherwise. Advert 5 February 2024 at 09:34 #711851 Bo’sunParticipant @bosun58570 Just a though, but would a slitting saw work, with the job mounted on an angle plate? A little clamp shuffling might be needed. 5 February 2024 at 09:34 #711852 bernard towersParticipant @bernardtowers37738 Is it possible that using cutting fluid allowed swarf to get jammed under the cutter, shouldn’t you machine it dry and use a vacuum. 5 February 2024 at 09:44 #711853 Brian WoodParticipant @brianwood45127 A better approach if you can manage it is to use a suitable width of slitting saw on a horizontal mill. Saw speed should be about 50 rpm with a good steady feed, cut each run in one pass. Regards Brian Sorry, I see that route has already been mentioned 5 February 2024 at 10:03 #711858 RobinParticipant @robin Quick, somebody sell this man a shaper. Some jobs simply cry out for one ? best Robin 5 February 2024 at 10:23 #711859 jaCK HobsonParticipant @jackhobson50760 Shaper – you need a bigger one than I have. Slitting saw – reach is the problem… I’d certainly have to come at it from both ends. It is 30mm thick so I could just clamp it vertical in the vice, but still, not sure reach gets me to the middle. Milling was the easy option for me – including workholding which is simples on a versatile vice. So what about feeds/speeds? 5 February 2024 at 10:27 #711860 BazyleParticipant @bazyle 1/ machine cast iron dry and use a gentle air blast to clear swarf. The graphite and chippy nature of CI makes lubrication unnecessary. 2/ calculate the cutting depth of each blade on each revolution – you need to avoid rubbing so your slow feed at high rpm was blunting the cutter. 1 thou min per bite per blade every revolution. 3/ yes a high feed rate will put a lot of sideways strain on the small cutter so you will have to reduce the vertical depth. 4/ a better bet is to make an engraving V cutter as the form is designed for doing lots of thin lines. 5/ without a shaper you can still improvise by mounting the work on the lathe saddle and making a non rotating between centres boring bar to hold the cutter. Or on the mill table and non rotating cutter. As you have proven by experiment that wasn’t the way to go. 5 February 2024 at 10:32 #711862 Thor ??Participant @thor Hi Jack, Your speeds seems to be OK. There is a nice calculator here. There is another calculator that gives both speeds and feeds here. I always machine Cast Iron dry, Bernard’s suggestion of using vacuum is good. Thor 5 February 2024 at 10:55 #711866 JasonBModerator @jasonb 2-flute HSS use all your 5000rpm but you need a small chipload on a 2mm cutter so around 0.004mm which equates to a feed of 40mm/min which is prossibly slower than the power feed will run at. Cut the full 0.5mm depth in one go and do it dry with air or vac to clear swarf. 3-flute HSS 5000rpm but as they are a bit weaker 0.003mm chip load which gives feed of 45mm/min. 2 & 3-flute Carbide you will be limited to your 5000rpm max but chip load can be increased due to stronger tool say 0.006 so 90mm/min feed 5 February 2024 at 11:36 #711874 RobinParticipant @robin On 5 February 2024 at 10:23 jaCK Hobson Said: Shaper – you need a bigger one than I have. Is this a case of large material or small shaper? We should be told ? best Robin 5 February 2024 at 11:44 #711879 jaCK HobsonParticipant @jackhobson50760 Thanks! I think I conclude, combining Jason’s 40mm/min and Bazyle ‘you need to avoid rubbing’ that a sensible compromise is to accept limited life of cutters in this scenario (if I want to get the job finished before I give up of boredom). I’ll try 2 flue carbide to finish off, dry. I really appreciate the ‘dry’ – cutting fluid everywhere is yuk. With this project I got to use some features that finally justified my tool purchase – 5000rpm, and wet-grinding six largish surfaces. 5 February 2024 at 12:28 #711882 SillyOldDufferModerator @sillyoldduffer Duffers patent rule of thumb for mild-steel: rpm = 10000 / dia in mm So 10000/2 = 5000 rpm. If cutter is carbide multiply by 1.5 = 7,500rpm In this case, material is cast-iron so a further correction may be needed. A little complicated because cast-iron is a family of alloys with different cutting properties, not a single standard metal. Generally, I halve RPM when cutting cast iron, so: 7500/2 = 3750 rpm Then I experiment, because faster is often better: Jason’s 5000rpm is perfectly reasonable. Beware! Cast-iron is frequently nasty, full of occlusions, and/or chilled super-hard by being hosed down in the foundry. Machinability varies from wonderful to very poor depending on what you have. Rule of thumb cutting calculations may not work out in practice because “cast-iron” is pretty random, especially if it was chilled, causing a hard skin of unknown depth. A small diameter cutter could sail through it, or come quickly to grief. Using a small diameter cutter on an unpredictable metal is high-risk. The cutter might happily plough through before suddenly hitting an occlusion or hard spot, blunting the edge or suddenly increasing the side load to breaking point. Rapid swarf clearance is important, because it adds to side-loading and causes blunting. Only the operator can judge, and I’d expect to break a few cutters before finding a safe optimum. A steady hand is important too – bumping is likely to break a small cutter. (You can guess how I know!) Jason recommends cutting full-depth in one go and he is a much more experienced and effective machinist than me. However, another duffer rule of thumb is to cut no more than 20% of cutter diameter deep, which is 0.4mm. Therefore I’d probably cut these grooves in two passes. My 20% rule is conservative though, and not entirely sensible! Although shallow cutting reduces the side-load, taking two passes blunts the cutter extra fast, which increases the side load. The pros and cons aren’t black and white. How long will the cutter last? Roughly speaking, a lightly loaded HSS cutter machining mild-steel will last a couple of hours before it gets too blunt. Driven hard, fast and deep, perhaps only 15 minutes. Jason’s 40mm per minute feed-rate is about right, so the number of cutters needed can be estimated from the groove lengths, and assuming mid-range life of an hour. Except 2mm diameter cutters are easily broken… In short, a highish RPM with a slow steady feed-rate, in either one or two passes, varied as necessary by the operator depending on the nature of the cast-iron. Could be straightforward, or tricky, or somewhere in the middle – I’d expect to break a few cutters finding out, because so much depends on the cast-iron’s properties, which might be lovely, horrible, or mixed. Dave 5 February 2024 at 13:04 #711901 JasonBModerator @jasonb 14-15K rpm would be a reasonable speed for 2mm carbide in CI but as said will be limited to the 5000rpm top speed of the SX3.5. Three times HSS speed is a common rule of thumb when going up to carbide. While I would agree with the 1 thou (0.025mm) chip load for most cutters when you get down to the very small you have to take their strength into account and reduce the load on them hence the 0.003mm I suggested which is almost 1/10th the loading. Keep the 1 thou for 6mm and above dia cutters. 5 February 2024 at 13:16 #711908 Michael GilliganParticipant @michaelgilligan61133 On 5 February 2024 at 11:36 Robin Said: … Is this a case of large material or small shaper? We should be told ? Shaper with less than 6” stroke might be a reasonable guess … although 3” stroke and a lot of faffing-about may suffice. MichaelG. 5 February 2024 at 14:54 #711929 ChrisLHParticipant @chrislh For anyone who doesn’t have a compressor or a suitabe vacuum cleeaner I have found blowing down a large diameter drinking straw to be surprisingly effective in clearing swarf if ultimately rather tiring. 5 February 2024 at 15:09 #711934 jaCK HobsonParticipant @jackhobson50760 On 5 February 2024 at 11:36 Robin Said: On 5 February 2024 at 10:23 jaCK Hobson Said: Shaper – you need a bigger one than I have. Is this a case of large material or small shaper? We should be told ? best Robin I have one of those Adept hand cranked shapers. Nice tool to cuddle but I don’t use it much… not at all anymore. 5 February 2024 at 15:28 #711937 RobinParticipant @robin On 5 February 2024 at 15:09 jaCK Hobson Said: I have one of those Adept hand cranked shapers. Nice tool to cuddle but I don’t use it much… not at all anymore. This is perhaps not a good time to have money, this is a time to have things that will hold their value. Things like shapers ? best Robin 5 February 2024 at 16:00 #711943 Anonymous A decent grade carbide cutter should be able to do all three plates without replacement. I use K2 cutters from YG. These are South Korean professional, albeit bottom of the range, cutters. For this job I would use a 2mm, 3 flute, stub cutter; 0.5mm DOC, 9500rpm and a chip load of 0.01mm/tooth, giving a feedrate of ~285mm/min. Running at 5000rpm would give a feedrate of 150mm/min. Andrew 6 February 2024 at 07:01 #712147 David George 1Participant @davidgeorge1 I have made similar plates which were used to lap the face of levers for aircraft controls. This was before CNC was around. To find hard spots they were surface ground and then laped on a granite surface plate with fine wet and dry paper and hard spots would usualy show up as shiny spots or area’s and discarded. They were eventually cut on a horizontal mill with a slotting saw cutter. David 9 February 2024 at 12:15 #713187 jaCK HobsonParticipant @jackhobson50760 I was excited to open my package from ArcEuro containing new carbide 2mm stub 2 flute….. aaargh! The stub cutters have 3mm shank and I got a 6mm collet. Frustrating! 9 February 2024 at 18:01 #713299 Neil WyattModerator @neilwyatt As has been said above, speed isn’t critical although ‘as fast as possible’ probably isn’t bad advice for 2mm on a standard mill. What is important is tooth load as too little will wear cutters rapidly leading and too much will snap cutters. People have already suggested feed rates. Neil 9 February 2024 at 18:18 #713302 jaCK HobsonParticipant @jackhobson50760 I forgot I had an ER 32 – R8 chuck! Another tool justified, Hurrah! 5000rpm, carbide stub mill, dry…. smooth like butter (I listen to Kpop in the workshop). And the mill seems to have ‘worn in’ a bit at the 5000rpm now. Now I just have hours of hand polishing to do. 11 February 2024 at 19:45 #713811 jaCK HobsonParticipant @jackhobson50760 To (almost) finish off the story, I now have three lapping plates and surface plates. Now with a whole days experience, I’m not so keen on the grooved side – it can easily cause scratches, either because the grooves are difficult to clean and retain largest grit sizes, or because the edges can cause scratches. The flat side is used to flatten a pitch lap. I can then get shiny glass with cerium oxide, but it is still a bit milky so I’ve got some learning to do still. And I don’t think the glass is coming out ‘optically flat’. So the whole project – a fail so far… unless you count the learning… 12 February 2024 at 09:52 #713856 Andy_GParticipant @andy_g On 11 February 2024 at 19:45 jaCK Hobson Said: I can then get shiny glass with cerium oxide, but it is still a bit milky so I’ve got some learning to do still. And I don’t think the glass is coming out ‘optically flat’. Has the surface you’re polishing previously been ground flat? Do you know what type of glass it is? You may well be seeing ‘short finish’ where the glass between the grinding pits is shiny, but the pits remain – you should be able to see this with a loupe, etc. There are two answers: 1) Polish some more, at the risk of losing the accuracy of the ground blank and rolling off the edges; 2) Re-grind to a finer grit. Ideally the blank should be ground finely enough that it has a waxy sheen before you start polishing. How flat is ‘optically flat’? If you are looking for something that is better than a few fringes, then it is a bit of an art! Good luck! 12 February 2024 at 11:32 #713868 jaCK HobsonParticipant @jackhobson50760 I bought it as an optical flat off ebay. A bad purchase is at is scratched/worn beyond use. Throwing good money after bad, I thought I’d have a go a repolishing and then seeing how flat it still is ? I’ll try a lot more polishing. I don’t expect it will be very flat. Author Posts Viewing 25 posts - 1 through 25 (of 33 total) 1 2 → Please log in to reply to this topic. Registering is free and easy using the links on the menu at the top of this page.
Model Engineer and Model Engineers' Workshop are leading magazines for modellers, with reputations for bringing you the best tips, tricks, and inspiration from the model engineering world. From miniature steam locomotives to clocks and tools, get the most out of your hobby with Model Engineer and Model Engineer's Workshop.
Jason recommends cutting full-depth in one go and he is a much more experienced and effective machinist than me. However, another duffer rule of thumb is to cut no more than 20% of cutter diameter deep, which is 0.4mm. Therefore I’d probably cut these grooves in two passes. My 20% rule is conservative though, and not entirely sensible! Although shallow cutting reduces the side-load, taking two passes blunts the cutter extra fast, which increases the side load. The pros and cons aren’t black and white.
Thanks! I think I conclude, combining Jason’s 40mm/min and Bazyle ‘you need to avoid rubbing’ that a sensible compromise is to accept limited life of cutters in this scenario (if I want to get the job finished before I give up of boredom). I’ll try 2 flue carbide to finish off, dry. I really appreciate the ‘dry’ – cutting fluid everywhere is yuk.
What life should I expect from small cutters and what speeds/feeds would be best? To finish, I’ll be getting a carbide 2 flute and run it at 5000 unless advised otherwise.
Copied from Valenite catalog Valenite Turning Insert ID System Inserts For Sale · Home Vertical Line Inventory Index Vertical Line ...
A decent grade carbide cutter should be able to do all three plates without replacement. I use K2 cutters from YG. These are South Korean professional, albeit bottom of the range, cutters.
How long will the cutter last? Roughly speaking, a lightly loaded HSS cutter machining mild-steel will last a couple of hours before it gets too blunt. Driven hard, fast and deep, perhaps only 15 minutes. Jason’s 40mm per minute feed-rate is about right, so the number of cutters needed can be estimated from the groove lengths, and assuming mid-range life of an hour. Except 2mm diameter cutters are easily broken…
Milling was the easy option for me – including workholding which is simples on a versatile vice. So what about feeds/speeds?
In short, a highish RPM with a slow steady feed-rate, in either one or two passes, varied as necessary by the operator depending on the nature of the cast-iron. Could be straightforward, or tricky, or somewhere in the middle – I’d expect to break a few cutters finding out, because so much depends on the cast-iron’s properties, which might be lovely, horrible, or mixed.
Beware! Cast-iron is frequently nasty, full of occlusions, and/or chilled super-hard by being hosed down in the foundry. Machinability varies from wonderful to very poor depending on what you have. Rule of thumb cutting calculations may not work out in practice because “cast-iron” is pretty random, especially if it was chilled, causing a hard skin of unknown depth. A small diameter cutter could sail through it, or come quickly to grief.
Export your CAD files directly to Cadasio from Fusion 360 and create online interactive instruction and service manuals. ... Additional Plugins. We also have ...
For anyone who doesn’t have a compressor or a suitabe vacuum cleeaner I have found blowing down a large diameter drinking straw to be surprisingly effective in clearing swarf if ultimately rather tiring.
KOMET® PCD drilling tool with chip guiding inserts. Drilling tools with an internal cooling supply are usually used for producing blind holes. These tools flush ...
DCGW and DCMW heavy turning CBN inserts is throughly welded and tipped CBN inserts with carbide blank for heavy turning applications,E-mail for inquiry or sample : sales@cbncut.com ,we will reply you as soon as possible.
Grooves are 1/16″ or 2mm, 0.5 mm deep. My mill goes up to 5000 rpm – this is the first time I used the high range, hurrah! It’s noisy at 5000rpm so I dropped speed down a bit. I have power feed – I went about as slow as it will go. 1/16″ 2 flute lasted just over one plate maybe up to 4000 rpm. 2mm three flute maybe did one and two thirds of a plate maybe 2800 rpm. They snapped off when they got a bit dull. I used cutting fluid applied with brush.