In low-carbon steel, for example, the low carbon content makes it harder for chips to harden and break away. There is not enough martensite formation, which means that the material will stay soft and sticky.

According to Miller, ID and OD turning with small DOCs, profile, and face turning requires a tight, sharp chip breaker (positive protection chamfer, relatively big rake angle, and a narrow nose design). A grooving operation has different requirements. Durring this process it’s preferable to produce small “comma” or “clock spring” chips that evacuate from the groove without scratching the side surfaces of the groove. You need to make chips that are smaller than the groove. You also need to get the right radius for the chip – how it curls – depending on the feed rate limits you set. The depth of the chip breaker’s pit affects both chip width and chip radius.

Of the six main workpiece material groups, steels (ISO P), stainless steels (ISO M), heat-resistant superalloys (ISO S), and nonferrous materials (ISO N) often produce chips that are not ideal.

“When chips form in these birdnests, they get wrapped up around the chuck and cause damage, but what we see shops most concerned about is the safety issue,” said Chad Miller, product manager – turning and advance materials for Seco Tools.

Free CNC Speed and Feed Calculator and Formula The Speed and Feed calculator allows machinists and programmers to calculate cutting parameters for multiple materials and cutting tool types. You can also calculate Speeds and Feeds using Online FSWizard Widget right here: This free speed and feed calculator allows CNC Machinists and Programmers to calculate cutting parameters for a wide variety of materials and tools.FSWizard is the first and only online speed and feed calculator to consider dozens of variables when calculating Milling, Drilling and Turning Speeds and Feeds. Key features of FSWizard CNC Machinist Speed and Feed Calculator Built-in material and tool database (Check here for a list of materials available in the PRO version: Supported Materials) Materials ranging from Mild and tool steels to Stainless, Aluminum, and Plastics Speeds and Feeds all kinds of Machining operations. Supports Milling, Drilling, Tapping, and Turning tools Drilling Speed and Feed Calculator Milling Speed and Feed Calculator Turning and Tapping Speed and Feed Calculator Calculate Cutting Speed (SFM), Chip-Load (ipt), RPM, and Feed-Rate. Calculate required Machining Power Calculate optimal Depth and Width of Cut Calculate Chip Thinning and HSM(High-Speed Machining) Multiple free geometry calculators and reference charts under the MENU button Reference data for FHS, SHCS, Heli-Coil, Pipe Taps, Scientific Calculator, Bolt Hole, etc... Circular and Linear Bolt Hole Pattern Calculator Countersink and Center Drill Calculator ISO Fits and Tolerances Calculator How to calculate speeds and feeds using FSWizard CNC Machinist Speed and Feed Calculator Click on the Material button to select the work material Select the Tool Type drop-down to pick a proper tool for the job.Milling, Drilling, Tapping, and Turning tools are supported Then enter proper tool geometry and cutter engagement. Your results are displayed on the blue toolbar Click on the toolbar to get more insights about your cutting data. MENU button gives access to additional calculators and reference data! Please post your questions and suggestions on our support forums!

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The Speed and Feed calculator allows machinists and programmers to calculate cutting parameters for multiple materials and cutting tool types.

Since cutting speeds can be in either Imperial (SFM) or Metric (SMM or m/min) units, you have to use two formulas to calculate the RPM.

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Cutting Speed is the speed at which the tip of the tool travels through the material. It is commonly expressed in Surface Feet per Minute (SFM) or Surface Meters per Minute (SMM).

“We like to think of this as high-precision coolant application,” said Burton. “When employing flood-style coolant, all you do is cool the chip. While cooling the chip can help it break, precision coolant application can cool it, break it, and move it out of the cutting area.”

“Just by looking at the chip’s size and color, you should be able to tell how the cutting tool is running,” Geisel said. “These two factors will tell you if you are using the proper chip former for the DOC, spindle speed, and feed rate. It just gives you so much feedback.”

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“This wedge action occurs because the coolant is directed at a very specific area,” explained Kevin Burton, turning product manager for Sandvik Coromant Canada. “For cutting materials that produce long chips, properly directed high-pressure coolant can have a dramatic effect on chip control and evacuation.”

The H-Carb Seven Flute High Efficiency Endmill specializes in deep axial trochoidal and high-speed machining applications. Offered at various lengths of cut, the 7 flute design creates a superior finish to conventional 5 or 6 flute tools.

In a typical flood-coolant setup, coolant is sprayed from a location that typically is far away from the cutting edge. This causes the chip to act as an umbrella, deflecting the coolant away from the cutting zone. When this happens, the cut is not well-lubricated or cooled at the cutting edge.

Calculate Speeds and Feeds for 1/2" (0.5 in) 2 flute end mill in Mild Steel at cutting speed = 100(ft/min), Chip Load=0.001(inch per tooth)

Seco’s FF2 is a finishing chip breaker designed for smaller DOCs and relatively low feeds (f = 0.008 to 0.025 inch, ap = 0.020 to 0.157 in.). Its design features a dimple and a very large rake angle at the nose. It also has a short, positive protection chamfer and is “narrow” in the front.

“All of these things together -- the geometries, coolant, grade, and coating -- enable the chip to break easily and move out of the cutting zone,” said Miller.

“If you are machining carbon-alloy steels, you don’t want to see dull gray chips; you want to see chips that are blue,” explained Steve Geisel, senior product manager for Iscar Canada. “When chips appear blue, it tells you that the heat generated in the cut is being directed into the chip and not being kept in the insert or the workpiece material.”

This free speed and feed calculator allows CNC Machinists and Programmers to calculate cutting parameters for a wide variety of materials and tools.FSWizard is the first and only online speed and feed calculator to consider dozens of variables when calculating Milling, Drilling and Turning Speeds and Feeds.

For turning applications, we do not need this formula since Spindle Speed is usually given in Constant Surface Speed (CSS), which uses SFM value directly. But if you still want to use the RPM formula, then the diameter value is the actual diameter of the workpiece.

One of the primary tasks machinists must learn to perform is a calculation of speeds and feeds required for milling, drilling, and turning.

The formula is used for milling and drilling applications. Please note that some tool manufacturers provide their recommended feed rate as feed per revolution. In such cases do not multiply by the number of teeth.

Bad chip breaking also affects productivity. Long chips take up more room in the hopper, which requires it to be emptied more often, but it’s not as full in terms of weight of chips. When combined with the time lost due to stopping the machine and removing chips, productivity is reduced and per-part costs are higher.

Chip appearance will vary based on several factors, but workpiece material is the main driver. The two most important details to watch for are chip color and chip size. The sizes of chips produced when cutting cast iron are vastly different from those made when cutting steel. And, depending on the material you are machining, there are certain colors to look for as chips are created.

It starts with knowing what workpiece material you have and what tooling and how you will be using to machine it.The combination of these two factors determines your initial Cutting Speed and Chip Load that you can put into the speed and feed formulas to calculate the cutting tool RPM and feed rate.

Joe Thompson has been covering the Canadian manufacturing sector for more than two decades. He is responsible for the day-to-day editorial direction of the magazine, providing a uniquely Canadian look at the world of metal manufacturing.

“In turning we say that there are four types of operations: finishing, medium, roughing, and heavy roughing,” he said. “We design chip formers for all four categories, and it’s important to use the correct chip former based on your DOC; the feed rate you want to run at; the spindle speed; and, when finishing, the type of surface finish you are trying to achieve.”

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The two most important details to watch for during a turning operation are chip color and chip size. Photo courtesy of Seco Tools.

Chip breakers are part of the macrogeometry of the insert. The size, geometry, and location of the chip breaker vary by material and depth of cut (DOC).

The chip breaker’s design is based on the DOC and also feed rate. For example, a roughing insert’s chip breaker must be designed is such a way that it can handle the high cutting force of the operation.

It’s when chips break poorly that birdnesting occurs. When the system produces long, stringy chips, commonly referred to as birdnests, the operator must manually clear them from the machining envelope, creating a health and safety issue for the operator, and also pause the machine, increasing the cycle time.

According to Geisel, long, stringy chips are an indication that either the cutting parameters are incorrect for the insert being used or an incorrect chip breaker is being used for the cutting parameters being run.

Chips normally break off in one of three ways: they self-break, they break against the tool, or they break against the workpiece. Chips that are an ideal size pose no threat to the machine and will not damage the part, toolholder, or insert.

During the application of HPC, a jet of coolant creates a “hydraulic wedge” between the chip and the insert. Not only does this cool the zone better, it forces the chip away from the insert face quickly, and it breaks the chip into smaller pieces.

When you have manufacturers' data simply find your tool in the catalog and cross-reference the cutting speed and chip load against the tool diameter:

Heat absorbed into the insert will reduce tool life and create poor surface finishes. It also might harden the workpiece, reducing tool life even further.

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It’s important to use the correct insert and chip former based on DOC, feed rate, spindle speed, and surface finish. Photo courtesy of Iscar Canada.

“Chip breakers, or what I like to call chip formers, are designed to form the chip in such a way that it breaks into a manageable size,” said Geisel. “No matter what type of material you are cutting, the last thing you want to produce are long, stringy chips. There is no excuse for creating them.”