Carbide Inserts in the Home Workshop - Printable Version +- MetalworkingFun Forum (http://www.metalworkingfun.com) +-- Forum: Machining (http://www.metalworkingfun.com/forum-5.html) +--- Forum: General Metalworking Discussion (http://www.metalworkingfun.com/forum-6.html) +--- Thread: Carbide Inserts in the Home Workshop (/thread-534.html) Pages:
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RE: Carbide Inserts in the Home Workshop - Mayhem - 06-21-2012 I use both HSS and insert tooling. RE: Carbide Inserts in the Home Workshop - Sunset Machine - 06-22-2012 Only one carbide face mill here, the rest all HSS. Forms tools sometimes carbon steel, a current one is A2. I experimented with carbide and 4140HT once, it just stopped the lathe cold and haven't tried it since. Light cuts only, what's the point. Sounds like I might be missing out on something though, have to take another look. RE: Carbide Inserts in the Home Workshop - rleete - 06-22-2012 I use HSS almost exclusively. Since most of the parts I make are eventually polished, the surface finish I get is important as it saves me time and effort. I rarely cut anything other than aluminum or brass. Even mild steel is probably used less than 5%. I also have no way to sharpen carbide at home, so that's a major consideration for me. RE: Carbide Inserts in the Home Workshop - EdK - 06-22-2012 (06-21-2012, 05:23 PM)Highpower Wrote:(06-21-2012, 02:50 PM)DaveH Wrote: What do you use? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ed RE: Carbide Inserts in the Home Workshop - Hopefuldave - 06-22-2012 All of the above - HSS for the soft stuff / best possible finish / special form tools, inserts for harder materials when I can allow the less-shiny finishes, brazed carbide for nasties like hardened QCTPs (e.g. boring the base to fit a topslide spigot - something I find I have to do a few times a week at work...) - the hard skin seems to be a couple of mm deep, HSS won't touch it, inserts seem to just slide around under the clamp and "get out of the way"! I almost always *sharpen* brazed tips, preferring to get the cheap ones and grind my own geometry, as cheap or expensive they still chip on hardened tool steel... A fine-ish green grit wheel and a diamond lap are good investments! Often the steel shaft needs grinding too - e.g. a lot of the cheaper brazed-tip boring bars are a bit clumsy as supplied, but grinding away some of the steel at the business end of a (f'rinstance) 10 or 12mm boring bar to get some heel clearance will let me get it into a 15mm hole *and cutting* and leaves the bulk of the bar at full size and rigidity, unless I need to go deep. I've found the carbide parting inserts (in the fancy blade tools) are a wonder, but damn they're *fragile*! No interrupted cuts, any side load at all and the insert's gone and the blade bends, nasty noises! I go with HSS if I have a tricky job to part off. Dave H. (the other one) RE: Carbide Inserts in the Home Workshop - Bill Gruby - 06-22-2012 nobody has mentioned HSS Indexable Inserts fron Arthur Warner. I use these most of the time now. Go to the site and at the left find Tool Kits. http://www.arwarnerco.com/?gclid=CIaas4264rACFYJlOgodPGhMfQ "Billy G" RE: Carbide Inserts in the Home Workshop - PixMan - 06-22-2012 (06-22-2012, 01:03 PM)Hopefuldave Wrote: I've found the carbide parting inserts (in the fancy blade tools) are a wonder, but damn they're *fragile*! No interrupted cuts, any side load at all and the insert's gone and the blade bends, nasty noises! I go with HSS if I have a tricky job to part off. I'll have to make a video of my carbide insert cutoff tool(s) doing an interrupted cut. It'll just amaze you. Not all carbide insert parting tools are created equal. |