Stefan, to forgot to explain the "heat" issue. Carbide, with and without various coatings is used extensively in metal machining. Carbide can take a tremendous amount of abuse and keep on cutting just fine. As an example, when milling with a carbide indexable insert endmill (or face mill etc.), the chips come off the part Blue-Hot, hot enough to cause an instant burn on the skin that will blister. These cutters can have anywhere from 2 teeth to dozens or even more teeth. More often than not, people will use coolant (a water with synthetic lubricants) on these cutters when cutting all sorts of hard and soft steels. In those cases, that insert is getting very hot while in the cut, then as the tip exits the cut with each rotation it is blasted with cold water. The inserts survive that very nicely. What most machinists don't realize is that you can cut just as effectively and get longer tool life without using coolant on these types of cutters. However, as I have done during demonstrations with big machines, you have to watch where all those chips pile up. On one particular machine I was deonstrating to Snap-On tools, we were cutting a large die base of tool steel. We were hogging LARGE amounts of material off the die base without coolant and everything was going along fine till things got blury. What happened was the chips piled up against a plexiglass door, built up enough heat to ignite the plexiglass. Even with the small fire, the customer was still happy as a pig in mud to buy the machine :-) Chris
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Re: grinding drills
2007-01-30 by lcdpublishing
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