I’ve found that carbide doesn’t give such a good finish, and is less adaptable for fast small ad-hoc jobs, which a hobbyist-dood does a lot of, it needs a lot more set-up care and time to produce a nice finish.
It’s also more brittle than HSS and can fracture where HSS would simply flatten and be resharpened with a quick brush on the grind wheel.
Carbide also needs to be run at what I would call silly-speed to work properly, it can be a bit of an eye opener compared with HSS, with hot swarf flying off all over the shop.
Cast iron is a nightmare, a storm of bits but HSS blunts too easily.
Carbide is fantastic for heavy roughing out work for anything like stainless and cast iron, or if you’ve got a bucketful of metal to remove as fast as possible on a limited cut depth hobby machine.
I find that negative rake works great on stainless and cast iron btw.
Carbide probbly gives a good finish in a more industrial scenario when you have to run off 100 of an item and once you’ve got a proper setup you plug in a new insert after x units and get a consistent result.
On the other hand if it’s a one-off basic metal item…a quick spin with the HSS at a relatively low speed has it done and dusted with a luvly finish.
HSS grinds easier, so is faster for form tools and making weird thread types, and when it blunts or breaks, it regrinds faster.
Both have their place in your arsenal, and neither can really replace the other at what they do best.
If the tool is skipping you need more stiffness, a more acute angle on the tip(maybe negative rake), or more speed.
Don’t put too much pressure on a carbide tip, it fractures relatively easily.
Edited By ady on 13/09/2010 22:59:04