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  • #582134
    Guy Mckie
    Participant
      @guymckie27319

      Good evening all.

      I am doing a Hemingway's machinists hammer.

      And getting a lot of chatter whilst turning the taper between centres. I don't get chatter on straight cuts.

      Quite frustrating . Just wondered if anyone knows the cure

      Ml7

      10mm tool carbide inserts.

      Many thanks

      Guy

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      #16346
      Guy Mckie
      Participant
        @guymckie27319
        #582138
        Martin Connelly
        Participant
          @martinconnelly55370

          For a long slender part one solution would be a travelling steady however that will not work on a tapered part. I would suggest trying HSS as you can get it much sharper than carbide inserts.

          Martin C

          #582139
          Guy Mckie
          Participant
            @guymckie27319

            I will try HSS tomorrow thanks for taking the time to reply

            Guy

            #582140
            Baz
            Participant
              @baz89810

              Really sharp HSS, drop the speed and increase the feed.

              #582141
              JasonB
              Moderator
                @jasonb

                I suspect you have a **Mt insert, swap it for a **GT one and that will help a lot as it is much sharper like an HSS tool

                Did 4 of these yesterday and got a nice smooth finish on some not so nice to machine steel with CCGT inserts with 0.8mm tip radius.14mm dia down to 12mm over a 200mm length, 5mm dia spigot at the end, 800rpm. Probably not as many years wear on my far eastern lathe as an old ML7 which can also affect things.

                 

                Edited By JasonB on 24/01/2022 16:58:18

                #582179
                Guy Mckie
                Participant
                  @guymckie27319

                  Thank you. Few th8ngs to try out now

                  Guy

                  #582200
                  old mart
                  Participant
                    @oldmart

                    The inserts intended for aluminium and commonly labeled HO1 may beavailable for your holder. They will cut well with tiny cutting depths and therefore reduce the tendency for chatter. You should try different spindle speeds, sometimes there is a resonance at a particular speed.

                    On Saturday, I turned a bit of unknown steel and the chatter was so intense that it was almost too pretty to continue machining, but it was the only piece I had. The answer was tailstock support.

                    #582220
                    Andrew Steward
                    Participant
                      @andrewsteward85018
                      Posted by Martin Connelly on 24/01/2022 16:47:12:

                      For a long slender part one solution would be a travelling steady however that will not work on a tapered part. I would suggest trying HSS as you can get it much sharper than carbide inserts.

                      Martin C

                      Im not being argumentative, I’m naive and know it! Before I bought tooling I read up on it and concluded carbide inserts would be best…. But now I’m reading the above. Have I made an error? Are HSS generally better or only if you are experienced enough to sharpen them yourself?

                      sorry for high jacking the thread

                      #582224
                      Paul Kemp
                      Participant
                        @paulkemp46892

                        What is best it what works and what is needed! In some applications only hss will really do (special tools, form tools, applications where speed required for carbide is not an option for various reasons) and in some cases only carbide will do (hard materials, chilled cast iron etc). The other consideration is what you have!

                        Why do you think you have made a mistake? Expand your repertoire, invest in some hss blanks and have a go, they are cheap enough. You have the carbide now get some hss and you have all the options.

                        Paul.

                        #582248
                        JasonB
                        Moderator
                          @jasonb

                          But what did you actually buy? cheap holders and unknown inserts or reasonably priced inserts and a range of half decent inserts to suit various jobs?

                          #582255
                          Martin Connelly
                          Participant
                            @martinconnelly55370

                            Carbide inserts are made from a powder that is pressed into shaped then heated to bond the particles together (sintering) and are generally not sharpened after that process. This leaves a slightly blunt cutting edge. They also have a nose radius typically 0.2mm or 0.4mm for the small sizes used on hobby lathes. Part of this bluntness is needed since a sharp piece of carbide can be very brittle and will snap off if poorly handled at any point in its journey from manufacture to first use. The **GT inserts Jason refers to above are ground and polished to be sharp and have a profile designed for aluminium so are much more suited to the less industrial machines found in many home workshops. They work well on other materials as well including stainless steel and HSS.

                            What you can do with HSS is form the cutting edge with a simple grinder then use a suitable fine stone finish the edge really sharp and to put on a radius that is far smaller than the 0.2mm that is likely on the inserts you have. There are plenty of YouTube videos on this. I have seen some people saying they can sharpen their HSS tools to the point they could shave with them.

                            The other thing that can be done with HSS is a vertical shear tool. There have been a few threads mentioning these, they can make very fine cuts if made and used correctly. The last discussion was in October 2020.Shear tool

                            Martin C

                            #582299
                            Howard Lewis
                            Participant
                              @howardlewis46836

                              Tried a shear tool; simple to grind and produced a finish as good as a tangential tool.

                              Taken as read that the cutting edge is on centre height.

                              Generally, reducing speed reduces chatter, or risk thereof.

                              Some lubrication might help.

                              In all cases whatever the tooling, keep things as rigid as possible. Minimising overhang cured a problem that I had with chatter..

                              Small nose radius.

                              HSS can be ground to a sharper edge than the MT carbide tips, which, being moulded, you have already been told will not be ground to a sharp edge.

                              HTH

                              Howard.

                              #582343
                              William Chitham
                              Participant
                                @williamchitham75949

                                Not saying a sharper tool won't help but what how did your set up actually change between the straight and tapered cuts? Have you done something to make the set up less rigid? Are you putting the taper on with the compound slide and if so is it now at a drastically different orientation to the work? I'd be looking at things that actually changed before concluding that the constant (ie the cutting tool) is at fault.

                                William.

                                #582349
                                Martin Connelly
                                Participant
                                  @martinconnelly55370

                                  William, the Hemingway's machinists hammer handle is a long and slender tapered part and Guy said he was machining it between centres, I presumed with the tailstock centre offset. There are a number of variables that could have changed but using a basic carbide tool for this seems likely to be a simple thing to change to HSS and see if it improves the machining. Trying to find a good rpm or speed for a tapered part will not be easy since the diameter is constantly changing.

                                  Martin C

                                  #582592
                                  John Reese
                                  Participant
                                    @johnreese12848

                                    Using a boring head to offset the tailstock center creates additional deflection of the tailstock center. Set over the tailstock and use a center directly in the tailstock quill. I know it is a PITA getting the tailstock back on center. Just grit your teeth and do it the right way.

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