Just been countersinking some mild steel and been rather surprised by the exceeding poor cutting ability of the countersinks I have – set of 3-flute HSS from RS. I’m countersinking a 7mm hole to about 12mm overall (for an M6 CSK).
It was all very nasty with considerable chatter. Given that in my Wabeco mill i can use a 2.5 inch facemill without it dropping speed at all, runout is imperceptible, and i can drill/mill up to at least 12mm (so far) with fabulous accuracy and surface finish, I’m going to blame the countersinks. It was all rock solid in a decent mill vice too.
I also tried a Nine9 indexable 90 degree spot drill (brilliant for chamfering!), but to be fair i was at too great a diameter (over 75% of the diameter of the insert) and this didn’t like it a lot either.
In the end, I used the 21mm countersink at high speed (2500 rpm) and just faced off a fraction at a time to get a decent finish out of the rough countersink I had already got. It’s good enough now but not an experience to repeat.
I did notice that on the 3-flute 21mm csk, one of the flutes actually showed a slight scuffing on the ground section a couple of mm behind the cutting edge – in other words looks like that particular flute isn’t even ground such that the edge is actually cutting!
Now folks, can anyone advise me around a solution to this? Am i missing anything? Or is it just that i need to go buy a really decent countersink? In which case – suggestions? (Guess the RS stuff these days is Chinese…)
Thanks!