Hi,
I think I have the answer to why but just wanted to check my reasoning is right.
I was squaring the edges on a piece of EN32B 100mm square and 6mm thick. All went well and the finish was fine, then I noticed the edges were not square to the face. i.e. the 6mm edge to the 100mm face. I worked out the mill had undercut the sides at about 2 degrees.
The setup was. The piece was held in the vice on parallels with the working side to the right. This meant swarf was thrown backwards and conventional cuts were from front to back. The 12mm 4 flute cutter was in an R8 collet and was running at 800RPM. I was taking 0.4mm to 0.5mm conventional cuts.
I know my SX3 can cut square as I had just finished making some parallels and used the same setup to trim the ends. But that was using a 14mm cutter and running at 1600RPM.
I had used the speed indicated in Tubal Cain's Model Engineer's Handbook. Group D in table A on page 5.14 to find the 1600RPM. But I was not sure about running so fast and had calculated 800RPM from the 80ft/min figure given on page 5.15. I have since re-read and think I have too high RPM.
Feed was about 140mm/min.
I checked the head trimming, about 0.015mm over 200mm. I checked the surface of the parallels in the vice and they were similar. So the workpiece was flat and the head square.
Then to find the problem I tried squaring the end of a 40x6mm bar.
Same result;
- Using conventional or climb cuts.
- Using a brand new different make cutter.
- For 0.1mm cuts, and less undercut under this.
- Repeating the same cut without moving the X removed 1/2 of the slope. I.E only cut the top 3mm of the bar.
- To rule out the R8 collet I tried an ER collet, but the same result.
I then tried changing the speed, running it at 1600RPM I get square cuts even with a 0.5mm cut.
I can understand that a tool is pushed away on a deep cut and hence the need for a spring cut, what stumps me is the undercut.
My hypothesis is that the cutting edge first contacts at the bottom of the piece. Then as it rotates the cutting edge engages higher up, but at the same time, the tool/head flexes away. When the flute is passing the piece the tool springs back. This vibration of the head causes the sloping face.
Does this sound right?
Adrian