Hi all,
sorry for late response, been away…
Clive
"Perhaps you had raw OSR and have now reaped the benefit!"
No, the one I used was the Canola Oil low Erucic acid variant normally used for cooking.
"Using it must be like 'Frying tonight' and the smell must be like rotting cabbage as it comes from the Brassica type plant family."
In fact, the smell wasn't really bad. The problem was the gumming and the corrosion.
"The fact that the stain is still there after cleaning means its etched into the metal."
Yes, it is very little though, I can't feel it at all with my nails. I'm going to try some metal polish.
The main reason for using rapeseed oil was the fact that it was non-poisonous, and it was very easy to vipe off your hands.
I'm using the water soluble oil type now, but it has a few drawbacks: All of this is on the mill, I have not used it on the lathe yet.
It does not smell good. This is according to my wife. My tolerance for "machinery" smell is very high!
The very low viscosity makes a real SPLASH every time you start the pump and the fluid reaches the nozzle. This splash spreads oil far from the machine! It is easy to clean up though.
The surface finnish is not as good as it was with rapeseed. I suspect that this is also a result of the low viscosity?
I have the impression that the thick rapeseed oil had a dampening effect. It seems to me that I more easily get chatter now.
If I can lay my hands on a can of neat cutting oil, or a mineral, what we used to call winter oil (10W), I will try to use that. The problem with the cutting oils is that they all contains additives which are more or less poisonous. My biggest problem is that I have been unable to get either!