I had a small 12mm thumbwheel, drilled and tapped to M6, sitting in a collet chuck and still attached to the stock. Mild steel, 15mm bar stock.
I trued up the parting tool, ensured it was flat to the work and checked centre height against a drill bit that was already sitting in the tailstock. I applied oil from my lathe oiler gun, a light engine grade oil. This set up usually works fine for me.
I started parting, lower speed than for turning as this is the general advice I have received. The parting was going just fine, nice smooth layers of metal coming off. This was around 300 rpm. As the diamater was getting thinner and it seemed the lathe was having to work a bit harder, I thought I would stop the cut and increase the speed slightly, to about 450rpm.
However when I went back to finish the cut, the tool only rubbed. I tried putting the speed back down. Then back up further. No luck. Applying a little more pressure and I heard a "crunk", and the final < 1mm wall remaining between the thumbwheel and its hole had deformed.
I thought maybe I had blunted the tool, but checking it on the parent stock showed it was fine.
Why might the tool have refused to cut when going back the second time?
Should parting off operations always be one smooth movement?
Thanks for reading!