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View Full Version : Who needs coolant????



Voicecoil
25-01-2021, 07:47 PM
Came across this video of ceramic end mill cutting nickel alloy - mad!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9t4ke40fhvk

BigBrand
25-01-2021, 10:41 PM
i love watching titans of cnc... its just complete machine porn

johngoodrich
26-01-2021, 06:49 PM
love it. the great thing about ceramic is you cant use coolant coz it needs to be hot

depronman
28-01-2021, 01:21 AM
We have some machines at BAE that rip though titanium and absolutly mad rates, you can't see the cutter for a cloud of chips. These used to be cut with coolant, literally gallons per second flooded at high pressure to cool and remove the chips
However some years ago they moved to tooling that cuts dry and the feed rates are insane, however I recal this was for roughing out only, and the finish cuts are still done under flood coolant, likely to be for surface finish and crack protection

Paul

Neale
28-01-2021, 08:48 AM
I've occasionally had a small carbide cutter glowing red but never had the comet-tail of red-hot chips coming off like that!

Voicecoil
28-01-2021, 01:40 PM
We have some machines at BAE that rip though titanium and absolutly mad rates, you can't see the cutter for a cloud of chips. These used to be cut with coolant, literally gallons per second flooded at high pressure to cool and remove the chips
However some years ago they moved to tooling that cuts dry and the feed rates are insane
Paul

I'm suprised you can cut Ti dry like that as it burns rather well - sprinkle some fine swarf into a gas flame if you want to experiment! Or maybe they just have to make sure the chips are big enough?

hanermo2
28-01-2021, 11:16 PM
Cutting hard stuff dry on a lathe or mill is std industry practice.
Hard turning or hard milling.

Haas machines do it quite well.
When I was at Haas Spain as the sales manager, I went to see some customers who did hard milling.
Looked just like the video.
Typically, the finish is very good, and the accuracy can be very good.

(Also had an insane 500 ton press, from england, about 80 years old, in use).