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  1. #1
    Boyan Would a 3.3mm drill be better than a 3mm in Brass?
    ..Clive
    The more you know, The better you know, How little you know

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by magicniner View Post
    Brass chips very nicely, you may find you don't get any issues but if you use very localised air you can shift enough chips for holes that depth, I use clip-together coolant pipe with a medical canula needle bonded into the nozzle from the inside,
    Regards,
    Nick
    So you are saying to try 24000 rpm, no peck drilling, blow air and try how fast things could go with that carbide cutter i have?

    Quote Originally Posted by Clive S View Post
    Boyan Would a 3.3mm drill be better than a 3mm in Brass?
    yes, actually i am using 1/8 . was using 3mm on my old flimsy machine cause due to vibrations it was making a 1/8 hole :-)

    Anyways i use a spiral pointed machine tap which further drill opens the hole if necessary.
    project 1 , 2, Dust Shoe ...

  3. #3
    Or would using a drill will be faster? Instead of a milling cutter?
    project 1 , 2, Dust Shoe ...

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Boyan Silyavski View Post
    Or would using a drill will be faster? Instead of a milling cutter?
    I would have thought so, the right tool for the job and all that?

    Milling cutters are for cutting sideways no?

    .Me
    .Me

  5. #5
    You should also check the drills geometry as a normal drill used on brass can break as it will pull into the hole, possibly not that relevant on a cnc machine as the drill will be restrained by the z axis.
    Normally if you drill a lot of brass you can remove the cutting edge with a 'stone'.

    Peter

  6. #6
    I had a talk with the HSMadvisor maker, so it seems i had that functionality but did not know how to find it.

    So according to the calculator it seems drill / HSS/ or mill/carbide/ is almost the same feed rate. But if drill is cobalt or carbide then 1.5x faster. 1000mm/min and 1500mm /min respectively.

    I use the general option " Other non ferrous alloys" in stead of "low lead brass " or similar as the latest give me too slow feed , slower than aluminum. So it seems my brass is different, as i know for a fact that it machines and drills much faster than aluminum.

    Will experiment tomorrow to see how fast it could go in real life and report back.

    Click image for larger version. 

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    project 1 , 2, Dust Shoe ...

  7. #7
    Boyan,
    I'd definitely use a drill bit, not a milling cutter,
    Regards,
    Nick
    You think that's too expensive? You're not a Model Engineer are you? :D

  8. #8
    And pecking could be reduced to short-stops to just break the chips.

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