Mike RzMachine
Cast Iron
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2007
- Location
- Utah
About 10 or so years ago, the local Iscar rep (shout out to Clay East) was very good and showed me the Iscar HEM library on MasterCam. We were machining 15-5 H900 with air blast 1" deep on a Brother 30 taper. We picked a 3/8" 5 flute from the library, and the HEM feeds and speeds came up with 14,500 rpm and 650 IPM at 5% stepover full depth. I laughed and Clay said go for it. It ran great with great tool life too. Made a mountain of chips.
getting a bit away from the cam chip thinning discussion on this question. How does the small radial margin allow much higher SFM for a given tool coating in harder materials? All of the tool charts i've used recommend a surface speed well below 300 sfm for hardened stainless, with the exception of guhring nano-Si. Iscar only shows up to 300 sfm for the solid carbide endmill series i found on their website.
any advise on how to related practically allowable surface speed with small radial engagement? that would be a huge time saver for me, assuming I can maintain reasonable tool life.
Thanks,
Mike