Andrew Tinsley | 18/12/2017 13:58:12 |
1817 forum posts 2 photos | I have just purchased a job lot of horizontal milling cutters. There are slitting saws, face cutters , side and face cutters and some profile cutters. Most are sharp and those that need sharpening can be done on a friends Quorn (Mine isn't finished yet, probably quite a common refrain!). Now there a few large slitting saws missing a tooth and an odd side and face cutter, again with a damaged tooth. Is there any point in keeping these, for initial rough milling? If not, then can anyone think of other uses? Seems a shame to throw away a few lumps of HSS! Andrew. |
Dave Martin | 18/12/2017 14:15:26 |
101 forum posts 11 photos | Andrew, I can't quickly find the thread, but I think it was on here - someone recently showed the use of slitting saw blade as a parting tool, and when a tooth was blunted, the blade was just rotated. The question was asked though as to how well swarf would be cleared from the cut.... Dave |
Farmboy | 18/12/2017 14:29:47 |
171 forum posts 2 photos | If you keep them you'll never need them, then the day after you throw them away you'll find many jobs you could have used them for
Don't ask ... Mike. |
Neil Wyatt | 18/12/2017 14:30:09 |
![]() 19226 forum posts 749 photos 86 articles | Posted by Andrew Tinsley on 18/12/2017 13:58:12:
I have just purchased a job lot of horizontal milling cutters. There are slitting saws, face cutters , side and face cutters and some profile cutters. Most are sharp and those that need sharpening can be done on a friends Quorn (Mine isn't finished yet, probably quite a common refrain!). Now there a few large slitting saws missing a tooth and an odd side and face cutter, again with a damaged tooth. Is there any point in keeping these, for initial rough milling? If not, then can anyone think of other uses? Seems a shame to throw away a few lumps of HSS! Andrew. Use as parting tools? |
Emgee | 18/12/2017 14:55:50 |
2610 forum posts 312 photos | Hi Andrew Surely the cutter/saw with a tooth missing is still usable if the remaining teeth are sharp. I don't think model engineers work to industry metal removal rates mainly out of respect for the machine capability Emgee
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Jon Gibbs | 18/12/2017 15:01:01 |
750 forum posts | +1 for Emgee's comments - I don't think you'll notice. If you want the tooth load on your slitting saw to be equal (and assuming it has an even number of teeth) you could always take a Dremel and remove every other tooth Jon |
SillyOldDuffer | 18/12/2017 16:11:35 |
10668 forum posts 2415 photos | I read a ME article recently by a chap who made all his tools himself in the 1960s by reforming HSS. Saws for parting off as mentioned, but he also describes worn out milling cutters being ground into lathe knives and boring bar inserts. His home-made knives were round at the holding end. They fitted into square bar drilled and slotted to grip them in his toolpost. They look exactly like the holders you can get for carbide boring bars. His boring bar cutters were also round but they fitted directly into a hole drilled into a home-made boring bar and were held in place with a grub-screw. Some of the tools look a little odd but no reason why they wouldn't work provided you have the grinding skills. Dave Edited By SillyOldDuffer on 18/12/2017 16:13:16 |
Peter Tucker | 18/12/2017 16:28:14 |
185 forum posts | Hi Andrew, I have a slitting saw with teeth missing, still cuts fine. ( The critical thing is sharp teeth.) Peter. |
Involute Curve | 18/12/2017 17:23:12 |
![]() 337 forum posts 107 photos | I've got a 4 tooth 20mm endmill with only a tooth missing, it lost its tooth in the first couple of seconds but has done a tone of work since..... |
Andrew Tinsley | 18/12/2017 17:27:22 |
1817 forum posts 2 photos | Thanks gentlemen! Looks as though I may as well sharpen the duff milling cutters and give them a try. I suspected that I may have been able to use them once ground and sharpened. Basically I was too idle to sharpen them and find it didn't work. Looks as though they may still be usable and definitely worth the effort of sharpening them. Not sure about using them as parting tools, the hefty slitting saws won't have the side clearance necessary and any rotating system would have a large overhang. Maybe I have misunderstood how to use them in this application? Interesting about cutting them up to use as a boring bar. how on earth would you cut them up to start with? Again I may well have got the wrong end of the stick! Thanks, Andrew. |
colin hawes | 18/12/2017 19:05:39 |
570 forum posts 18 photos | I have several side and face milling cutters with missing teeth and experience shows that they work perfectly well on thick material but you need to take more cars if the material is thin because one of the teeth will be taking twice the cut on auto feed. Colin |
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