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I've been looking into getting a gear cutting set. Is there a particular sized set that I should invest in first?
Don't say that too loud in the US lol somebody might hear you.I live in the US. I like the idea of going metric, it's what I first learned when I got into machining, and like you said since the world uses metric usually you can find tooling cheaper.
I thimpfk, but am not sure, that at one time, calipers were made that used "fractional" instead of decimal. I thimpfk they went up to 1/128th" but am not sure. I have to convert a lot of drawings from fractional to decimal when I redraw them. Some times it's a terrible PAIN to do it.My machines and measuring tools are all imperial (not counting the digital calipers and DRO that can do either), but some of my tooling and nearly all of my own designs are a mix.
Metric bearings are so much cheaper than imperial bearings that it doesn't make sense to me to design for the latter, even if everything else in the design is based on inches. After all, when it comes down to it, I'm going to be cutting the bearing seat to as precise a size as I can, and it doesn't matter a bit whether that size is 1.250" for an imperial bearing, or 1.260" (=32mm, close enough) for a metric one; either way, for a home machinist like me, I'm going to squeak in that last .0001-2" for the fit I need. My CAD software doesn't care what unit I'm using, and it is happy to convert either to the other - put in a 32mm bearing, and get the 1.260" measurement shown to suit my inch-based lathe and mill. (Of course, 1.260" is rounded to 3 digits, but I can just as easily have it show 1.2598 or 1.25984 or 1.259843 or ... not that I generally get closer than +/- .0005, though I can get down to +/- .0001" if I really try ... and if I don't mind possibly scrapping two or three parts before I get there!)
If I'm doing 3d printing, I usually design entirely in mm, just because that's how the printer is set up, and a lot of the screws and nuts that I use with 3d prints are metric. But "designing in metric" may include converting some inch-based measurements to mm if I need to accommodate something inch-based in the design.
Meanwhile, I bought a set of 8 module 1 cutters and later another set of 8 module .8 from AliExpress or EBay or some such; each set cost around $50, but that was last year; maybe the prices have gone up. Neither set is best quality, of course, but they have proven more than good enough for what I am doing.
Honestly, for a machinist, who cares? I don't design or machine in fractions, I design and machine in decimals. It doesn't really matter to me whether those are decimals of an inch or of a mm.
Hi Nautilus: I have been a lurker on HMEM for years and recently got into gear cutting. I self taught and avoided a lot of the complexity, someday I hope to have a fuller understanding but was able to cut useable gears in brass and aluminum with a little prep work and without advanced math. This is how I did it:I've been looking into getting a gear cutting set. Is there a particular sized set that I should invest in first?
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