I'm not an engineer either, just a hobby user who is generally quite practical. It's quite happy machining steel and iron provided you don't go mad. I seldom use anything larger than 6mm dia cutters except when surfacing larger aluminium parts.
On steel for adaptive cuts I use a 6mm dia 3-flute cutter run at the maximum of 5000rpm, Ae (sideways depth of cut) 0.6mm which is 10% of cutter dia and that applies to smaller cutters too. Ap (vertical depth of cut) 6mm eg 1xD or a bit less if it works out as a multiple of the overall height rather than say 3 cuts of 6mm and one of 2mm on a 20mm part I'll do all four cuts at 5mm each. I leave 0.3mm for finishing.
For finish contours around the outside of a part I'll again use the Ap of 6mm though may go a bit more if the part is not too thick such as 8mm and do one pass taking a 0.2mm cut and then one of 0.1mm
If it's more of a 3D shape then after the adaptive I will use a 4mm or 4mm 4-flute ball nose cutter which is better than the usual 2=flute as you can feed twice as fast for the same given chip load. Stepover will be in the region of 0.2mm to 0.25mm depending on the job running at 5000rpm and 600mm/min feed
I'm not so keen on doing just a contour around the pass where the tool cuts at it's full width and in shallow passes as it doe snot sound as happy and you also wear just the end of the cutter rather than spread the wear over a longer length of flute. So will generally use the adaptive route to get the waste off the part unless its a sheet metal job eg from 3mm or less sheet.
These figures are for Carbide cutters. I get quite a few from APT, the odd one from ARC and the ones that do the adaptive are NC from Cutwel. The NC stands for New Century which is the Chinese factory owned by YG-1 so still made to a good standard. Drilling is usually Dormer A022 HSS Stub Drills.
All climb cuts, again the machine sounds so much happier climb cutting that conventional.
I usually put the details of the cut in the captions that come up during the video or in the comments below so that should give you an idea of what works.
On steel for adaptive cuts I use a 6mm dia 3-flute cutter run at the maximum of 5000rpm, Ae (sideways depth of cut) 0.6mm which is 10% of cutter dia and that applies to smaller cutters too. Ap (vertical depth of cut) 6mm eg 1xD or a bit less if it works out as a multiple of the overall height rather than say 3 cuts of 6mm and one of 2mm on a 20mm part I'll do all four cuts at 5mm each. I leave 0.3mm for finishing.
For finish contours around the outside of a part I'll again use the Ap of 6mm though may go a bit more if the part is not too thick such as 8mm and do one pass taking a 0.2mm cut and then one of 0.1mm
If it's more of a 3D shape then after the adaptive I will use a 4mm or 4mm 4-flute ball nose cutter which is better than the usual 2=flute as you can feed twice as fast for the same given chip load. Stepover will be in the region of 0.2mm to 0.25mm depending on the job running at 5000rpm and 600mm/min feed
I'm not so keen on doing just a contour around the pass where the tool cuts at it's full width and in shallow passes as it doe snot sound as happy and you also wear just the end of the cutter rather than spread the wear over a longer length of flute. So will generally use the adaptive route to get the waste off the part unless its a sheet metal job eg from 3mm or less sheet.
These figures are for Carbide cutters. I get quite a few from APT, the odd one from ARC and the ones that do the adaptive are NC from Cutwel. The NC stands for New Century which is the Chinese factory owned by YG-1 so still made to a good standard. Drilling is usually Dormer A022 HSS Stub Drills.
All climb cuts, again the machine sounds so much happier climb cutting that conventional.
I usually put the details of the cut in the captions that come up during the video or in the comments below so that should give you an idea of what works.
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