Tin Falcon
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First of all you have been given lots of otion and I will attempt to not repeat to much.
As bogs pointed out the answer to the above limit is solid carbide. carbide is stiffer so the length limit is 7 times the diameter.
So search MSC, enco, travers etc for solid carbide mini boring bars.
Tin
There is a very good reason for this . The rule of THREE that is a steel boring bar should not stick out more than three times its diameter. This goes for work sticking out of a chuck and lathe tools as well. And less is better. And do not feel bad if you do not know this it seems to be some dark hidden secret barely talked about much less published.I'm trying to bore a hole 3/8" Diameter to a depth of ~1". The problem I'm running into is all the boring bars I've been able to find online for that diameter have a maximum bore depth of 3/4".
As bogs pointed out the answer to the above limit is solid carbide. carbide is stiffer so the length limit is 7 times the diameter.
So search MSC, enco, travers etc for solid carbide mini boring bars.
first of all a quality cobalt bit may be in order here. second use a good wheel . The gray import wheels are ok for General purpose grinding and a quick touch up but white wheels are a lot better for HSS . If you really want something that will run cool get a norton blue wheel. A bit pricey at $30 for one wheel. but they were developed to grind tools fast and cool. Also use a grit coarse enough to remove some material. Then a finer grit to finish and i do the last bit by hand on fine oil stone.I've tried grinding my own boring bars out of 1/4" HSS bar but grinding the bar is taking an obscenely long time, partly due the hardness of HSS as well as the fact that the blank heats up fairly quickly when removing such large amounts of material.
Tin