Re: Climb milling was feeds and speeds.
Posted by
Lee Studley
on 2001-06-03 13:49:03 UTC
I once had to put a good edge on a 24"x 1/8" aluminum ruler for a
luthier and found that the best results I could get were with climb
milling the 1/8" edge on a manual Bridgeport with power feed.
If I went the other normal way, it gummed up badly. This was without
coolant, but it agrees with the list member that mentioned sign
making. I dont know why it worked better, but there probably
is a use for climb milling when appropriate. Maybe just for light
cuts an controlled setups.
-Lee
luthier and found that the best results I could get were with climb
milling the 1/8" edge on a manual Bridgeport with power feed.
If I went the other normal way, it gummed up badly. This was without
coolant, but it agrees with the list member that mentioned sign
making. I dont know why it worked better, but there probably
is a use for climb milling when appropriate. Maybe just for light
cuts an controlled setups.
-Lee
Discussion Thread
Woody
2001-06-03 09:16:47 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Climb milling was feeds and speeds.
Jon Elson
2001-06-03 11:45:28 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Climb milling was feeds and speeds.
Lee Studley
2001-06-03 13:49:03 UTC
Re: Climb milling was feeds and speeds.
Robin S.
2001-06-03 15:31:20 UTC
Re: Climb milling was feeds and speeds.
Jon Elson
2001-06-03 15:34:47 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Re: Climb milling was feeds and speeds.
Woody
2001-06-03 17:16:48 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Climb milling was feeds and speeds.
Kenn Danner
2001-06-03 18:07:07 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Climb milling was feeds and speeds.
Sven Peter, TAD S.A.
2001-06-03 18:27:44 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Climb milling was feeds and speeds.