MadModder
The Shop => Tools => Topic started by: PeeWee on November 08, 2010, 08:54:19 AM
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Hi All,
I am looking at getting some indexable cutting tools top try out. any recommnedations of suppliiers or type i should either go for or avoide, such as www.glanze.co.uk
regards
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Hi PeeWee
If its for turning I can recommend the Glanze ones.
Have had other cheapo ones where the insert is not well seated - basically a waste of time.
Best used for serious metal removal (hot blue chips, holes in clothes :doh:). If you want a good finish hard to beat HSS.
Inserts seem best on lathes with grunt, on the smaller lathes HSS cuts better cos its holds a better edge meaning the lathe requires less power to cut.
If its for a mill much the same.
Good Luck
picclock
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I have most of the small glanze insert tooling now and I love them I'm running a sieg C4 lathe if that helps
I wish I had bought them sooner I waited because I had read they were not really for small machines but they work great on mine :thumbup:
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I love indexable tooling. Mine is mostly the stuff sold by Greenwood's, they last ages, work on pretty much anything and the finish is as good as anything I've ever managed with HSS. (Of course I could just be crap at sharpening HSS...)
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Share Piclocks view, i never ever had any joy with inserted tooling except Kennametal Top Notch on small machines. Decent HSS Cobalt the way to go.
I do have a boxed set of the Glanze, cheap budget type with German sounding name, big mistake never used because they flex, tips not much better. The £60 or £70 would have been better put towards a Sandvic, Kenametal, Iscar, Ceratizit quality tool.
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Hi All,
Thank you for the quick responses, the lathe they will be used on is the WM-250 from warco. who would be the best supplier of Sandvic, Kenametal, Iscar, Ceratizit etc as i only seem able to find inserts on ebay?
regards
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PeeWee,
I have been using the Glanze series now for many years. When I upgraded my machine to a larger set, my original set was given to another model engineer and it is still in daily use.
http://www.chronos.ltd.uk/acatalog/Set_of_7_Glanze_Indexable_Lathe_Tools_10mm_Square___XC52__11571.html
The advantage of this system is that it uses two different angles on the very easily obtained, and relatively cheap tips, and the holders make full use of all four corners of the tips for various cutting operations, so you don't throw them away when say the sharp angles are worn out, plus also, I have found the boring tool is very good to use, very little vibration even at full extension.
I found out the other day that Chronos are also now selling the super sharp tips which overcome a lot of the problems of the 'blunt' nature of this type of cutting tool, and don't require as much grunt. Supposedly they cut a mirror finish on ali.
Bogs
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As John said :thumbup:
I have two sets with different size shanks ,,, all take the same tip ,,,, makes life easy when all you have to do is bye one type of tip to fit the tooling :med:
Rob
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thank you all, i have also just noticed that glanze.co.uk is a chronos website, though they don't make them.