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Ignoramus16724 Ignoramus16724 is offline
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Default Coolant vs. cutting oil/lube

On 2009-06-27, Ed Huntress wrote:
Where cutting forces or non-cutting friction is high, you can add sulfur to
oil and you get more film strength, with little influence on lubrication,
without increasing the puncture threshold. Tough cutting conditions, such as
tapping, benefit from the sulfur. You can also add chlorine or a variety of
other chemicals to get a somewhat mysterious reduction in shear strength at
the cutting edge. Somehow they get right into the shear area and reduce
cutting forces. This was the subject of a lot of research during the '50s.
Maybe they have it figured out now. They didn't when I was writing about it,
in the '70s and early '80s. The extreme example of this was carbon
tetrachloride, which produced a very large reduction in shear strength right
at the cutting edge. Don't use it.


Ed, can you elaborate on your "do not use them" statement. I have old
"GALAXY thread cutting oil" with sulphur and chlorine base. It seems
to work well. Is it harmful to health?

i