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Ignoramus7187 November 24th 10 10:54 PM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
I will need to make some gears using a HSS 16 pitch gear cutter. Can I
do ths with a water based soluble oil cutting fluid and what speed and
feed would you recommend.

thanks

i

Wes[_5_] November 24th 10 11:45 PM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
Ignoramus7187 wrote:

I will need to make some gears using a HSS 16 pitch gear cutter. Can I
do ths with a water based soluble oil cutting fluid and what speed and
feed would you recommend.

thanks

i


What diameter cutter?

Wes

Jon Elson[_3_] November 24th 10 11:48 PM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
On 11/24/2010 04:54 PM, Ignoramus7187 wrote:
I will need to make some gears using a HSS 16 pitch gear cutter. Can I
do ths with a water based soluble oil cutting fluid and what speed and
feed would you recommend.

Assuming the general ~3" diameter gear cutter, and assuming you are
making gears of relatively mild stuff, then about 150 RPM and about 5
IPM feed. But, just calculate it very much like an end mill.

Water-base cutting fluid should be fine.

Jon


Ignoramus7187 November 25th 10 12:06 AM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
On 2010-11-24, Wes wrote:
Ignoramus7187 wrote:

I will need to make some gears using a HSS 16 pitch gear cutter. Can I
do ths with a water based soluble oil cutting fluid and what speed and
feed would you recommend.

thanks

i


What diameter cutter?

Wes


I would say 3 inches.

i

Ignoramus7187 November 25th 10 12:55 AM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
On 2010-11-24, Jon Elson wrote:
On 11/24/2010 04:54 PM, Ignoramus7187 wrote:
I will need to make some gears using a HSS 16 pitch gear cutter. Can I
do ths with a water based soluble oil cutting fluid and what speed and
feed would you recommend.

Assuming the general ~3" diameter gear cutter, and assuming you are
making gears of relatively mild stuff, then about 150 RPM and about 5
IPM feed. But, just calculate it very much like an end mill.

Water-base cutting fluid should be fine.

Jon


OK, thanks. I may go lower on IPM, but it is a good start.

i

DoN. Nichols[_2_] November 25th 10 04:01 AM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
On 2010-11-24, Ignoramus7187 wrote:
I will need to make some gears using a HSS 16 pitch gear cutter. Can I
do ths with a water based soluble oil cutting fluid and what speed and
feed would you recommend.


Well ... first I would need to know what metal you will be
cutting. The cutter alone does not define the speeds. (And if you want
RPM, we'll need the diameter of the cutter.)

As for the feed -- we would also need to know the number of
teeth on the cutter -- feed is usually specified as feed per tooth, so
the more teeth the faster the total feed you can get away with.

You can look these up in _Machinery's Handbook_ -- which is
where I would go to calculate these once I knew the specifics of the
workpiece material and the number of teeth.

Or -- if "some gears" does not translate to enough to make time
consumed particularly important, I would aim for perhaps 50 to 70% of
the maximum speed, and perhaps as low as 50% of the calculated feed.
Those speeds and feeds are for a company turning out the maximum number
of pieces in a day, considering the tradeoffs between the number of
minutes per piece and the time lost to changing tooling. With the
recommended speeds and feeds, it is *assumed* that you are willing to
sacrifice some tool life for more parts in a day.

Perhaps the ideal (for such a factory) would be speeds and feeds
which would call for replacing the cutter once a day -- at the change of
shifts. For your own tools this is probably not optimum, unless someone
is paying you to make a lot of these.

Good Luck,
DoN.

--
Remove oil spill source from e-mail
Email: | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564
(too) near Washington D.C. | http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html
--- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero ---

Jim Wilkins November 25th 10 12:13 PM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
On Nov 24, 7:55*pm, Ignoramus7187
wrote:
On 2010-11-24, Jon Elson wrote:

On 11/24/2010 04:54 PM, Ignoramus7187 wrote:
I will need to make some gears using a HSS 16 pitch gear cutter. Can I
do ths with a water based soluble oil cutting fluid and what speed and
feed would you recommend.

Assuming the general ~3" diameter gear cutter, and assuming you are
making gears of relatively mild stuff, then about 150 RPM and about 5
IPM feed. *But, just calculate it very much like an end mill.


Water-base cutting fluid should be fine.


Jon


OK, thanks. I may go lower on IPM, but it is a good start.

i


Can you resharpen the cutter?

When I've cut gears flex and chatter limited the feed.

jsw

wolfgang November 25th 10 05:15 PM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
On Nov 25, 7:13*am, Jim Wilkins wrote:
On Nov 24, 7:55*pm, Ignoramus7187
wrote:



On 2010-11-24, Jon Elson wrote:


On 11/24/2010 04:54 PM, Ignoramus7187 wrote:
I will need to make some gears using a HSS 16 pitch gear cutter. Can I
do ths with a water based soluble oil cutting fluid and what speed and
feed would you recommend.
Assuming the general ~3" diameter gear cutter, and assuming you are
making gears of relatively mild stuff, then about 150 RPM and about 5
IPM feed. *But, just calculate it very much like an end mill.


Water-base cutting fluid should be fine.


Jon


OK, thanks. I may go lower on IPM, but it is a good start.


i


Can you resharpen the cutter?

When I've cut gears flex and chatter limited the feed.

jsw



DoN's admonition above is well put; form cutters and slitting saws are
run much slower than run-of-the-mill cutters. I would start with 1/4
to 1/2 of the speed as determined by classic means. Let's see: 4xCS/
dia=4x80/3=106rpm. (assuming low carbon steel work piece) I would
start off with 30 rpm for a 3" dia. cutter.

As these cutters are quite robust one can use a fairly aggressive chip-
per-tooth feed. How much depends on the surface finish required,
horse power of the spindle, and rigidity of the set-up. I'd try .004"
to .006" chip per tooth. Assuming a 12 tooth cutter the feed in
inches per minute becomes 12x.004x30=1.44" say 1.5 inches per minute.
Too low a feed increases cutter wear.

For cutting steel a sulphurized cutting oil is best when using form
cutters. For a one-off any good cutting oil would suffice.

Let us know what you decide and how it worked out for you.

Wolfgang


John November 26th 10 09:02 PM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
Ignoramus7187 wrote:
I will need to make some gears using a HSS 16 pitch gear cutter. Can I
do ths with a water based soluble oil cutting fluid and what speed and
feed would you recommend.

thanks

i



I would run about 60 surface feet per minute (sfm) and use either water
based coolant or a mister with coolant in it. You could run faster but
it will save the tool to run at 60 sfm. You could also use sulfur oil
and either mist or paint it on the cutter. The final decision of speed
comes from looking at the color of the chips and how much heat you are
generating, all revelent on the sharpness of the tool, the type of
coolant and the sfm of the cutter. To get the most life out of the tool
you want the chips to come off shiny with no discoloration and the
coolant not steaming from the heat.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_feet_per_minute
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speeds_and_feeds


John


Ignoramus8184 November 27th 10 03:18 AM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
On 2010-11-26, john wrote:
I would run about 60 surface feet per minute (sfm) and use either water
based coolant or a mister with coolant in it. You could run faster but
it will save the tool to run at 60 sfm. You could also use sulfur oil
and either mist or paint it on the cutter. The final decision of speed
comes from looking at the color of the chips and how much heat you are
generating, all revelent on the sharpness of the tool, the type of
coolant and the sfm of the cutter. To get the most life out of the tool
you want the chips to come off shiny with no discoloration and the
coolant not steaming from the heat.


John, thanks. I will try to hook up the rotary indexer to my CNC mill
tonight, so that I can do the entire job automatically without needing
to press the button on the indexer. The mill itself would
electronically "press the button".

If I do that, I do not particularly care of the job takes 10 minutes
or 30 minutes due to too conservative setting of the feed. I can just
start the job and go home to do something else. Plus, I have to worry
less about rigidity.

I would say, I will start at 80 RPM or so. at 3 inches diameter, it
gives me 62 FPM.

i


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_feet_per_minute
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speeds_and_feeds


John


John November 27th 10 04:59 AM

Speeds and feeds for a 16 pitch gear cutter
 
Ignoramus8184 wrote:
On 2010-11-26, wrote:
I would run about 60 surface feet per minute (sfm) and use either water
based coolant or a mister with coolant in it. You could run faster but
it will save the tool to run at 60 sfm. You could also use sulfur oil
and either mist or paint it on the cutter. The final decision of speed
comes from looking at the color of the chips and how much heat you are
generating, all revelent on the sharpness of the tool, the type of
coolant and the sfm of the cutter. To get the most life out of the tool
you want the chips to come off shiny with no discoloration and the
coolant not steaming from the heat.


John, thanks. I will try to hook up the rotary indexer to my CNC mill
tonight, so that I can do the entire job automatically without needing
to press the button on the indexer. The mill itself would
electronically "press the button".

If I do that, I do not particularly care of the job takes 10 minutes
or 30 minutes due to too conservative setting of the feed. I can just
start the job and go home to do something else. Plus, I have to worry
less about rigidity.

I would say, I will start at 80 RPM or so. at 3 inches diameter, it
gives me 62 FPM.

i


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_feet_per_minute
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speeds_and_feeds


John


forgot to tell you how to compute the feed rate.

RPM x the number of teeth on the cutter x load per tooth (.002 to
..004)= feed in inch per min.


John


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