{"id":18875,"date":"2019-12-24T05:42:27","date_gmt":"2019-12-24T05:42:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.mcctcarbide.com\/?p=3979"},"modified":"2020-05-06T01:40:46","modified_gmt":"2020-05-06T01:40:46","slug":"3979-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.meetyoucarbide.com\/ru\/3979-2\/","title":{"rendered":""},"content":{"rendered":"
Parting is to insert a blade like tool directly into the workpiece and cut off the workpiece with a certain length. It is usually used to remove the finished end of the workpiece from the bar in the chuck. Other uses include cutting the head of the bolt.<\/p>
There are many kinds of commercial parting tools provided by tool suppliers, but most of them are too large to be used on 7×10.<\/p> This is problematic because the top of the parting tool must be centered. The 7×10 interest group described many attempts (including my own), including grinding, turning, and grinding, to remove 1 \/ 16 “from the bottom of the carriage, but with little success. The tool holder is quite hard metal.<\/p> Even so, the gadget is tempting, because grinding a separation tool from a tool blank is painful – because so much metal has to be ground off – and the separation tool becomes dull and brittle. This tool and similar large tools use preformed tools. If you break the end, you just need to grind a new tip and continue. I haven’t done that yet, but the best solution is to use the high frequency 5 \/ 16 “parting tool, which may just make a custom tool holder of the right height.<\/p> This is another 1 \/ 2 “business separation tool. I plan to customize a knife rest for it one day.<\/p> Grinding your own separation tool is not really difficult, but it takes a long time and produces a lot of metal and grinding dust, because relatively large amounts of metal you have to move from blank. Here are some typical pictures of household ground tools. Note that the tool is tapering from top to bottom (like a narrow trapezoid), tapering from front to back, providing safety for the cutting head. The top of the tool has been ground down by several thousandths of an inch to align the top edge of the tool with the lathe centerline. If you have a tool holder with an adjustable tool height, you do not have to. Forming a parting blade near the edge of the tool allows the tool to work near the chuck jaws.<\/p> Separation always takes place close to the chuck jaws – no more than 1 \/ 2 “, preferably no more than 1 \/ 4”. Parting cutting exerts great tangential force on the workpiece. If the cutting is too far away from the chuck claw, the workpiece may be extruded from the chuck.<\/p><\/figure>
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Tailor ground separation tool<\/h2>
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Clamp workpiece<\/h2>
Adjust the cutter head<\/h2>