A long time ago, I remember an experienced local gunsmith telling someone, who was going to try this for the first time, to use a very sharp pointed HSS tool and move it down the barrel rapidly, using shallow cuts, to prevent heating. The finish was like awful looking shallow threads, but it didn't matter, since he had a floor mounted long belt sander, and a barrel spinner. The most important thing was to keep the barrel as cool as possible.
I turn barrels unsupported between centers with an offset live center slow with light cuts... 20 thou off the diameter. It takes a long time and you can't charge much for it. I do this as little as possible. Been doing it for 40 years. It took a lot of experimenting to get to a stage that works well for me.
This is a pretty delicate chip curler I grind. It wears down fairly quickly if the rpm is fast.
My offset live center... nothing fancy but it works well.
Ben,
Did you ever figure out what Bill Leeper was recommending for a HSS tool grind or did you go with the carbide you had in the picture?
I do have a pneumatic follow rest to hopefully eliminate chatter.
Ridz
Ben, hand pouring coolant on carbide is not a good idea especially if it is something like a water soluble coolant as it can heat fracture the carbide. A thin coat of cutting oil works fine but even pouring oil on irregularly can also fracture carbide if you are running a higher surface footage speed.I tried both and did better with my own tools. I had something similar to Dennis' below.
Carbide takes more pressure and more heat. I do not have coolant on my lathe at home. So, I was hand pouring with a drip pan. pita
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Ben, hand pouring coolant on carbide is not a good idea especially if it is something like a water soluble coolant as it can heat fracture the carbide. A thin coat of cutting oil works fine but even pouring oil on irregularly can also fracture carbide if you are running a higher surface footage speed.
Your tool grinding looks good but the tool on the left should be positioned to the cut at about a 10-15 degree leade angle. i.e., creating a shoulder of about 10-15 degree slope. Too steep of slope causes too much contact area area for a depth of cut. Conversely, cutting as a square shoulder will can give some chatter as the cut starts to taper out.
A tip if you are using a larger lathe that has a taper attachment, hold about 1"-2" in the chuck will support the barrel as this gives less chatter than running totally between centers and driving the barrel with a lathe dog.
I will be using a pneumatic follow rest built on Mark Strattons design.
I assume that artwork of a chipbreaker Dennis ground was done using a dremel tool with a diamond burr, I have to get some of them.
Should the chipbreaker be located as part of the cutting edge or located some distance away from the cutting edge, leaving a lip as in Jerry,s pic?
Regards,
Pat
Ridz, look closer. There may be an illusion that there is a flat between the cutting edge and the lip, but there isn't. What you want is a high relief clearance to cause there to be less cutting pressure, just like a sharp knife.I
Should the chipbreaker be located as part of the cutting edge or located some distance away from the cutting edge, leaving a lip as in Jerry,s pic?
Regards,
Pat