I use mostly HSS and use a big chip breaker in them, the way I was taught many years ago, works great on most things but on POM or Nylon the chip comes off in one long piece, I have a couple of times emptied all of the other metal chips in the chip pan from the long plastic chip going first into the pan and then wrapping around the part. This is while hogging material off taking 1/8" or more per side and a real coarse feed.Yes, it does produce a long chip, but compared to nylon, for example, I found it easier to work.
Moly cuts like cast iron, makes a real similar chip. It's one of the most expensive, easy to cut metals I ever worked with.in piece of Molybdenum
That seems more aligned with my comment about needing a good grinder than your comment here about CNC:https://forum.allaboutcircuits.com/threads/the-right-to-repair.127119/page-8#post-1558729 Which is it? Do you need a good grinder or not?I use mostly HSS and use a big chip breaker in them, the way I was taught many years ago, works great on most things but on POM or Nylon the chip comes off in one long piece, I have a couple of times emptied all of the other metal chips in the chip pan from the long plastic chip going first into the pan and then wrapping around the part. This is while hogging material off taking 1/8" or more per side and a real coarse feed.
Carbide tooling is more helpful in CNC. for a couple of reasons, a CNC machine(not home built) is built more rigid and the spindle and feeds are much faster than conventional machining. Insert carbide tooling is made virtually the same shape and size to a given standard. Off the top of my head I don't remember who's standard, I'd guess ANSI but could be wrong. This allows CNC to work in concert with CAD. The differences of you versus me grinding a HSS tool won't work in CNC because it doesn't fit what is in the CAD algorithm(not sure if that is the correct term for how CAD and CNC work together).That seems more aligned with my comment about needing a good grinder than your comment here about CNC:https://forum.allaboutcircuits.com/threads/the-right-to-repair.127119/page-8#post-1558729 Which is it? Do you need a good grinder or not?
If you look at your carbide inserts you will see that they are not sharp like a ground HSS tool. They have a small *land* between the actual cutting edge and the chip breaker. This land and the higher speed in a CNC machine situation is what lets them cut good and not chip. And is probably what the difference is between you experience with Delrin and mine in lathe work. HSS shears the chip and insert carbide smashes it off.I use both HSS and carbide. I am also lazy and use carbide when its readily available and does the job.
WALMART.com alert
This is insane. Creality 3D CP-01 3D Printer/CNC/Laser Engraver for US$51.99.
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https://www.walmart.com/ip/Creality...CNC-Milling-Cutting-DIY-Carving-Eng/991314698
Edit: I suspect someone made an error in the pricing, maybe it should read $1151.99???
I went ahead and bought one for fun. I'll let you know how it works out.WALMART.com alert
This is insane. Creality 3D CP-01 3D Printer/CNC/Laser Engraver for US$51.99.
![]()
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Creality...CNC-Milling-Cutting-DIY-Carving-Eng/991314698
Edit: I suspect someone made an error in the pricing, maybe it should read $1151.99???
I hope you get it.I went ahead and bought one for fun. I'll let you know how it works out.
I already am. At $51 (plus reading some reviews), I'm not expecting much. I bought it purely out of curiosity.You may become the proud owner of a 3D printer.
He's possibly related to either you or me.Maybe you'll get the free tackle box for your bait?
Just noticed on checkout this:
View attachment 227041
Notice the "sold by".
It was worth a try. At least the return/refund process is painless via the Walmart app...I already am. At $51 (plus reading some reviews), I'm not expecting much. I bought it purely out of curiosity.
I half expect I'm going to receive a print head or some other replacement part rather than an actual printer.

Now we know. Thanks for posting an update.It was worth a try. At least the return/refund process is painless via the Walmart app...
Any dimensional drift in that time?I've been cleaning my shop's clutter and throwing things away, and I discovered a few prints I made a couple of years ago with my Epax printer, which works with liquid resin. The prints in question have become almost perfectly transparent (prints normally look kind of milky when they're pulled out of the printer) and are much harder and tougher than prints that I made a few months ago.
That tells me tons about the time that it really takes for the resin to thoroughly cure.
Good question. I do remember the parts being quite tall (for the printer) and they were about 3% taller than intended when they came out.Any dimensional drift in that time?