that works but i have a 3/4" blade bandsaw and just modified it so i can hold something as short as 3/4" and cut yes yours is faster for sure but the tool you use is way more expensive than the bandsaw blade when the life of the tool is factored in keep up the good work sir
Thank you for watching and commenting! I use my worn out end mills when I do this and surprisingly they have a lot of end of life performance. I have a JET copy of a Roll In bandsaw and it is an excellent saw they only made it for a year or so and I believe they were sued by Roll In for patent infringement, and discontinued it abruptly. The configuration of the back stop does not allow me to hold on to shorter stumps of material though. I should make a better one but there is always something I should be doing and need more hours in the day.
Hi, I normally put the source for the tools we use in videos in the description but I intentionally did not in this video because we have an upcoming video that will feature this new end mill and I will give all the info. We will likely be doing a giveaway, so stay tuned
That was awesome, can you share cutting data (rpm, doc, sfm etc….) I am a chicken sh@& and think I baby my vf2 too much Also, maybe I missed it, what was the material ? 1018? Thx
Hi thanks for watching, the cutter is 1/2" material is 1018, spindle speed 7200 rpms, feed rate 250 ipm and the mill was spiralling in .05" per pass. More videos coming with these end mills they are incredible, I may even do a giveaway in the next few videos. I sometimes have to rush at the end of the day to do a video I neglected to mention this end mill has over 500 parts on it before this on a different part.
@@meddlingwithmetal7153 it is not, this is a more affordable competitor you will be surprised, but I can't let the cat out of the bag yet. US made as well 🇺🇲
Elan it took 2 minutes on the mill our band saw easily takes about 4 min to cut this 3.5" diameter round stock also hard to hold on the saw when the parts are short, thats why we have a lot of drops this size.
that works but i have a 3/4" blade bandsaw and just modified it so i can hold something as short as 3/4" and cut yes yours is faster for sure but the tool you use is way more expensive than the bandsaw blade when the life of the tool is factored in keep up the good work sir
Thank you for watching and commenting! I use my worn out end mills when I do this and surprisingly they have a lot of end of life performance. I have a JET copy of a Roll In bandsaw and it is an excellent saw they only made it for a year or so and I believe they were sued by Roll In for patent infringement, and discontinued it abruptly. The configuration of the back stop does not allow me to hold on to shorter stumps of material though. I should make a better one but there is always something I should be doing and need more hours in the day.
Nice work 😮👍👍
Thanks Patrick!
What kind of end mill did you use ?
Hi,
I normally put the source for the tools we use in videos in the description but I intentionally did not in this video because we have an upcoming video that will feature this new end mill and I will give all the info. We will likely be doing a giveaway, so stay tuned
That was awesome, can you share cutting data (rpm, doc, sfm etc….)
I am a chicken sh@& and think I baby my vf2 too much
Also, maybe I missed it, what was the material ? 1018?
Thx
Hi thanks for watching, the cutter is 1/2" material is 1018, spindle speed 7200 rpms, feed rate 250 ipm and the mill was spiralling in .05" per pass. More videos coming with these end mills they are incredible, I may even do a giveaway in the next few videos. I sometimes have to rush at the end of the day to do a video I neglected to mention this end mill has over 500 parts on it before this on a different part.
It’s not by any chance a Kennametal HARVI III is it? 😜
@@meddlingwithmetal7153 it is not, this is a more affordable competitor you will be surprised, but I can't let the cat out of the bag yet. US made as well 🇺🇲
😮
doesn't look like evaporation to me
Ill try to do better next time!
Pretty sure the fastest way is a bandsaw...
Elan it took 2 minutes on the mill our band saw easily takes about 4 min to cut this 3.5" diameter round stock also hard to hold on the saw when the parts are short, thats why we have a lot of drops this size.
First world solution!🙄