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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Gunsmithing
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<blockquote data-quote="NesikaChad" data-source="post: 373044" data-attributes="member: 7449"><p>I don't exceed 4k rpm most cases. Going too slow on the feed with a high spindle speed just means burned up tooling and cooked wood. As far as feed rates I run at a top of about 50ipm only because the mill I have will turn into a studdering fool if I try to run surfaces any faster. The mill I had at Nesika had much more modern software and higher spindle RPM capacity. I'd shred through stocks at over 300ipm! That was bad ***! Complete an entire inlet in about 4 and half minutes! Now it takes about 15-20. Still beats using lamp black and a scraper though!</p><p></p><p>My tool packages and tool paths are a bit different than what's commonly encountered when working with wood. Very, very rarely do I have an inlet "grenade" on me and require a bunch of repair work.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NesikaChad, post: 373044, member: 7449"] I don't exceed 4k rpm most cases. Going too slow on the feed with a high spindle speed just means burned up tooling and cooked wood. As far as feed rates I run at a top of about 50ipm only because the mill I have will turn into a studdering fool if I try to run surfaces any faster. The mill I had at Nesika had much more modern software and higher spindle RPM capacity. I'd shred through stocks at over 300ipm! That was bad ***! Complete an entire inlet in about 4 and half minutes! Now it takes about 15-20. Still beats using lamp black and a scraper though! My tool packages and tool paths are a bit different than what's commonly encountered when working with wood. Very, very rarely do I have an inlet "grenade" on me and require a bunch of repair work. [/QUOTE]
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