just as i thought, its a mine field.
I only use carbide tipped on my Boxford, i tend to run it at about 1500 rpm, and cut anything i need to without a thought, brass, bronze, cast, steel, so on.
I even buy my tips cheap from ebay and half the time dont know what they are! Just bung 'em in and see what happens, obviuosly i'm a HSM

The surface finishes are generally good to very good and i'm happy with it.
BUT, the colchester has a top speed of 1200 and usually runs around 600 and i want to use it to do the bigger jobs and bigger cuts i cant do on the little boxford:- steam engine flywheels, wheels, cylinder bores etc lots of off centre cast iron and great big fat cuts on steel.
The little ccmt tips i use at present dont like big cuts or high feed rates and removing vast amounts of steel at 0.3mm DOC sucks.
I DO like the idea of being able to fling in another tip and maintain the cut i was doing previously without re-setting etc. (no QC holder on the colchester)
What i need is the most flexible tooling with the least amount of types etc.
All my other tip tooling uses one tip-CCMT060204 and i have 3 boring bars, left/right turning and a coarse left for using the other two unused tips.
BUT they suck for getting close to the centre as the tools are quite blunt and fat, so the DCMT looks good for that.
I doubt i will be turning much hard steel so maybe HSS wont be too bad. But then maybe a set of left/right tools for the larger CCMT09 tips would be better along with a DCMT left to get into the centre??
I'm just having a hard time making my mind up before splashing out on a set as i dont have endless funding.
BTW, i'm not sure aboutthe A/O wheel, when i got my grinder, i ordered a set of wheels one for general one for carbide, maybe it was A/Oxide and Silicon carbide?? One is grey one is green.
Dave
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