As a turning specialist at Sandvik Coromant, John Winter has helped countless companies transition from manually sharpened carbide and HSS tool bits to indexable alternatives.
And no, he doesn’t miss the largely bygone era that preceded their arrival. Today’s indexable carbide cutting implements are not only more cost-effective than previous options, they also reduce CNC machine downtime significantly while cranking out far more parts per shift. And they’re constantly improving.
Following ISO Guidelines
Cutting tool development is a dynamic industry, Winter says, evidenced by the fact that the company introduced its first indexable tools in the early 1940s, with countless advances in carbide, coatings and geometries since then.
The lion’s share of them follow guidelines set by the International Organization for Standardization, or ISO, which seek to standardize the specifications and terminologies used to describe these essential products and provide interchangeability to their users, whether they purchase them from Sandvik Coromant or another cutting tool manufacturer.
One of the guidelines is ISO 1832, the standard for turning tools. It defines and helps control manufacturing of the now familiar shapes that CNC lathe operators use daily.
The ubiquitous CNMG-432 roughing insert follows the 1832 standard, for instance, with each character representing attributes such as insert shape, relief angle, tolerance and size.
Insert Security
Many hundreds of other unique combinations exist. While few would dispute that inserts made to the ISO standard increase overall efficiency and reduce manufacturing costs, Winter and other team members are also open to new ideas, even if it means bypassing those standards.
The company has found, for instance, that “proprietary pockets” increase insert security. Sandvik Coromant’s PrimeTurning is one well-known example, where inserts with a football shape are said to increase metal removal by a factor of three or greater, even in heat-resistant superalloy metals like Inconel 625.
“As a result, we’re able to push our turning products harder than ever before,” Winter says.
Other innovations include locating rails (iLock) on the bottom surface of select turning inserts to prevent movement and cuboidal eight-sided turning inserts (CoroTurn 300) that promise improved chip control and high-quality surface finishes.
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