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#1
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| anyone machined sterling silver before, i'm looking for speeds and feeds to start with,, i'm going to be using 1/2 endmill for roughing, probably diamond coated, and 1/4 ball for finish, also diamond coated, i'll look for your input, thanks |
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#2
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| Can I have the chips?.................I have turned it before but not milled it. If I had to point you in a direction, it is a little like 6063 Alum. soft and gummy. I think that if you treat it that way you'll be good. I'm assuming that you are not milling huge amounts of it and if you are, I definetly want the scrap! Although when you think about it, there are engineered plastics out there that dwarf Gold in cost by weight. |
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#4
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#5
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| can't cast it, too much fine detail on it, they tried, i machined it out of alum and stailess before, so they can see the diffrence between cast and machine, and its huge, save which planet, mars ???????????? lol |
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#6
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That's mostly used for cutting abrasive materials like graphite and fiberglass, which wear down the tooling. Sterling mills a lot like aluminum - it's "grabby", but it's a bit harder. I'd experiment with a copper rod to start with; if your speeds and feeds work on copper, they'll work on silver. A cobalt-steel tool will be sharper and less brittle than diamond-coated carbide, not to mention cheaper. But I also agree with the folks who told you to cast it, not try to carve it out of a solid rod. If you mill it out of wax rod, you can pull a rubber mold from that which will transfer all your detail. Then you can cast a hollow wax, which will cast better than a solid one, while saving a lot of $17/oz silver. Just trying to recycle all that silver swarf is going to be more hassle than not spraying it all over in the first place... Andrew Werby www.computersculpture.com |
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