Brent H
Ultra Member
@YYCHobbyMachinist wins! Yep, that is the stuff. I have used the stuff from KBC tools in the big bottle at work. Works well if your prep is good.
Hi @PeterT
So I measured the shank of the cutter and it was 0.400 so that is needed a bit more clearance (say 0.015”). Since I was cutting on the rotary table things were somewhat easy. Once the table was square and centred I determined where I wanted to stop (some folks might want to plow right through - saves time).
I cut in to what I wanted the depth to be, in my case was 0.610 for a 7/8” thick plate. Once the final pass was done with the 3/8 straight cutter, I simply made a pass 0.020 either side of centre leaving a 0.415 wide slot.
the floor of the T is set with the T slot cutter. I brought it in to just be touching bottom (say a couple thou) and it did the rest. Power fed it in and out and while feeding blew the chips out (comp air) to keep the cutter from jamming up on material. Also a bit of oil for side lube of the cutter. So no clean up pass just the feed out and keeping chips out of the way.
For blackening I used the gun blue stuff from Cabelas but - rinsed the parts in a bit of paint thinner to degrease and remove bluing, cleaned off and then soaked in an acid solution to remove any rust and mill scale - you can go harder with a diluted muriatic acid but outside and with huge ventilation. - I just soaked in vinegar for a few hours. Blew all clean and swished them in the bluing. Sit for 10 minutes in the bluing - then dry all off and coat in light oil - like spindle oil.
Hey Craig, if you are milling a slot within a slot , so to speak, I would mill the larger slot (larger cutter, stronger) and then switch to the smaller one and mill out the centre.
for mine I actually cut in T - slots (thicker plate) with a dedicated T slot cutter specific for 3/8” bolts (basically you can slide a 3/8” bolt into the slot)
I hope the piece was taken AWL!I am using a piece of the ship’s hull for one of the parts.