Tom Kitta
Ultra Member
The bigger motor rule is for running slow & needing power. Milling unless you work *hard* and hog does not use that much power - this is why old BP machines were fine with 1hp motor.
A new BP clone with 40 taper has 5hp motor - which is a LOT of power. With sharp cutter in mild steel == 5 cubic inch of metal per minute (say 4 counting in machine friction) at full power. That is HUGE metal removal - there is no way my machine could remove that much without walking out the shop. That is cutting with 1" end mill 1" deep at 4 inch/ min rate - that is very aggressive and you should not cut more then 50% of the EM diameter.
so if you only use VFD for fine tuning speed +- 20% on a mill that has originally 1hp motor there is little need to go bigger unless you want to hog material (which may be more then the mill can handle depending on size). If you use VFD to go +- 80% you should think of bigger motor or you will be only able to take lighter cuts at the extremes - most of the problem will be at low range - low range == big end mill or big drill == lots of power.
A new BP clone with 40 taper has 5hp motor - which is a LOT of power. With sharp cutter in mild steel == 5 cubic inch of metal per minute (say 4 counting in machine friction) at full power. That is HUGE metal removal - there is no way my machine could remove that much without walking out the shop. That is cutting with 1" end mill 1" deep at 4 inch/ min rate - that is very aggressive and you should not cut more then 50% of the EM diameter.
so if you only use VFD for fine tuning speed +- 20% on a mill that has originally 1hp motor there is little need to go bigger unless you want to hog material (which may be more then the mill can handle depending on size). If you use VFD to go +- 80% you should think of bigger motor or you will be only able to take lighter cuts at the extremes - most of the problem will be at low range - low range == big end mill or big drill == lots of power.