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by megraf 1950 days ago
Actually, it's a little different. Using coolant is the norm even when doing mild steels. You can remove material quicker, your part remains cooler, and your tools remain cleaner.

There's even cuttings bits that have integral cooling (holes in the cutting surface).

2 comments

Right--I support a fair number of machine shops and they're all moving to CNC (although they're using a lot manual machines still). 5 axis is nice and there's a surprising amount of manual tooling changes.

We had a problem where one of the integral cooling loops had a tube come off and it sprayed the better part of a 50 gallon drum of coolant all over the shop before someone got over and hit the e-stop.

That sounds correct. Unless you have a sensor, there's no way to make a meaningful detection and decision to stop something.

And sensors that are reliable and durable cost $$$$.

Pretty sure even the mildest steel is still a hard metal. Soft metal would be something like copper or aluminum IIRC. (Or lead or gold, moreso, but you probably wouldn't want to be machining those for obvious reasons.)