Seco offers a variety of square shoulder milling cutters for use with advanced cutting materials, allowing you to take advantage of these cutters’ benefits, such as higher cutting speeds. When applied correctly to appropriate applications, PCBN, PCD and ceramics provide unbeatable boosts for square shoulder milling productivity.
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Shoulder milling operations include:
Shoulder milling generates two faces simultaneously, which requires peripheral milling in combination with face milling. For a finishing operation, achieving a true, ninety-degree shoulder is one of the most important requirements, other application like roughing operations can be made with close to 90 degrees solutions with high chip removal ratios Shoulder milling can be performed by traditional square shoulder cutters, and also by using end milling cutters, long edge cutters and side and face milling cutters. Due to these numerous options, it is essential to consider the operational requirements carefully in order to make an optimal choice.
Shoulder face mills of conventional designs are often capable of milling “true”, 90 degree shallow shoulders. Many shoulder face mills are universal cutters, and can be used advantageously for making holes, ramping or full slots on components. They offer a good alternative to face milling cutters when milling axially deflecting surfaces or for milling close to vertical faces.
The indexable insert and solid carbide end mills offer good solutions for shoulders requiring accessibility or where quality surface is the top priority, repeatability between passes and true 90 degrees are the key features of these tools.
Long edge cutters are generally used for milling deeper shoulders, and contouring wide components in one shot, even using in conjunction with high power machines, will permit remove high chips volume in roughing operations that can be finished using the same long edge cutter or solid carbide tools.
This frequently used operation is generally performed by shoulder face mills and end mills. A shallow cut allows for a larger radial cut. Often these cutters can replace face mills, particularly when the axial pressure on the component is a limitation, and when there is a demand for accessibility close to vertical faces or fixture sections. Oversized shoulder cutter options provide for optimal accessibility when milling shallow shoulders located deep.
Use repeated passes with shoulder face mills and end mills. To minimize surface errors, such as scallops and transition-edges between the passes, a high precision cutter that is able to produce true 90º shoulders is an absolute requirement. If shoulder depth is smaller than 75% of the cutting edge length, the quality of the vertical surface does not normally require extra finishing.
A long edge cutter is a good solution for deeper, larger and usually heavier shoulder milling applications. They have a high metal removal capacity, and are generally used for rough milling as the resulting surface texture is characterized by side milling at high feed rates.
These cutters make demands on:
Radial forces are considerable making this a tough side milling application.
Shorter long edge cutters are suitable for:
Longer versions are intended for:
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Oversized shoulder cutter options provide for optimal accessibility in milling shallow shoulders located deep. For those shoulders that are located at even larger depths, up to 3xDc use extensions with the Coromant Capto coupling, for longer assemblies, damper adaptors are the solution. Long edge cutters are also available in oversized versions to be used for deeper shoulders located deep. However, the radial depths of cut are more limited.
General speaking these tip and hints are valid for all shoulder milling applications.
Side and face milling cutters are also used for milling shoulders, particularly if the configuration is narrow yet radially wide. These cutters are often the only possible solution for back-facing of hidden shoulders and faces.
Machining an edge is really a side milling operation applied in contouring tool passes. Side milling and edging are options of peripheral milling.
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When there is no run-out in the cutter, the height of the cusp, h,
will be equally high and can be calculated using the formula:
Profile depth / cusp height
When there is a run-out in the cutter, the feed per tooth, fz,
and consequently the height of the cusp, h, will vary depending on the TIR.
As mentioned, surface texture and climbing tendencies may limit the feed rate, especially when the radial depth of cut is small.
When using the side of an end mill to mill a profile, a series of ‘cusps’ are generated. The height of the cusp, - h, is determined by:
Indexable insert cutters will always have a higher TIR than solid carbide cutters. Also, the larger the cutter diameter, the greater the number of teeth, which increases the distance between the high and low spots of the cusp.
For best surface finish:
Feed recommendation (disregard hex):
Note: The worst surface quality is achieved if only one cutting edge generates the surface, due to bad run-out of the cutter.
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