Added: 3 years ago
From: corok3y
Views: 18,174
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  • fascinating. The self driven transports was something I had not seen before.

  • Is it just me, or do those W*** inserts at 1:39 look giant sized!? They look like a 1" inscribed circle, or an "8"!

    Biggest I've ever used were TNMG 643 or something like that and I thought they were huge!

  • So thats why they are like $15-25 a piece!

  • I have had some problems with this brand of carbide insert tooling-breaking up in light service. Has anyone else had any problems?

  • @saladdogger What grade and geometry are you using? What material are you cutting? Are you roughing or finishing? Are there any interrupted cuts?

  • So this is why inserts are so expensive!

  • i have sold Sandvik for over 21 years...good stuff....just imagine you are seeing only several of the Inserts they offer...there are thousands of types and radius...

  • I'd love one of those giant inserts I saw at the start of the video for my collection!

  • @davfritz You wonder what sort of monster uses inserts like those!

  • no need for distracting music

  • Anyone got and scrap carbide, ill pay top dollar

  • Comment removed

  • You get what you paid for. ;D

    Just think of all the steps involved. If there are 10 steps, and each step scraps 3%, you'll end up with 26% less than what you started with.

    Therefore, quality plays a big role. Not only to save money but ensure the customer receives perfect inserts. Quality is based on ppm (parts per million defective).

    Six Sigma = 3.4 parts defective per million units.

  • hey nice video men, i have just one doubt, after the sintering, the insert gets reduced to the half??? but just because of the sintering process?? or what?

    thanks.

  • The powder blend contain a special wax that helps the "blanks" retain it's shape after pressing. The wax will melt / evaporate out during the sintering process. That's the reason for the decrease in dimension. The press "recipe" for every insert size/shape/power blend combination accounts for this shrinkage. The shrinkage % varies across the product line.

  • Note the blanks the guy's putting into the furnace. It's huge! I think it is a WNMA 320908? I don't think that is a standard insert.

    Thanks for the question :)

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