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...
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?
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.
fascinating. The self driven transports was something I had not seen before.
alehax27 2 months ago
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!
EruditeCanadian 3 months ago
So thats why they are like $15-25 a piece!
kev8338 3 months ago
I have had some problems with this brand of carbide insert tooling-breaking up in light service. Has anyone else had any problems?
saladdogger 1 year ago
@saladdogger What grade and geometry are you using? What material are you cutting? Are you roughing or finishing? Are there any interrupted cuts?
soundspark 1 year ago
So this is why inserts are so expensive!
dargonz350 1 year ago
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...
onefugowie 1 year ago
I'd love one of those giant inserts I saw at the start of the video for my collection!
davfritz 1 year ago
@davfritz You wonder what sort of monster uses inserts like those!
YoungJim409 10 months ago
no need for distracting music
bustermetoo 2 years ago
Anyone got and scrap carbide, ill pay top dollar
robert1229 2 years ago
Comment removed
onefugowie 2 years ago
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.
corok3y 2 years ago
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.
kommodorez24 2 years ago
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.
corok3y 2 years ago
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 :)
corok3y 2 years ago