- Joined
- Dec 20, 2012
- Messages
- 9,422
Seemed to have some work hardening going on today at a shoulder that I was repetitively lingering in. It seemed to get very hard and the bit would squall a little. I will change my technique on the next piece. The raw material is 3/4" dia. 1144 with 100 ksi yield and RC 25 hardness from McMaster. It cuts well and the finish is okay. BTW, the hardness appears to be greatest at and near the surface.
Mike, you mentioned stripping the gray off before you machine it. How do you do that? Just skim it off? I want to knurl the big end and sounds like I need to get that gray off first at a minimum, is that correct?
Yeah, I've found that the skin is rather hard so get under it and skin it off. I just take a 0.010" deep cut and that usually does it; if not, go a little deeper. If you're going to skin it and then knurl, I would skin the gray off and then take a tiny cut, maybe 0.002" deep at high speed with a sharp tool. This will give you a nice satin finish that you can lay a nice knurl down on.
Edit: I should add that if you're going to knurl this stuff, do it like you mean it. By that, I mean to get your knurl to maybe 90% of full depth and cut it in a single pass. If you try to make repeated passes in this stuff it may not allow you to get to full depth. Form-Rol, the knurl company, recommends you consider 90% depth a full depth; beyond that, they consider it to be over-rolling the knurl and this can damage your knurls. I do hope you have a robust knurler for this job.
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