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climb milling on the bridgeport , thoughts


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conversly so on a cnc mill , climb milling is the preferred method .
spindle and axis loads are a lot less doing it this way.
think of the dynamic of climb milling as opposed to conventional
it's biggest chip load is at entry then diminishes at exit , conventional just the opposite
when i served my apprentiship conventional was the way to do it
then along came cnc's which changed that

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  • 1 month later...

I would not try climb milling on a conventional machine. You can get by with it on very light cuts on softer materials but it is too dangerous. Your part my leave the vice, your cutter may break , you could pull head out of adjustment or all of the above. As said above climb milling is great on CNC but not for conventional.

Chuck

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  • 1 month later...

I have been a professional machinist for over 55 yrs, and if you are not careful it can be dangerous, but it is the best way to get a good finish because in essence it is always a light cut as far as the cutter is concerned. just look at the direction the cutter is turning and the direction of feed and you can quickly see that in climb milling the cut always ends as if it were a light cut - in conventional milling it always ends as a heavy cut.
but if it does grab, you can break the cutter or pull the work out of the machine.
if you know how, climbing is easy - if you are too new - avoid it

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  • 2 months later...

For climb milling many older conventional mills had a
"split-nut" IIRC.

By actuating a mechanical lever the halfs of the nut
were moved apart, thereby taking up the slack. I
don't remember what the problems were (if any)
caused by uneven lead screw wear.

Dennis

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That's a backlash eliminator.

The point to removing any sloppiness due to wear on nut or thread is to help prevent the cutter taking control and dragging the workpiece under the cutter, as it tries to 'Climb' and pull itself along the workpiece

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