Straight-tooth cutters work well on high-carbon steel and cast iron. Carbide cutters are made of premium sub-micrograin carbide for fast, smooth cuts. Staggered-tooth cutters have an alternating right- and left-hand helix for efficient cuts in mild steel, aluminum, and brass. [14]

Wide Choice There is a wide choice of both profiled and rectangular shaped inserts in various thicknesses and tooth pitches. lt is even possible to have the plain insert without teeth.

The used “Creep Feed technology” enables to grind individual teeth into the hard, wear resistant carbide. This produces precise, super sharp teeth with a well-defined point and surfaces with excellent gripping properties.

DANmed is expanding its stock and offers you now large and small purchase quantities (from 10 pcs.) of tungsten carbide plates for needle holders and tweezers. The  “Super Grip-it” Design ensures a perfect, flawless and impeccable gripping.

Milling cutters are cutting tools typically used in milling machines to perform milling operations and occasionally in other machine tools. They remove material by their movement within the machine or directly from the cutter's shape.

Milling tools are either center cutting or non-center cutting. Center cutting mills can plunge straight down into material, while non-center cutting tools cannot. Notice that the cutting edges of the center cutting end mill continues to the center of the tool. The center of the other has a small hole at the center. Non-center cutting end mills require a pilot hole, ramping or helical motion to plunge into material. the way you can tell the difference is the teeth of some cutters do not go all the way to the center of the end face.

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High Speed Steel (HSS) tooling is Shiny in color, and relatively light in weight. Carbide tooling is dull in color and relatively heavy compared to high speed steel. HSS is used for general purpose milling of both ferrous and non-ferrous materials. Carbide provides the user with the ability to run faster with less tool wear

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To determine how many teeth your cutter should have, follow these guidelines: 1. Always have at least three teeth in the cut. 2. Use more teeth for thin and hard materials. 3. Use fewer teeth for soft materials and larger sections. [24]

An endmill is a type of milling cutter, a cutting tool used in industrial milling applications. It is distinguished from the drill bit in its application, geometry, and manufacture. While a drill bit can only cut in the axial direction, a milling bit can generally cut in all directions, though some cannot cut axially. End mills are used in milling applications such as profile milling, tracer milling, face milling, and plunging.