Tool Talk
What's-It Forum => What's-It Forum => Topic started by: bigdaddie47 on July 14, 2012, 12:34:38 AM
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I found these in a bottle when I was cleaning up and resorting my workbench. Not sure where they came from. the Outlined Square one has "ADAMAS THERMILL" on the back. I checked google and found lots of trademark sites and reference to carbide machining but they were all about legal stuff. They are iron with a finish on them. Useful? or fishing sinkers? Thanks to all the gentlemen who have helped me before.
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Those cutting bits for metal working machines. I have used a brake drum lathe that uses the triangle type for surfacing the drums.
Those can be quite costly new.
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Replaceable carbide tips for lathe tools - each shape would have its own holder, to which the tip is held by a high tensile screw..
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Most of them are titanium coated indexable milling cutter inserts. I used these for many years on Hurco CNC machines and Bridgeport mills. I still have many of the cutters which use from 1 to 6 inserts. Very expensive.
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Defiantly not fishing sinkers.
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I found these in a bottle when I was cleaning up and resorting my workbench. Not sure where they came from. the Outlined Square one has "ADAMAS THERMILL" on the back. I checked google and found lots of trademark sites and reference to carbide machining but they were all about legal stuff. They are iron with a finish on them. Useful? or fishing sinkers? Thanks to all the gentlemen who have helped me before.
Not only for metal turning. If your a wood turner there is a new application.
http://www.easywoodtools.com/
It is not exactly shear turning, more like shear scraping. I have tested these tools and they are super easy to use and you get a pretty good finish.
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Wood turning chisel:
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Thank you, Great purveyors of wisdom. Finally something of value in all of my junk. Still haven't found out what my old pump was (canalboat pump was a bust). Now to figure out what to do with them.
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Google up carbide recyclers.
About 3 days after you send them off you'll begin to find things you wish you kept them for.
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Aunt Phil, I get in enough trouble with my hand tools much less using big guy machines!! LOL
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I bought a brake lathe on Craigslist a while ago.The tool bar takes a funky diamond shaped bit that cost $60.00 each. I just had a friend make me another bat to take the triangle bits that are only $30.00 for 6.
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The white diamond-shaped one near the upper right looks to be ceramic. Harder than carbide, but much more brittle.
You can scratch glass with any of those bigdaddie, should you ever get a hankerin' to.