brightspark
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and over expensive and not always neededJoin the dark side. Insert tools are a doddle![]()


and over expensive and not always neededJoin the dark side. Insert tools are a doddle![]()
all tools are easy to use providing there sharpened properlyThey are, but so easy to use.
correctIt all boils down to material type and how long you want to spend on a job.
I do mainly stainless and Duplex or harder steels EN19 etc so although HSS will cut them they don't last to long and it takes time to regrind the edge. If you are doing it as a hobby and by that I mean the actual lathe work is the hobby and not a means of producing parts for your hobby, then HSS will likely do fine. If turning for a living or needing to get parts done as fast as possible then Insert is the only way to go.
I still occasionally make up a form tool out of HSS but it is very occasionally, last one was probably 10 years ago or more and if I had had the CNC at the time I wouldn't have been using a form tool.
They are easy to use and I love em for the speed and visual appearance I can get from a finishing cut but there is a great satisfaction getting a beautifully turned part or accurately turned thread from a tool made up by my own hands. Those inserts are also very dear and one wrong turn sees them down by an edge as I've managed to do a couple of times. It's kinda catch 22 because they are good for beginners in one respect with there simplicity but very bad for beginners in the respect at £3-5 a pop it will soon cost a fortune till you learn to look after them. I'm still a beginner with the lathe game but I blunted plenty of hss before trying out the inserts. Now I use both.They are, but so easy to use.
PS Like many I now use mid range indexable tools, Glanze seems to do me fine being a reasonable balance between price and quality. Be careful with the Myford they are a little slow for most tipped tools to be at their best, and they do not like the industrial negative rake tooling as they lack a little in stiffness and power.
I picked up two 21t gears so O can cut metric on my Imperial ML7, as you say works well enough.Hi, standard gear set for an ML7 or Super 7 is:
2 x 20, 25, 30, 35, 38, 40, 45, 50, 55, 60, 65, 70 and 75t
With the addition of 2 x 21t gears a range of metric threads can be cut. The mathematically correct change wheel for imperial to metric is a 127t gear which is too big to fit on the lathe so either 63t or the 21t gears are used, while they are an approximation the difference in the real world is very small and they are perfectly fine for normal use.
The very early machines with a gearbox needed a different set.
So guessing that some of those missing in your list are on the machine, it looks as if you have a standard imperial set.
Keith
I sent off for a r/h Glanze indexable turning tool [with insert], just to try.
Next up, I need to grind a parting tool from HSS - be good practise, every day a school day......![]()