You can also use 1/2" drive core box router bits. They come in large radius sizes. I have no idea why the call them core box![]()
" I have no idea why the call them core box"
Goes back to them being used in foundry pattern shops to make core boxes to produce cylindrical cores. Mill two half round cavities, fit the halves with locating dowels, book them together, clamp them securely and fill with your choice of core sand, open the box, remove core (place it in a contoured "drier if oil bonded sand and bake to cure. Chemically bonded sands using urethane binder systems cure at room temperature. Some core sands are cured by gassing before removing from the core box.
A core is set in a mold cavity or assembled with other cores to produce areas of a casting that can't be drawn from the pattern. Think intake and exhaust ports on traditional IC engines or cooling water passages in engine blocks. They come in all sizes and shapes.
30 years of pouring liquid metal into holes in sand or 20 foot water cooled molds to make ductile iron water pipe to 90,000 lb ocean going diesel engine blocks and 1lb brake cylinders.
One thing to be aware of: The helix angle on conventional end mills tends to lift the material as it cuts and may contribute to chipping and splintering when machining gel coated fiberglass. The glass also dulls high speed steel tools quickly. Straight fluted carbide router bits are better and there are special tools designed for fiberglass that cut a very clean edge. There are also reverse helix (down cutting) tools that work well for this application as long as you aren't machining a closed pocket. There's a lot of stuff out there.Was curious if you guys would fill me in on the tooling used in a vertical mill to do inletting and opening up barrel channels? I recently bought a mill and don't have any tooling specifically for this.
For wood laminates, carbide for me. The epoxy/glues are extremely hard and will dull HSS whether woodworking router bits or endmills, in short order.
I've used a lot of core box cutters on laminates over a lot of year's and never sharpened one yet..
Is there a manufacturer that produces a 1.250" and 1.350" core box bits? Preferably carbide?
I found and ordered 1.125" and 0.5" core box bits on ebay. I figure I'll just make more passes for the time being. Be nice to open up straight 1.250" and 1.350" barrel channels with less passes and not having to adjust Y axis on the mill. Thanks
Wouldnt you need a 1.5” one to open a barrel channel big enough?