Many machines have 24 volt control systems. May not have the amperage to run any motors. May not be dc.My lathe has 24VDC power terminals.
Many machines have 24 volt control systems. May not have the amperage to run any motors. May not be dc.My lathe has 24VDC power terminals.
Here's the easy button. Just add a few magnets and a settling pond.
The Graymills 1/8 HP pump is what came with my Haas. The emersion style pumps can run continuously. Just turn coolant on and off as needed.
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Machine Tool Coolant Pumps - Industrial Coolant Pumps | Graymills
Graymills manufactures & supplies machine tool coolant pumps for fluid handling and filtration. Visit our site to see our products & contact us for any questions today!www.graymills.com
I thought the typical lathe coolant pump was designed to run water based coolant vs cutting oil? I know that the supplied coolant pump on the PM 1440 GT won't run continuously for more than about 10 minutes when pumping oil without throwing the thermal breaker. I like that $179 system you linked to, but will it hold up to 30 minutes of pumping cutting oil?
Anyone use water soluble coolant for their chamber reaming operation. I have a small cnc milling machine and use Hangsterfer's S500 CF coolant in the coolant system. I also use it with the built in coolant sump and pump in my manual lathe. The coolant pump on my lathe is all built into the machine and is prett much like the ones Mr. Tooley posted. Not sure if the pressure would be high enough but they have plenty of volume coming out of a 1/2" hose.
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Coolant Concentrates
Building on our legacy of ultra-reliable coolants like S-500® CF, our 700 Series Bio-Hard ® technology has evolved from the high quality emulsifiable oils (high oil content) into semi-synthetic (lo…www.hangsterfers.com
A friend runs it in his CNC’s. I have a 5 gallon bucket of the S-500-CF he gave me that I haven’t had a chance to use yet. I don’t see any reason why it wouldn’t work. It’s similar to some of the Rustlic product that some were using (Nat Lambeth aka @Rustystud ).Anyone use water soluble coolant for their chamber reaming operation. I have a small cnc milling machine and use Hangsterfer's S500 CF coolant in the coolant system.
Curious what kind of oil you're running in yours?
A friend runs it in his CNC’s. I have a 5 gallon bucket of the S-500-CF he gave me that I haven’t had a chance to use yet. I don’t see any reason why it wouldn’t work. It’s similar to some of the Rustlik product that some were using (Nat Lambeth aka rustystud).
Coolant is for extreme rpm applications, but as you see above it works just fine. Its more for heat than lubricityIIRC, at least one reamer company (JGS?) says to use oil with their reamers, not a water based coolant. Not sure how big of a deal that is, but that is what is driving me to oil instead of coolant.
Nat Lambeth @Rustystud has said he has had reamers go to 1500 chambers cut with Rustlicbut that is what is driving me to oil instead of coolant.
In 2005 I built a high pressure flush coolant system. The engineers at Rustlic put me on to Rustlic 255R cut 5:1. I have chambered over 5,000 barrels with 50 gallons of recycled coolant. Rustlic 255R is no longer available. The engineers at Rustlic recommended that I convert to UltraCut Pro. May change it out today. Have about 4 gallons of coolant left in my reservoir. I think that I have gotten my moneys worth. I have several reamers with over 1500 chambers cut with no regrind. Recently I broke a flute on a 6.5/300 Weatherby reamer. This was the first reamer that I have ever broken. There was no chamber damage and I believe the reamer had a existing crack at the root.
I am convinced that through barrel flush coolant is the best way to go if your going to do multiple barrels per month.
Nat Lambeth
Coolant (oil or water soluble) provides A)heat removal, B)shaving evacuation C) lubricity.Coolant is for extreme rpm applications, but as you see above it works just fine. Its more for heat than lubricity
On machine reamers, I have noticed over the years, depending on material, reaming a hole with coolant, will cause the hole to be undersized by .0001 (as noticed with gauge pins)