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Threading barrels

I've had best luck with AR Warner HSS inserts. I can thread to the shoulder and get very close. The hss is friendly at lower spindle speeds and produces nice surface finishes.....and it offers the durability of hss with the ease of carbide.

Ive ground parting tools, hand ground blanks, lantern style williams and Armstrong....and I keep going back to the Warners.

I thread to the headstock with the cross and to a travel dial.
 
^^^
Ditto, never seen spring gages before. Definitely less headache than wires, but they're diameter and pitch specific so you need a bunch of them- and won't work on a non-"standard" diameter. I'll stick with my handful of thread mikes. Three mikes 0-1", and two 1"-2" measure every pitch and diameter I need.
I epoxied a cheap sprit level on my thread mics to make sure I’m flat and thus in the middle of the barrel. That’s my thought anyways.
 
Man waiting on my lathe has got me asking lots of questions. I guess iam just excited. Now here another guesting for you guys. What method do you use straight in with crossfeed or 29 1/2 deg compound method. What are the pro,s and cons of each. Also do any of you guy thread away from the chuck. Thanks

E
The only important thing is never set the compound beyond 30 deg. The truth is you can use any angle to zero on the compound. What happens as you change degrees it biases the cut more on the L side of the bit or insert. Most machinists doing barrel threading simply plunge cut with the crosslide when using carbide. As long as you have a lathe with a 2hp motor straight in is great. I and many others thread away from the chuck. Works great, just remember to invert your tool upside down. Also if your using carbide thread from 360-600 rpm. It creates beautiful threads. A great way to start inverted threading is to go to Mc Master Carr web site. Buy a L hand carbide 60 deg tool. Also remember to use your fish gauge when aligning your bit with the tenion It really improves thread quality. Also after your scratch cut TPI test you can run your first real cut between 0.0015-0.0020, after that keep your depth around 0.0005.
 
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The Man waiting on my lathe has got me asking lots of questions. I guess iam just excited. Now here another guesting for you guys. What method do you use straight in with crossfeed or 29 1/2 deg compound method. What are the pro,s and cons of each. Also do any of you guy thread away from the chuck. Thanks

Ed
Example of reverse threading with direct plunge cut 6FD37C5B-5F50-4A80-A8A5-C4BB05DD5587.jpeg
 
Yes...angle off by 90° in wrong direction. If you feed on compound, needs kicked 30° from face. LLooksto be kicked 30° from axis. Depends on how scale is oriented on cross feed that can be confusing. Some start a zero at 6 o'clock and some at 9 o'clock.
 
Looks like the compound at 30 but he plunged straight in maybe.
You can thread with plunging directly in from beginning to end. The tool will just cut on both sides. Not a big deal for the little tenon threads, but may become a challenge on deeper course threads because the amount of tool pressure on tool. Depends on machine and tool size as well. Many ways to thread. But looks like he fed in at 30 in wrong position.
 
You can thread with plunging directly in from beginning to end. The tool will just cut on both sides. Not a big deal for the little tenon threads, but may become a challenge on deeper course threads because the amount of tool pressure on tool. Depends on machine and tool size as well. Many ways to thread. But looks like he fed in at 30 in wrong position.
Yes I worded it wrong. Like the tool is set at 30 instead of compound.
 
I see it all the time. The compound is angled 30 degrees from the spindle axis. The tool is fed in on compound for each pass cutting the front flank away.

If the tool itself was angled and fed directly in in X, I don't think the tool would have lasted to create the buttress looking thread.

When feeding on compound, must be angled 29.5-30 degrees from face of part. Infeed direct in X, tool needs to be square(regardless tool needs centered) but compound can by anywhere, just don't feed with it:)
 
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