…Currently, I wouldn’t use a vast array of end mills, drills, cutters, but I absolutely need to be able to change my cutting tools efficiently. The idea of them getting stuck in the taper is pretty disastrous, as my work does pay bills.
Morse Taper was the first attempt at a quick change tool system, and it remains popular today. It’s relatively slow-change on a milling machine, because a drawbar has to be loosened and tapped with a mallet to release the grip.
Though MT works reasonably well, many attempts have been made to do better, most of them long forgotten! R8 is a survivor, originally only common in the US, but spread successfully. R8 also has limitations and critics! Larger machines go with INT, and similar. MT and R8 are affordable, INT less so!
Speed changing commercially involves balancing labour cost relative to tool cost. Time is money, but what’s the balance? Therefore, necessary to put figures on statements like ‘I absolutely need to be able to change my cutting tools efficiently.’ An MT tool-change takes two or three minutes. Is that too inefficient? What the mill is used for makes a big difference too – I mostly hold tools in an ER collet chuck, so R8 vs MT is mostly irrelevant! R8 wins only if I had to rapidly swap tools in the spindle. If time efficiency is a top-priority, plan the workflow carefully. Aim to minimise tool changes. An automatic tool-changer might be essential: fast tool-changing isn’t cheap, unless labour costs are even higher.
Some fear whacking drawbars with a mallet will damage bearings, but I’ve not found any evidence of this in normal operation. It is possible to jamb an MT, either by brutally overtightening it, or by leaving it in place long enough for oil to gum or corrosion to set in. Both avoided by sensible operation. Over-tightening might result from forcing damaged tapers, so inspect ‘bargains’ carefully! Male and female tapers should both be kept clean. Posh machines avoid tapping with a release mechanism, and they can be home-made. I’d rather fit an ejector than convert a machine from MT to R8.
The main reason I went MT is that tools can be used on my lathe and mill, a mild advantage that saved a few bob! The lathe has MT tapers. At the time in the UK R8 tools were harder to find and more expensive than MT, but much less of a problem now. And no complaints recently of machines converted too cheaply to R8 by simply boring the MT spindle out; that weakens it.
Dave