Well I certainly won’t suggest a rear toolpost. Most commercial lathes can’t be set up to use them, and for me the rear toolpost on a small lathe is just plain inconvenient and cramped.
I could jam up anything with ease, and going wider doesn’t solve the problem.
Mostly its down to rake angle (because you can get jam up on rear tollposts too (I know!!))
Basically if you have a lot of rake, which looks “sharp”, then the download on the top of the tool generates an inwards vector, pulling the tool into the work. If you then don’t feed fast enough to keep the x slide pressed up against the back of the leadscrew, the tool can jump forwards into the job – indeed its pulled forwards into the job.
This geometry also applies on a rear toolpost too.
Most of us who are having parting problems tend, from all I have spoken to, to increase rake, and feed gently – with care, because you think its about to jam up. Which is exactly what one should not do
So the tricks are to get rid of the top rake and part with a minimal degree of rake – you have been given this advice already in a different form, because the Glanze tools are fitited with ISCAR GTN2 negative rake tips, or clones thereof.
And feed positively so you keep the load on the cross- slide. If you are feeding fast enough, you keep the pressure on the x slide, and it can’t pull forwards into the work. As soon as you relieve the feed, you unload the feednut, and it can pull forwards into the backlash, and you are in trouble. Mostly my jam ups occurred not as you I was feeding, but just as I backed off, ready to take another handful of handwheel, – and thats why.
Since that penny dropped, I have not had a single jam up, and I used to dread parting off. Now its the proverbial piece of p… . Same blades, same holders etc etc.
Rotational speed – of no great concern I reckon. If you slow down, your hand feed rate per rev (thickness of chip) goes up – which is not what you want if you are in jam up country. So now I part off at whatever sped I was last using, and more or less never in back gear. If it chatters a bit I slow down.
I do have tipped parting tools, and they are excellent as Coalburner says, but actually I don’t use them very much any more, because a decently ground Eclipse blade is better, and it doesn’t jam! More useful too, because the front faces are ground handed so they drop the job off
You will see people producing drawings showing how a rear mounted tool is suposed to throw the tool out of the work. But actually they are too simplified to be of use, and take no account of the efffects of rake – the angle at which the force is being generated, or the difference between having a tool mounted, front or back toolpost, above or below centre (by a small amount) .
Edited By mgj on 24/12/2011 16:47:48