smorgasbord
Member
This is a really interesting product and product video:
Essentially, a redesigned cutting geometry that gives smoother mortise walls/tenon sides as well as making the bits stiffer. Inspired by the bits included with the Multi-Router/Panto-Routers of the 1970s and 1980s. These should work well for hand-held or Shaper Origin mortising as well.
@jeffinsgf, can you expand on the other potential uses? for instance, being stiffer, the ¼" bits might be good for CNC routing, where bit breakage is sometimes an issue. The 12º angle versus today's more common 30º angle does make me think we'd have to slow the CNC down for proper chip evacuation, which kind of takes away the need for stiffer bits in the CNC, so maybe that's not the best use case for them.
For woods like cherry or hard maple that have a tendency to burn, are these bits, since they almost rub on the sidewalls, more likely to create burn marks if feed rates aren't kept up?
Basically, compared to "regular" spiral bits, what are the pros/cons?
Essentially, a redesigned cutting geometry that gives smoother mortise walls/tenon sides as well as making the bits stiffer. Inspired by the bits included with the Multi-Router/Panto-Routers of the 1970s and 1980s. These should work well for hand-held or Shaper Origin mortising as well.
@jeffinsgf, can you expand on the other potential uses? for instance, being stiffer, the ¼" bits might be good for CNC routing, where bit breakage is sometimes an issue. The 12º angle versus today's more common 30º angle does make me think we'd have to slow the CNC down for proper chip evacuation, which kind of takes away the need for stiffer bits in the CNC, so maybe that's not the best use case for them.
For woods like cherry or hard maple that have a tendency to burn, are these bits, since they almost rub on the sidewalls, more likely to create burn marks if feed rates aren't kept up?
Basically, compared to "regular" spiral bits, what are the pros/cons?