Thanks a MIL (excuse the pun) Gwyn. I will try a test cut on the weekend at that speed :)
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Another thing to be aware of is cutters come in spiral upcut and spiral downcut, if you are cutting thin material an upcut will try to lift the material and cause chatter and doesn't give such a clean top edge as a downcut, however a downcut pushes the swarf into the cut and the heat of the tool can melt this and screw up the cut. you pay your money and you take your choice!
Regards
geoff
Hey Geoff
Yeah this i know - pros and cons. With thin stuff i.e. MDF that is very flimsy or soft I try and screw it down to a spoil board. I'll give the perspex a shot - i have up cut mills. if it works well then that will be fine to complete my panels over time :)
Thanks again for your input to Geoff. Much appreciated.
Hey Gwyn
I had some black perspex at home that i wanted to use to make some calibration tools for the 3D printer. I loaded up a 3mm end mill 2 flute and set the feed to 200mm/min and spindle rate to 8000rpm - WOW it cut beautifully! I was very impressed.
Really appreciate the assistance. I first did a 2 pass cut with a 25mm ramp in @ 60mm/min and then the second piece a 1 pass cut. One part was great and the 2 part.
So really either way but feedrate and speed was perfect.
Thanks again. Now to get some white acrylic :)