About Lead?

graham-xrf

H-M Supporter - Gold Member
H-M Supporter Gold Member
It's soft goopy stuff, but I see from YouTube videos it can be (carefully) machined.
Would the cutting tool for turning have the same conventional clearance and rake angles one would use for steel, or does it need something a bit different?
 
Thanks guys. The plot behind it is because we are getting to that stage in the xrf material identification thread. There seems no choice but to use a lead part to mount the smoke detector elements.
 
I'm sure the answer is in the Machinery's Handbook. On one hand, we think of aluminum as kinda gummy and run it fast, but aluminum alloy with silicon is pretty hard compared to lead. Too fast might make a mess. I agree feeds should be slow. It might not be that far off from machining plastics. I want to see pics when the time comes, @graham-xrf!
 
I would expect holding the lead in a chuck or collet would be a bigger problem than the turning. Pressure of the jaws will deform the lead causing it to loosen in the chuck.
Yes - that is what happens. It is possible to let that happen initially while the support mandrel hole is drilled. Once it is an a more grip-able shaft, with a couple of pressure discs, one each end, then you turn away the chuck dents, and make the part in that setup - at least that is how the explanation went.

I have, of course, asked everybody I thought might have any idea, but it seems, as often happens, I am up to doing stuff nobody else knows about. The proof will be in the attempt. There may end up being more than one of those.
 
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