Chapter 17, Milling – Smithy Midas 1220 LTD User Manual

Page 79

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Chapter 17

Milling

In milling, one or more rotating cutters shape a workpiece held by a vise or other

holding device. The cutters mount on arbors or at the end of the spindle in collets or

adapters.

Figure 17.1 MI-1220 LTD Milling/Drilling parts

Machinists use mills to machine flat surfaces, both horizontal and vertical, and to make

shoulders, grooves, fillets, keyways, T-slots, and dovetails. They can also make curved

and irregular surfaces and machine accurate holes. Its variety of machining operations

and high metal-removal rates rank the mill in importance with the lathe.

The millhead rotates 180 degrees and adjusts up and down. A quill that moves in and out

of the head carries the spindle.

You can move the table horizontally in two directions by turning the cross-slide and

long-feed handwheels The cross-slide handwheel turns the table longitudinally (at right

angles to the spindle axis); the long-feed hand crank moves it transversely (parallel to the

spindle axis).

To rotate the mill head, loosen the centering lock on the front of the mill head and the

mail lock on the back.

Millhead

(Rotates 180 degrees)

Crank Shaft

Main Lock

(At the back)

Centering Lock

17-1

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