Even the best bit will burn if you are moving it too slowlylooking at the cut apart from taking to much in one go it looks like a cheapo cutter set......ask me how I know.....
A decent Whithill/hall cutter would eat it but it'll be around £40 on it's own.....
I like the idea of the tape. Never thought of that. I agree with shallower passes and move a little faster if possible too.high tannin woods and woods with lots resin in will burn more easily, I find beech to be especially bad for it. especially across the grain.
The usual fix is to take shallow passes. with a bearing guided bit I'd usually wrap a bit of tape round the bearing for the first cut then take a spring cut with the tape removed.
is there a reason why you are running the cut so deep that you get a lip on the top? I'm assuming it's intentional.
Hi. That's the profile the bit is designed to cut?high tannin woods and woods with lots resin in will burn more easily, I find beech to be especially bad for it. especially across the grain.
The usual fix is to take shallow passes. with a bearing guided bit I'd usually wrap a bit of tape round the bearing for the first cut then take a spring cut with the tape removed.
is there a reason why you are running the cut so deep that you get a lip on the top? I'm assuming it's intentional.
Most just use the round over though rather than still leaving a sharp arris to deal with.Hi. That's the profile the bit is designed to cut?
NO. If it’s not sharp use a diamond slip to touch it up, it’s neither rocket science nor difficult.Make sure your bit is sharp if its not bin it!
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