I don’t buy this suggestion of cutters scraping, Putting a modern ground cutter in a French head will not result in it scrapping.
A modern block sets the cutters on an angle to place the cutter tips on a line that runs through the exact centre of the block. The profile in the cutter is ground to take into account the angle the cutter is mounted. It therefore produces an exact replica. French heads have no advantage or can do anything better than a modern head.
French heads were often not tightened up sufficiently, or, cutters were stacked. This resulted in them releasing from the head when they shouldn’t becoming high speed missiles imbedding themselves in what ever was close……yuk! Modern blocks prevent cutters from escaping by wedges and either serrations or pins. French Heads don’t have limiters, so if you get something you shouldn’t caught by the cutter it tends to pull it in chopping a lot more off.……like hands. This along with other daggy practices created the bad press the spindle gained.
A modern block sets the cutters on an angle to place the cutter tips on a line that runs through the exact centre of the block. The profile in the cutter is ground to take into account the angle the cutter is mounted. It therefore produces an exact replica. French heads have no advantage or can do anything better than a modern head.
French heads were often not tightened up sufficiently, or, cutters were stacked. This resulted in them releasing from the head when they shouldn’t becoming high speed missiles imbedding themselves in what ever was close……yuk! Modern blocks prevent cutters from escaping by wedges and either serrations or pins. French Heads don’t have limiters, so if you get something you shouldn’t caught by the cutter it tends to pull it in chopping a lot more off.……like hands. This along with other daggy practices created the bad press the spindle gained.