Hss Vs Kryo Vs Pm.....
More steel info - pretty soon you folks may get a Met. Eng. certificate!!!
Mother Nature is not fair - harder generally means more prone to chipping, and more wear resistance generally means more prone to chipping. Grades that have high levels of Cobalt for red hardness are generally less tough as a result. and so on.... Carbide tooling has extreme wear reistance and red hardness, but next to no toughness when compared to PM HSS alloys.That is why in metal cutting most carbide tools are well supported inserts with very little vibration desired during use. Woodturning translation - use carbide for finishing work, not roughing a stump!!!!!
I have no direct knowledge of sources of supply in tools referring to HSS with "60" in the descriptor, but there are well known PM HSS called ASP 60 and 2060 and they are the same compositions.
The typical hardnesses shown on the data I provided were for metal cutting applications. In wood operations, I would guess that the tools are somewhat under hardened for optimum toughness. That would indicate (again no direct knowledge) that the PM super highspeeds such as CPM Rex 45, 76 and ASP 60 would probably be a point or two lower than shown on the chart. Typical for M4 would be 62-63, not its full hardening capability of 65. For more examples of typical hardnesses, see Lacer article in AAW journal, last summer.
Tool life is complicated and involves combinations of wear resistant particles, matrix hardness, and toughness and the material being turned - e.g. MDF vs Pine. Sometmes wear is the result of micro-chipping first, then dulling......
The carbide based tooling we see in the wood turning field use very small pieces extremely well supported, so that the shank is taking the beating.
There is a proper place for every tooling material but when making tools for the open market, manufacturers have to assume the worst and apply safe processing. As a result, maximum attainable hardness is probably not supplied.
Very highly alloyed PM tools can be more difficult to re-sharpen, and care must be taken to assure no edge damage. They can be burned just like any other tooling. However, I know of no general tendency or reputation for chipping.
The reason why CPM 10V (A11-generic versions) has been so successful in woodturning is that it is simply an extremely highly wear resistant tool steel - not a PM HSS. It exhibits very good toughness and resistance to chipping and contains no red hardness enhancing additions, which are not needed in woodturning. It is routinely used for blanking and stamping other metals, so turning wood is a piece of cake for it. Jerry Glaser figured this out over 20 years ago!
There are lots of great, well made tools on the market. Evaluate your goals, your pocket book, and your skills and choose accordingly. Tools do not make the turner - creativity, practice, and a positive outlook do.
But wait, with a new tool, a new lathe, a new turning smock, a new chuck, and a great piece of wood, I'll bet I can...........
Jerry Wright