Sandvik Coromant — New Products & Digital Solutions Hub

Table of Contents

New Products at a Glance 

Inserts

1) Precision Finishing Insert—Micro-Geometry for Stainless

Sells on: (a) Anti-adhesion rake polish for 304/316 burr control; (b) Stable edge-hone for consistent Ra; (c) Predictable wear scar for SPC.

Materials: Austenitic stainless (M), free-cutting ferritic; light finishing on low-alloy steels.

Start window: Vc 90–160 m/min, fn 0.05–0.20 mm/rev (turning), directed emulsion; Ready to Run.

2) Heavy-Duty Roughing Insert—Cast Iron & Low-Alloy Steel

Sells on: (a) Thick, secure chipbreaker; (b) Notch-resistant edge for scale; (c) Heat-tolerant coating for long duty cycles.

Materials: K/P groups—gray/ductile iron, C45, 42CrMo (normalized).

Start window: Vc 140–240 m/min (K), fn 0.15–0.35 mm/rev; emulsion or dry with extraction.

Milling Cutters

3) High-Feed Face Mill—Thin Chip, High MRR

Sells on: (a) High-feed geometry for shallow ap and high fz; (b) Low cutting forces for slender setups; (c) Excellent per-edge economics.

Materials: P/M/K; excels on steels and cast irons.

Start window: ap 0.5–1.2 mm, fz 0.25–0.45 mm/tooth, Vc 180–260 m/min; emulsion; Ready to Run.

4) Finish-Grade Shoulder Mill—Hardened Steel & EDM Replacement

Sells on: (a) Polished rake for low burr; (b) Edge integrity at 50–58 HRC; (c) 90° shoulders within tight flatness.

Materials: Hardened tool steel (H), mold steels.

Start window: ap 0.2–0.6 mm, ae ≤ 15%Ø, fz 0.05–0.12, Vc 120–180 m/min; rich emulsion.

Drilling

5) Through-Coolant Solid Carbide Drill—Mixed-Material Cells

Sells on: (a) Self-centering split point; (b) Fast chip evacuation on 3–5×D; (c) Stable diameter across changeovers.

Materials: P/M/N; suitable for 304/316 and Al 6xxx.

Start window: 304/316: Vc 60–120 m/min, f 0.10–0.22 mm/rev, 30–50 bar emulsion; Ready to Run.

6) Exchangeable-Head Drill—Mid/Large Ø Cost Control

Sells on: (a) Body reuse reduces per-diameter spend; (b) Repeatable head seating; (c) Fast head swaps for high-mix lines.

Materials: P/M/K; deep holes with through-coolant.

Start window: See Parameter Card for Ø-specific Vc/f and pressure.

Toolholders

7) Precision Capto Tooling—Short Gage Length, Fast Preset

Sells on: (a) Repeatable length for fewer retouches; (b) Low runout for bore quality; (c) Simple changeovers reduce downtime.

Use cases: Swiss cells, horizontal lines, and mold finishing.

Start window: Follow cutter/insert card; ensure TIR ≤ 0.01–0.02 mm at edge.

Digital & Tool Data Updates

Why ISO 13399 Matters to CAM

ISO 13399-standardized tool data ensures predictable import into CAM and simulation: accurate cutter diameters, length/assembly stacks, recommended cutting conditions, and collision envelopes. Good data cuts hours from programming and helps prevent small but expensive mistakes (like wrong gauge length on a deep bore).

Tool Libraries, Optimization, and Connectivity

Tool libraries: Updated turn/mill/drill families arrive as ready-to-load bundles, reducing manual entry.

Optimization: Template feeds/speeds and chip-control logic (e.g., high-feed vs. shoulder) pre-wire safer defaults; you still tune for your machine/material.

Connectivity: Look for smoother links between tool data → CAM → presetting → machine, so offsets and assemblies match exactly.

Compatibility Tips

Keep a shadow copy of your current library; import new families side-by-side.

Use consistent naming conventions (family-diameter-L/D-holder) so programmers and operators speak the same language.

Confirm post-processor support for any new canned cycles or high-feed strategies before shop release.

ROI Calculator Template

Three value streams produce most of the return:

Tool life uplift (fewer heads/inserts per year)

Cycle-time reduction (shorter takt or higher MRR)

Quality yield improvement (less scrap/rework/time-on-CMM)

ROI Inputs & Outputs 

Input / Output

Symbol

Unit

Example

Tool cost per edge/head

CtC_tCt​

$

35.00

Holes/edges per tool

NNN

parts

900

Machine + operator rate

RmR_mRm​

$/min

2.00

Cycle time change

ΔT\Delta TΔT

min/part

−0.12

Scrap/rework reduction

ΔS\Delta SΔS

$/part

0.03

Changeover minutes saved

ΔC\Delta CΔC

min/change

4

Changes per week

FcF_cFc​

#

12

Tooling cost/part: Ctool=Ct/NC_{tool} = C_t / NCtool​=Ct​/N
Time value/part: Vtime=Rm×ΔTV_{time} = R_m \times \Delta TVtime​=Rm​×ΔT
Changeover value/part: Vchg=Rm×(ΔC×Fc/weekly parts)V_{chg} = R_m \times (\Delta C \times F_c / \text{weekly parts})Vchg​=Rm​×(ΔC×Fc​/weekly parts)
Quality value/part: Vqual=ΔSV_{qual} = \Delta SVqual​=ΔS
Total delta/part: ΔP=−Ctool+Vtime+Vchg+Vqual\Delta P = -C_{tool} + V_{time} + V_{chg} + V_{qual}ΔP=−Ctool​+Vtime​+Vchg​+Vqual​

Run the math for A/B trials and confirm with one month of production data before scaling.

A/B Trial Flow—From Sample to Volume

Phase

Scope

Timebox

Data to Capture

Sample

5–20 parts

1–2 days

Chip form photos, first-piece metrology, spindle load traces

Pilot (Small Batch)

100–500 parts

1–2 weeks

Tool life (edges/head), cycle deltas, burr/finish scores

Volume

1 month

4–5 weeks

Cost/part, SPC Cp/Cpk, changeover minutes, scrap/rework rate

Startup Parameters & Process Windows 

These are conservative windows meant to get you to clean, stable chips fast. Optimize in small steps after the first-run check.

Common Materials: Starter Windows & Notes

Material

Milling Vc (m/min)

fz (mm/tooth)

ap/ae

Turning Vc (m/min)

fn (mm/rev)

Notes

Cast Iron (K)

160–260

0.18–0.35

ap 1–2 mm, ae 30–60%Ø

140–240

0.15–0.35

Dry or emulsion; watch dust and notch wear.

Low-Alloy Steel (P)

140–220

0.10–0.25

ap 0.8–1.5 mm, ae 20–50%Ø

120–200

0.10–0.28

Keep chip thickness healthy; avoid dwell.

Stainless (M, 304/316)

90–170

0.05–0.18

ap 0.4–1.0 mm, ae 10–30%Ø

90–160

0.05–0.20

Prefer through/directed coolant; hold feed to resist BUE.

Hardened Steel (H, 50–58 HRC)

120–180

0.03–0.10

ap 0.2–0.6 mm, ae ≤ 15%Ø

Sharp but secure edge; minimize radial engagement.

Aluminum (N)

250–450

0.10–0.35

ap 1–2 mm, ae 40–80%Ø

Polished rakes; MQL or clean emulsion; avoid built-up edge.

“If You See X, Do Y” Troubleshooting

Symptom

Likely Cause

First Adjustment

Long, stringy chips (stainless)

Low chip thickness / weak coolant aim

Increase fz/fn 10–20%; verify aim/pressure; reduce Vc 10%.

Matte/black hole walls

Rubbing; chip packing

Lower Vc 10–15%; keep f; improve coolant filtration/aim.

Chatter bands (thin walls)

Excess overhang / step load

Shorten gage length; smooth path; reduce ae; increase fz slightly.

Oversize bores / taper

Runout, poor pilot

Check TIR at edge; use pilot; ensure holder condition.

Entry/exit burrs

Dull edge / tiny feed

Fresh edge; raise fz/fn slightly; add chamfer or erase pass.

Risks & Boundaries

Compatibility & machine floor minima: Confirm basic holder interface, runout, coolant pressure, and machine power before committing. Many “Ready to Run” items assume directed or through-tool coolant and TIR ≤ 0.02 mm.

Supply chain & delivery: Keep a dual-source plan for common diameters and a buffer kit (spare bodies/holders) for 8–12 weeks of demand. Lock priority lanes for any part families on which you build takt-time reductions.

FAQ

Q1: Will these new tools fit our existing holders and toolpaths?


Most entries are backward-compatible with standard seats/holders. We flag exceptions in each block. For CAM, reuse your cycle structures—only parameters change.

Q2: Do we need CAM updates to use the new libraries?


Not usually. Import the ISO 13399 data and attach the recommended default parameters. Validate post-processor support for any new canned cycles (e.g., high-feed or peck-logic variants).

Q3: How do we submit trial-cut data for incentives?


Use Trial-Cut Request to attach your log (cycle deltas, tool life, photos of chips/finish, first-piece dimensions). Qualifying pilots receive intro pricing on the standard kit.

Q4: What counts as a fair comparison in A/B trials?


Match material, toolpath, coolant, machine, and gage length. Change one variable at a time and run enough parts to stabilize chip form and temperature.

Q5: What if we lack high-pressure coolant?


Choose blocks labeled Ready to Run for low-pressure environments, or select shallow L/D and freer chipformers. Apply the troubleshooting table to control heat/chip packing.

Q6: How are parameter cards maintained?


We version them monthly. Each card shows date, rev, and the specific insert/cutter family. Keep the latest copy in your shop standard and archive prior revs.

Q7: Can we request custom edge preps or specials?


Yes—use the Trial-Cut Request notes. We’ll propose a special grind/coating or recommend a close standard SKU.

Q8: What qualifies for “Ready to Run”?


Low retrofit effort (no fixturing change), clean ISO 13399 data, and conservative start windows that are proven on commodity machines and coolants.

Conversion & Services

Lead Time & Support:

Standard diameters and common grades are typically in stock or short lead.

Dedicated application engineers can join first-article runs (remote or on-site) and help lock SPC targets.

Need a substitute now? See Recommended Alternatives for compatible SKUs (materials, L/D, holder interface), each presented as a component card that you can add to your BOM.

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