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Home / Convert External Cooling to Through-tool Coolant in Two Minutes

Convert External Cooling to Through-tool Coolant in Two Minutes

For shops looking to convert to coolant-through tooling, retrofittable systems are one way to go.

Posted: September 29, 2023

REGO-FIX reCool retrofits take only minutes with the easy installation of external fluid fittings, coolant hose and other special components like a nut fitted with either a sealing disk or coolant flush disk that directs coolant through or, if desired, on the periphery of the cutting tool.
For about half the price of an original through-spindle coolant option, the REGO-FIX reCool system converts an external flood coolant machine into an internal cooling system and eliminates the annual maintenance requirement for through-coolant spindles.
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Rego-Fix, Coolant, tooling
For about half the price of an original through-spindle coolant option, the REGO-FIX reCool system converts an external flood coolant machine into an internal cooling system and eliminates the annual maintenance requirement for through-coolant spindles.

Many shops understandably try to recover the expensive acquisition cost of live-tool machines by saving on options that might seem unnecessary at the time of purchase. Through-spindle internal cooling is, in many cases, one machine feature shops might forego, settling instead for flood cooling.

Most shops would agree that external cooling — where coolant is sprayed at the cutting area through a nozzle positioned 3”-to-6” away from the cutting point — is inherently inefficient. Unless the operator’s aim is excellent, the coolant stream could miss the mark entirely, resulting in poor chip evacuation, high tool temperature and an overheated cutting zone. Even an optimal setup still results in coolant spray and splatter.

For drilling or deep pocket machining applications, flood cooling is particularly ineffective as the stream fails to reach the cutting zone once the tool enters deeper into the workpiece. As a result, additional peck cycles are required to evacuate chips and cool the tool head, which makes for longer overall part cycle times.

In through-spindle internal coolant systems, coolant streams through the tool tip directly at the cutting zone, efficiently evacuating chips and cooling the area without additional peck cycles. And that is a much more effective method of machining.

With a non-through-spindle coolant system, shops are probably programming extra blow off cycles to get chips out of the way, losing productivity and again extending part cycle times. If a programmed cycle is cooling off a cutting tool or evacuating chips, the machine is not making chips, and that’s not the most efficient way to use a machine.

On the downside, through-spindle coolant systems are expensive to buy and maintain. Coolant-through tool machines cost approximately twice as much as an external flood machine. Not to mention, through-spindle cooling systems come with a hefty annual maintenance bill — somewhere near 20%-to-30% of the original purchase price — to open, regrease and inspect seals in the tool head.

Retrofittable Through-coolant Tooling Systems

In many cases, once a shop gets its non-through-spindle coolant machine up and running, it begins questioning whether or not there might have been a better option. That’s where being able to convert tools to coolant-through by adding something as simple as a retrofittable unit becomes extremely beneficial. For about half the price of an original through-spindle coolant option, such a system converts an external flood coolant machine into an internal cooling system and eliminates the annual maintenance requirement.

Suitable for emulsion and oil coolants on live, static and Swiss Automatic machines, system retrofits are completed in a matter of minutes. Users simply install external fluid fittings, coolant hose and other special components like a nut fitted with either a sealing disk or coolant flush disk that directs coolant through or, if desired, on the periphery of the cutting tool.

Peripheral cooling with the coolant flush disk directs coolant to the cutting zone along the tool shank and is suitable for moderate cavities. The sealing disk conducts coolant through the tool for maximum lubrication and cooling of the cutting edge, providing the best surface quality for deep cavities.

One such retrofittable through-tool coolant system is reCool. It is designed to work with any standard ER collet (DIN 6499 / ISO 15488) and accommodates sizes from ER 11 through ER 40. Originally configured for stationary collet holders with external fine threads in static holders and ER and ERM threads in driven tools and turning machines, adapters are available to convert to internal threading on static machines and external threading for driven tooling.

The reCool system handles cutting speeds up to 12,000 rpm on driven machines and delivers coolant pressure of 100 bar (1,450 psi) or 150 bar (2,175 psi) with an optional high-pressure hose. While the system is extremely versatile and adaptable, it should be noted that the system cannot be used with sealed collets in either static or live tooling configurations.

Once the sealed reCool unit is installed, shops begin reaping the benefits of both schemes: the life and maintenance-free longevity of a non-through-spindle cooling system and the performance of internal cooling. Tool life is increased, surface finishes are improved, and the overall machining process is streamlined.

Non-cutting cycles for chip evacuation and tool cooling are eliminated, thereby reducing work hardening of the workpiece. For some manufacturers, removing those non-cutting cycles allows them to machine their parts in a single pass, which results in shorter overall lead times. Additionally, setups are made more efficient by not having to aim the coolant flow, and machine downtime is reduced by longer tool wear that requires less frequent changes.

For shops looking to convert to coolant-through tooling, retrofittable systems such as reCool are the only way to go because currently there’s nothing else comparable to it on the market. The only other option a shop has is to replace a machine’s entire live tool head.

www.regousa.com

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