Does the Felder head produce a different chip than any other insert head
Does the Felder head produce a different chip than any other insert head
“Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness..." - Mark Twain
The chip is the same as some other inserted head that skew the insert. Some insert heads have a straight cuts. Some inserted heads have skewed cuts.
Felder is the only head that has skewed and Helical Cut. I do believe there is a patent on the head, and the special radiuses inserts can only be bought through Felder. I haven’t looked for a alternative supplier yet, as I am only on the second face of the four, in five years. I rotated when I found my cutter block to be too hot to touch after a two hour run. It was still leaving a pretty good finish. I have been running a lot of IPE through the head recently. I can’t compare it to Pine but I can run pine over it afterwards with no questions asked.
Last edited by Matt Mattingley; 09-16-2018 at 11:17 PM.
Not quite but they do come out a little differently with horse power, amperage and finish product. You well know A skewed cut can reduce load.
Sure there is aftermarket heads. I’m wondering if there is a head-to-head comparison??? This could run this thread two or three more pages....
Decibel readings, finish, amperage readings, carbide longjevity, head chip management, chip/head temperature value and displacement. Then there is tool capacity. This particular machine is outfitted with a real 4hp. motor.
In my opinion this is a pretty good beast machine.
Felder has patent a continuous chip load displacement. Byrd has attempted to copy without infringing with alternate cut displacement. Felder is a true helical head. Byrd is not.
I’ll take a picture of my hammerhead tomorrow and post here. There is a significant difference between a Byrd and A Felder. The difference between a hammer and a Felder is they go from 2 rows to 3 rows of inserts. This is accomplished by a larger diameter head.
Last edited by Matt Mattingley; 09-17-2018 at 12:04 AM.
You can get the inserts for Hammer (which I imagine is the same as Felder) from here: https://sje-tools.com/14-carbide-inserts
Regards from Perth
Derek
Contact him directly. He is very approachable and will let you know when he more.
Regards from Perth
Derek
This is a Byrd head
15-inch-Shelix_d400[1].png
This is the Silent Power head
IMG_1462blog-main[1].jpg
“Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness..." - Mark Twain
Of all the laws Brandolini's may be the most universally true.
Deep thought for the day:
Your bandsaw weighs more when you leave the spring compressed instead of relieving the tension.
Felder came to market with this head many years after Byrd had their Shelix head out. Fine woodworking talked about the Felder head being "rolled out" in 2012 or thereabouts and Felder talks about it being new in their video from 2012. Byrd has been out much longer than that.....so who "copied" who? Don't even try to go there Matt because if you look at big industrial equipment, the Italians and Germans were doing segmented heads long before we saw Byrd over here.
The Byrd head has skewed knives with a radius....you've seen mine. The radius is required and is a function of the diameter of the head and the angle of shear etc. They are also helically arranged around the block, the only difference is, they're not continuous like the Felder is. With either design, the chip still breaks at or near the end of the cutter so really neither creates a continuous chip like my Wadkin skew knife head. What's interesting is that Felder calls their head a spiral head sometimes.