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  2. High-speed steel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-speed_steel

    M42 is a molybdenum-series high-speed steel alloy with an additional 8% cobalt. [14] It is widely used in metal manufacturing industries because of its superior red-hardness as compared to more conventional high-speed steels, allowing for shorter cycle times in production environments due to higher cutting speeds or from the increase in time ...

  3. Drill bit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drill_bit

    While the above is a common use of center drill bits, it is a technically incorrect practice and should not be considered for production use. The correct tool to start a traditionally drilled hole (a hole drilled by a high-speed steel (HSS) twist drill bit) is a spotting drill bit (or a spot drill bit, as they are referenced in the U.S.). The ...

  4. Annular cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annular_cutter

    A tungsten carbide tipped (TCT) and high-speed steel (HSS) annular cutter (also known as a "core drill" or "hole saw"). An annular cutter (also called a core drill, core cutter, broach cutter, trepanning drill, hole saw, or cup-type cutter) is a form of core drill used to create holes in metal.

  5. Milling cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milling_cutter

    Material: High speed steel (HSS) cutters are the least-expensive and shortest-lived cutters. Cobalt-bearing high speed steels generally can be run 10% faster than regular high speed steel. Cemented carbide tools are more expensive than steel, but last longer, and can be run much faster, so prove more economical in the long run.

  6. Tool bit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tool_bit

    Originally, all tool bits were made of high carbon tool steels with the appropriate hardening and tempering.Since the introductions of high-speed steel (HSS) (early years of the 20th century), sintered carbide (1930s), ceramic and diamond cutters, those materials have gradually replaced the earlier kinds of tool steel in almost all cutting applications.

  7. Stellite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellite

    Stellite alloys are a family of completely non-magnetic and corrosion-resistant cobalt alloys of various compositions that have been optimised for different uses. Stellite alloys are suited for cutting tools, an example is Stellite 100, because this alloy is quite hard, maintains a good cutting edge at high temperature, and resists hardening and annealing.