I've carved a few test pieces in limestone (but never tried to inlay it),
from memory I used a fairly high speed (15-20k rpm) and slow feedrates
(150-300 mm/min).

Mind you, I was probably rubbing the tool at that, so it should be possible
to go faster - experimenting a bit should give you some idea of how
fast/deep you can go with your gear.

Used standard (uncoated) carbide tooling, mainly small ballnoses, with a
light cut. Water was applied using a spray bottle, didn't need a lot.

When I ran without water I had a lot of problems with the stone chipping and
losing detail. Could be speed/feed dependant though.

The biggest problem was that the cut stone tended to form a thick paste,
which obviously needed to be cleaned off the rails and screws before it got
into any bearings.

Hope that helps.
Ben


-----Original Message-----
From: Erik Friesen [mailto:e...@aercon.net] 
Sent: 03 September 2012 21:45
To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC)
Subject: [Emc-users] Limestone cnc

What would be the minimum setup needed for doing an inlay on limestone?

My dad in law was asking about this, and I don't see a lot of easy info
about this.

Could we use a slow router, say 6000rpm, and some type of diamond bit, and
take all day to do the job?

Is water a requirement?

Is there some basic reason why a typical cnc router setup won't work?
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