I'll reiterate the opinion that HSS is the way to go, and the stuff from Busy Bee, bought on sale, is as good as any.
At a buck or so per 1/4" square tool blank, you can afford to have a bunch of them, and practice your grinding. Get a couple of the 3/8 x 1/2 rectangular section ones too, they make great boring and internal threading bits.
A pair of vice grips to keep from burning your fingers while grinding, and don't quench the hot tool in water, until it has cooled in air to well below black heat. Quenching a red hot HSS tool can cause a micro-fracturing on the surface, that can limit tool life. A minor risk, but more probable than you softening HSS up while grinding it.
HSS will hold a cutting edge when it is red hot. The heat treat schedule, to anneal HSS runs into days long, at extremely high temperatures, the alloys used are not subject to losing their hardness by getting the tool hot on the grinding wheel. Tool holder suppliers like Armstrong, used to provide a holder to put your HSS bit into, so that you could lean on the bugger and make the grinder WORK. They had a ball end on the one end so you could brace it against your leg or hip, and LEAN on it! Go like heck, then allow it to cool in air, then grind it for pretty afterwards. Works very well, and cuts down your time sitting in front of the grinder, instead of doing productive work.
FWIW, once you gain some hands-on time, carbide is OK. There is a steep, expensive learning curve, as you get used to not touching the tool against a non-moving work, and you get used to feeding the tools in to the work with some confidence.
CCMT and CCGT are my two favorites. I have a couple of the Glanze (IIRC) Carbide lathe tool kits and boring bar kits from KBC tools, and they are relatively expensive sets for a hobby guy. The carbide inserts that come with, will get you started, then shop Ebay or Carbide Depot or similar cheapskate sources and go from there.
I would skip the Busy Bee house brand insert carbide entirely, and brazed carbide, while it has it's uses, is a bit of a trap, if you think it will save you from having to learn how to grind a cutting tool, as it really should be properly ground to suit the job, which requires a bit more in the way of tooling and grinders, as well as still needing to understand tool grinding, which gets you right where you were trying not to be.
Plain, high carbon steel, makes a really useful cutting tool as well, though heat management becomes a real issue. I make a lot of tools from water or oil hardening rod, that when run slowly to keep the heat from drawing the temper at the cutting edge, can often provide a better surface finish than HSS and take a sharper edge. But too hot for just a second, and done!
Cheers
Trev
At a buck or so per 1/4" square tool blank, you can afford to have a bunch of them, and practice your grinding. Get a couple of the 3/8 x 1/2 rectangular section ones too, they make great boring and internal threading bits.
A pair of vice grips to keep from burning your fingers while grinding, and don't quench the hot tool in water, until it has cooled in air to well below black heat. Quenching a red hot HSS tool can cause a micro-fracturing on the surface, that can limit tool life. A minor risk, but more probable than you softening HSS up while grinding it.
HSS will hold a cutting edge when it is red hot. The heat treat schedule, to anneal HSS runs into days long, at extremely high temperatures, the alloys used are not subject to losing their hardness by getting the tool hot on the grinding wheel. Tool holder suppliers like Armstrong, used to provide a holder to put your HSS bit into, so that you could lean on the bugger and make the grinder WORK. They had a ball end on the one end so you could brace it against your leg or hip, and LEAN on it! Go like heck, then allow it to cool in air, then grind it for pretty afterwards. Works very well, and cuts down your time sitting in front of the grinder, instead of doing productive work.
FWIW, once you gain some hands-on time, carbide is OK. There is a steep, expensive learning curve, as you get used to not touching the tool against a non-moving work, and you get used to feeding the tools in to the work with some confidence.
CCMT and CCGT are my two favorites. I have a couple of the Glanze (IIRC) Carbide lathe tool kits and boring bar kits from KBC tools, and they are relatively expensive sets for a hobby guy. The carbide inserts that come with, will get you started, then shop Ebay or Carbide Depot or similar cheapskate sources and go from there.
I would skip the Busy Bee house brand insert carbide entirely, and brazed carbide, while it has it's uses, is a bit of a trap, if you think it will save you from having to learn how to grind a cutting tool, as it really should be properly ground to suit the job, which requires a bit more in the way of tooling and grinders, as well as still needing to understand tool grinding, which gets you right where you were trying not to be.
Plain, high carbon steel, makes a really useful cutting tool as well, though heat management becomes a real issue. I make a lot of tools from water or oil hardening rod, that when run slowly to keep the heat from drawing the temper at the cutting edge, can often provide a better surface finish than HSS and take a sharper edge. But too hot for just a second, and done!
Cheers
Trev