Today I discovered that flood coolant is transformative!
I got it running this morning, which really means figuring out that the pump doesn't pump unless the spindle is turning. The power comes from the VFD to a separate contactor, driving the 3-phase pump motor. So of course you can't test it by just "turning on the pump". So getting it running really only involved half a day of head scratching, and then dumping 4 gallons of coolant into the sump.
So of course I immediately went to town one something too big for my table ;-)
It's one of three heavy 4"x1.5" cast bar 4' long with these convenient recesses cast in:
So I use those to hold it to the table, rough one half out, slide it down the table and rough the other end. Turn it over onto parallels, do the same, then turn it a third time and take a finish pass. It won't be perfectly straight, but close enough?
The cuts the carbide inserts can take while being cooled are just astounding to me.
These are going to be the rails for a lathe a friend is building - I'm thinking "incredible overkill" while he's thinking "they were free!" But either way I'm impressed by what this mill can do.