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Fred,
I’ve never used an alumahog in a right angle. Not sure if the tool will take the torque for long. I do use them often on the straight handles. They remove a lot of material fast.
When you’re doing transfers, the tough part is the ridge of plating, not the aluminum itself. I’d be worried that the hog would chip the plating.
I’ve got a few single cut burrs. I get them from Buckeye carbide and they last a good long while. I prefer the double cuts myself, but the singles give a nice finish if you hold them at the right rpm with a steady hand. Tend to jump around more than the double cuts, at least for me.
Anyone know of a place that sells some good LEFT handed bits? I’ve got the one from CC and it’s very aggressive. If you’ve done many saws, you’ll understand. The PTO side upper is just in the wrong orientation for the right angle bits to not want to chatter like crazy.
If I remember correctly @Mastermind uses a alumahog in his RA's, I think it was a SE-51NF. Personally I use Buckeye single cuts in my RA, SE-51S or SE-53S. I usually cycle a slightly dull single cut from the straight handpiece to the RA.
The plating tears up the alumahogs pretty quickly, I'll use a double cut to rip out large over plating in a port before switching to an alumahog to keep them from chipping.
The contra angle handpiece I made myself is better at getting the exhaust side corner of the PTO side upper, or the intake side on the flywheel but I can only run the 53 size (3/16") burrs or I'll tear the gears out of the head quickly. It seems the extra angle of the contra help you fight chatter better than a straight 90.