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Since both machining modes shown above operate a substitution of real
expected surface with something different ( an arc in case of continous
mode, and a plane in multi-cut mode) some form errors occour.
This means that gears milling may be used without problems ONLY in
case of further grinding (expecially for multi-plane machining mode)
or in case of low-quality gears, for which continous mode milling
might be satisfying enough.
But don't forget that also hobbing has quite the same problems, since
a good hob in AA class may be built only in brazed-blade mode,
needs a proper sharpening,
and its quality depends upon re-sharpening process too, while
indexable insert hobs hardly reach quality A and often stop at B.
Gears milling is then a comparable alternative to hobbing, just
because both process might lead to a comparable quality.
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