-Then you have a problem somewhere. An R8 collet has quite a bit of holding power- no, they're not as powerful as a 40 taper, but properly applied, they work very well for the average small shop or home shop use.
If you're using a power drawbar, but still finding an endmill moves too easily in the collet, you have a problem somewhere. Not enough air pressure to the drawbar wrench, perhaps, or an overrun clutch is maladjusted.
Another possibility is your spindle taper is damaged or worn, and no longer provides the proper clamping force on the collet. The collet itself may have been damaged from a prior spin or crash- or excessive use when left too loose- and will no longer grab well.
Or you're severely overloading the collet, by trying to bury an oversized endmill into alloy steel, or using a too-large facemill or shell mill while taking a too-deep cut, or forcing a too-fast feed rate, etc.
Yeah, you treat an R* machine like you would a 10HP NMTB40 machine, and that collet isn't gonna hold up. But I've been running R8 machines since about '94, and the
only time I've spun something in a collet is when I stupidly tried to use a 1/2" collet to hold a 1/2" drill.
And it's not just me- there's literally about 20 million R8 machines out there, and very, very few of them are having the kinds of problems you are.
Doc.