311 chapter 20

75
FUNDAMENTALS OF MACHINING Or ORTHOGONAL MACHINING

Transcript of 311 chapter 20

Page 1: 311 chapter 20

FUNDAMENTALS OF MACHININGOr ORTHOGONAL MACHINING

Page 2: 311 chapter 20

Machining is the process of removing unwanted material from a workpiece in the form of chips. If the workpiece is metal, the process is often called metal cutting or metal removal.

What makes this process so unique and difficult to analyze?

Page 3: 311 chapter 20
Page 4: 311 chapter 20

BASIC MACHINING PROCESSES

Page 5: 311 chapter 20

BASIC MACHINING PROCESSES

Page 6: 311 chapter 20
Page 7: 311 chapter 20

TURNING PROCESS

Page 8: 311 chapter 20

TURNING PROCESS

Page 9: 311 chapter 20
Page 10: 311 chapter 20

1. For a turning operation, you have selected an HSS tool and turning a hot rolled free machining steel, Bhn 300. Your depth of cut will be 0.150 in. The diameter of the workpiece is 1.00 inches.

a. What speed and feed would you select for this job?b. Using a speed of 105 sfpm and a feed of 0.015, calculate the spindle rpm for this operation.c. Calculate the metal removal rate.d. Calculate the cutting time for the operation with a length of cut of 4 in. and .10-in. allowance.

Page 11: 311 chapter 20

MILLING PROCESS

Page 12: 311 chapter 20

MILLING PROCESS

Page 13: 311 chapter 20

MILLING PROCESS

Page 14: 311 chapter 20

2. For a slab milling operation using a 5-in.-diameter, 11-tooth cutter. the feed per tooth is 0.005 in./tooth with a cutting speed of 100 sfpm (HSS steel). Calculate the rpm of the cutter and the feed rate (fm) of the table, then calculate the metal removal rate, MRR, where the width of the block being machined is 2 in. and the depth of cut is 0.25 in. Calculate the time to machine (Tm) a 6-in.-long block of metal with this Setup. Suppose you switched to a coated-carbide tool, so you increase the cutting speed to 400 sfpm. Now recalculate the machining time (Tm) with all the other parameters the same.

Page 15: 311 chapter 20

DRILLING PROCESSD = diameter of the drill which rotates 2cutting edges at rpm Ns.

V = velocity ofouter edge of the lip of the drill.

Ns = 12V/ΠD. Tm = cutting time = (L + A)/frNs.

where fr is the feed rate in in. per rev. The allowance A = D/2.The MRR = which is approximately 3DVfr

Page 16: 311 chapter 20
Page 17: 311 chapter 20

3. The power required to machine metal is related to the cutting force (Fc) and the cutting speed. For Problem 1, estimate cutting force Fc for this turning operation. (Hint:You have to estimate a value of HPs for this material.)

Page 18: 311 chapter 20

4. In order to drill a hole in the material described in Problem 1 using an HSS drill, you have to select a cutting speed and a feed rate. Using a speed of 105 sfpm for the HSS drill, calculate the rpm for a -in.-diameter drill and the MRR if the feed rate is 0.008 inches per revolution.

Page 19: 311 chapter 20

BROACHING PROCESS

The Tm for broaching is Tm = L /12V.The MRR (per tooth) is 12tWV in.3/min where V = cutting velocity in fpm,W is the width of cut, t = rise per tooth.

Page 20: 311 chapter 20
Page 21: 311 chapter 20
Page 22: 311 chapter 20
Page 23: 311 chapter 20
Page 24: 311 chapter 20
Page 25: 311 chapter 20

Usually, 30 to 40% of the total energy goes into friction and 60 to 70% into theshear process.

Page 26: 311 chapter 20

Doubling speed or depth of cut

In general, increasing the speed, the feed, or the depth of cut will increase the power requirement. Doubling the speed doubles the horsepower directly. Doubling the feed or the depth of cut doubles the cutting force Fc. In general, increasing the speed does not increase the cutting force Fc, a surprising experimental result.

However, speed has a strong effect on tool life because most of the input energy is converted into heat, which raises the temperature of the chip, the work, and the tool, which effect the tool life.

Page 27: 311 chapter 20
Page 28: 311 chapter 20

The angle that the tool makes with respect to a vertical from the workpiece is called the back rake angle a. A positive angle is shown in the schematic. The chip is formed by shearing. The onset of shear occurs at a low boundary deformed by angle f with respect to the horizontal.

Page 29: 311 chapter 20

In metal cutting, we observe that the onset of shear (to form the chip) is delayed by increased hardness (so f increases directly with hardness).

Page 30: 311 chapter 20

If the work material has hard second-phase particles dispersed in it, they can act as barriers to the shear front dislocations, which cannot penetrate the particle. The dislocations create voids around the particles. If there are enough particles of the right size and shape, the chip will fracture through the shear zone, forming segmented chips. Free-machining steels, which have small percentages of hard second-phase particles added to them, use this metallurgical phenomenon to break up the chips for easier chip handling.

Page 31: 311 chapter 20

MERCHANT MODEL

Page 32: 311 chapter 20

The shear angle can be measured statically by instantaneously interrupting the cut through the use of quick-stop devices. These devices disengage the cutting tool from the workpiece while cutting is in progress, leaving the chip attached to the workpiece. Optical and scanning electron microscopy is then used to observe the direction of shear.

Page 33: 311 chapter 20

It is assumed that the resultant force R acting on the back of the chip is equal and opposite tothe resultant force R acting on the shear plane.

The resultant R is composed of the friction force F and the normal force N acting on the tool–chip interface contact area.

The resultant force R’ is composed of a shear force Fs and normal force Fn acting on the shear plane area As

Since neither of these two sets of forces can usually be measured, a third set is needed, which can be measured using a dynamometer (force transducer) mounted either in the workholder or the tool holder.

Page 34: 311 chapter 20

The only symbol in this figure as yet undefined is b, which is the angle between the normal force N and the resultant R. It is called friction angle b and is used to describe the friction coefficientm on the tool–chip interface area, which is defined as F/N so that

Page 35: 311 chapter 20
Page 36: 311 chapter 20

Unit power is sensitive to material properties (e.g., hardness), rake angle, depth of cut, and feed, whereas ts is sensitive to material properties only.

Page 37: 311 chapter 20
Page 38: 311 chapter 20
Page 39: 311 chapter 20

CHATTER

Page 40: 311 chapter 20
Page 41: 311 chapter 20
Page 42: 311 chapter 20
Page 43: 311 chapter 20

LOBE DIAGRAM

The amplitude of chatter vibration may be more safely limited by temporary reduction of the feed per tooth until a preferred speed and stable depth of cut have been established.

Page 44: 311 chapter 20

SHAPING PROCESS

Page 45: 311 chapter 20
Page 46: 311 chapter 20
Page 47: 311 chapter 20
Page 48: 311 chapter 20
Page 49: 311 chapter 20
Page 50: 311 chapter 20
Page 51: 311 chapter 20
Page 52: 311 chapter 20
Page 53: 311 chapter 20
Page 54: 311 chapter 20
Page 55: 311 chapter 20
Page 56: 311 chapter 20
Page 57: 311 chapter 20
Page 58: 311 chapter 20
Page 59: 311 chapter 20
Page 60: 311 chapter 20
Page 61: 311 chapter 20
Page 62: 311 chapter 20
Page 63: 311 chapter 20
Page 64: 311 chapter 20
Page 65: 311 chapter 20
Page 66: 311 chapter 20
Page 67: 311 chapter 20
Page 68: 311 chapter 20
Page 69: 311 chapter 20
Page 70: 311 chapter 20
Page 71: 311 chapter 20
Page 72: 311 chapter 20
Page 73: 311 chapter 20
Page 74: 311 chapter 20
Page 75: 311 chapter 20