Title: Chapter 22 - MACHINING OPERATIONS AND MACHINE TOOLS:
1ME 350 Lecture 5 Chapter 22 23
- Chapter 22 - MACHINING OPERATIONS AND MACHINE
TOOLS - Turning and Related Operations
- Drilling and Related Operations
- Milling
- Machining Centers and Turning Centers
- Broaching
2Turning
- Single point cutting tool removes material from a
rotating workpiece to generate a cylinder - Performed on a machine tool called a
- Variations of turning performed on a lathe
- Facing
- Contour turning
- Chamfering
- Cutoff
- Threading
3Chamfering
Cutoff
- Cutting edge cuts an angle on the corner of the
cylinder, forming a "chamfer"
Tool is fed radially into rotating work at some
location to cut off end of part
4Facing
Contour Turning
Threading
Tool is fed radially
- Tool follows a contour that is other than
straight
Pointed form tool is fed at a large feed rate,
thus creating threads
5Engine Lathe
6Turret Lathe
- Tailstock replaced by turret that holds up to
six tools - Tools rapidly brought into action by indexing the
turret - Tool post replaced by four-sided turret to index
four tools - Applications high production work that requires
a sequence of cuts on the part
7Multiple Spindle Bar Machines
- More than one spindle, so multiple parts machined
simultaneously by multiple tools. Example - After each machining cycle, spindles (including
collets and workbars) are indexed (rotated) to
next position
8Boring
- Difference between boring and turning
- Boring is performed on the _________ diameter of
an existing hole - Turning is performed on the _________ diameter of
an existing cylinder - Boring machines
- Horizontal or vertical - refers to the
orientation of the machine spindles
9Reaming
Tapping
- Slightly enlarges a hole
- Provides better
- Improves
Used to provide internal screw threads on an
existing hole. Tool called a
10Radial Drill
- Large drill press designed for large parts
11Milling
- Machining operation in which work is fed past a
rotating tool with multiple cutting edges - Axis of tool rotation is perpendicular to feed
- Two forms
(a) (b)
12Slab Milling
Slotting
- Basic form of peripheral milling in which the
cutter width extends beyond the workpiece on both
sides
Width of cutter is less than workpiece width,
creating a slot in the work
13Face Milling
End Milling
Profile Milling
Cutter diameter is less than work width, so a
slot is cut into part
- Cutter overhangs work on both sides
Form of end milling in which the outside
periphery of a flat part is cut
14Machining Centers
- Highly automated machine tool can perform
multiple machining operations under CNC control
in one setup with minimal human attention - Typical operations are
- Other features
- Automatic tool changing
- Pallet shuttles
- Automatic workpart positioning
15Mill-Turn Centers
- Highly automated machine tool that can perform
the operations
16Broaching
- Moves a multiple tooth cutting tool linearly
relative to work in direction of tool axis
Examples of internal broaching
17 - Chapter 23 CUTTING TOOL TECHNOLOGY
- Tool Life
- Tool Geometry
- Cutting Fluids
18Three Modes of Tool Failure
- Cutting force is excessive and/or dynamic,
leading to brittle fracture - Cutting temperature is too high for the tool
material - Preferred wearing of the cutting tool
19Preferred Mode
- Longest possible tool life, wear locations
- Crater wear location
- Flank wear location
20Tool Wear vs. Time
- Tool wear as a function of cutting time. Flank
wear (FW) is used here as the measure of tool
wear. Crater wear follows a similar growth curve.
21Effect of Cutting Speed
- Effect of cutting speed on tool flank wear (FW)
for three cutting speeds, using a tool life
criterion of 0.50 mm flank wear.
22Tool Life vs. Cutting Speed
- Log-log plot of cutting speed vs tool life.
23Taylor Tool Life Equation
- where v cutting speed
- T tool life and
- n and C are parameters that depend on feed,
depth of cut, work material, and tooling
material, but mostly on material (work and tool). - n is the
- C is the _______ on the speed axis at one
minute tool life
24Example Problem
- A tool run at 160m/min lasts for 5 min. If the
tool is run at 100m/min it lasts for an average
of 41 min. - What is C and n?
25Tool Near End of Life
- Changes in sound emitted from operation
- Chips become ribbon-like, stringy, and difficult
to dispose of - Degradation of surface finish
- Increased power required to cut
- Visual inspection of the cutting edge with
magnifying optics can determine if tool should be
replaced
26Desired Tool Properties
- Toughness - to avoid fracture failure
- Hot hardness - ability to retain hardness at high
temperatures - Wear resistance - hardness is the most important
property to resist abrasive wear
27Hot Hardness
- Plain carbon steel shows a rapid loss of
hardness as temperature increases. High speed
steel is substantially better, while cemented
carbides and ceramics are significantly harder at
elevated temperatures.
28Typical Values of n and C
- Tool material n C (m/min) C (ft/min)
- High speed steel
- Non-steel work 0.125 120 350
- Steel work 0.125 70 200
- Cemented carbide
- Non-steel work 0.25 900 2700
- Steel work 0.25 500 1500
- Ceramic
- Steel work 0.6 3000 10,000
29Tool Geometry
- Two categories
- Single point tools
- Used for turning, boring, shaping, and planing
- Multiple cutting edge tools
- Used for drilling, reaming, tapping, milling,
broaching, and sawing
30Single-Point Tool Geometry
(a) Seven elements of single-point tool geometry
and (b) the tool signature convention that
defines the seven elements.
31Holding the Tool
- Three ways of holding and presenting the cutting
edge for a single-point tool (a) solid tool
(typically HSS) (b) brazed cemented carbide
insert, and (c) mechanically clamped insert, used
for cemented carbides, ceramics, and other very
hard tool materials.
32Common Insert Shapes
- Common insert shapes (a) round, (b) square, (c)
rhombus with two 80? point angles, (d) hexagon
with three 80? point angles, (e) triangle
(equilateral), (f) rhombus with two 55? point
angles, (g) rhombus with two 35? point angles.
33Twist Drills
- The most common cutting tool for hole-making
- Usually made of high speed steel
Standard geometry of a twist drill.
34Twist Drill Issues
- Along radius of cutting edges cutting speed
- Relative velocity at drill point is _______, (no
cutting takes place) a large thrust force must
deform the material - Problems
- Flutes must provide sufficient clearance to allow
chips to be extracted - Rubbing between outside diameter of drill bit and
hole. Delivery of cutting fluid to drill point
is difficult because chips are flowing in
opposite direction