Machining 1
Machining 1
Machining 1
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Machining Process
• Cast, formed and shaped products may need
further machining operations to give them the
desired final shape, after removal of extra material
in the form of chips.
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Turning
• High proportion of work machined in shop
turned on lathe
– Turning tool set to given depth of cut, fed
parallel to axis of work (reduces diameter of
work)
• Chip forms and slides along cutting tool's upper
surface created by side rake
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Lathe
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Planing or Shaping
• Workpiece moved back and forth under
cutting tool
– Fed sideways a set amount at end of each
table reversal
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Plain Milling
• Multi-tooth tool having several equally spaced
cutting edges around periphery
• Each tooth considered single-point cutting tool
(must have proper rake and clearance angles)
• Workpiece held in vise or fastened to table
– Fed into horizontal revolving cutter
– Each tooth makes successive cuts
– Produces smooth, flat, or profiled surface depending
on shape of cutter
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Inserted Blade Face Mill
• Consists of body that holds several equally
spaced inserts
• Cutting action occurs at lower corner of insert
– Corners chamfered to give strength
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End Milling
• Multi-fluted cutters held vertically in
vertical milling machine spindle or
attachment
• Used primarily for cutting slots or grooves
• Workpiece held in vise and fed into
revolving cutter
• End milling
– Cutting done by periphery of teeth
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Drilling
• Multi-edge cutting tool that
cuts on the point
• Drill's cutting edges (lips)
provided with lip clearance to
permit point to penetrate work
piece as drill revolves
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Machining
Cutting action involves shear deformation of work material
to form a chip
•As chip is removed, a new surface is exposed
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Machining in the Manufacturing Sequence
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Machining Operations
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Examples of machining processes
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Turning
Single point cutting tool removes material from a
rotating workpiece to form a cylindrical shape.
(a) turning
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Cutting Conditions in Machining
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Cutting Conditions for Turning
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Roughing vs. Finishing in Machining
In production, several roughing cuts are usually taken
on the part, followed by one or two finishing cuts
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Types of chips
• Continuous
• Built up edge
• Serrated or segmented
• Discontinuous
Basic types of chips and their photomicrographs produced in metal cutting (a) continuous ship with a
narrow,straight primary shear zone; (b) secondary shear zone at the chip tool interface;(c) continuous
chip with large primary shear zone; (d) continuous chip with built-up-edge;(e) segmented or
nonhomogeneous chip and (f) discontinuous chips
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Continuous chips
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Continuous chips
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Built-up edges chips
• BUE consists of layers of material from the
workpiece that are gradually deposited on the tool.
• BUE then becomes unstable and eventually breaks up
• BUE material is carried away on the tool side of the
chip
• the rest is deposited randomly on the workpiece
surface.
• BUE results in poor surface finish
• reduced by increasing the rake angle and therefore
decreasing the depth of cut.
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Discontinuous chips
• Discontinuous chips consist of segments that may be
firmly or loosely attached to each other
• These chips occur when machining hard brittle
materials such as cast iron.
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Serrated chips
• Segmented chips or non-
homogeneous chips
• Semi continuous chips with
zones low and high shear
strain
(e)segmented or
• Low thermal conductivity and nonhomogeneous chip and
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Chip Breakers
• Long continuous chip
are undesirable
• Chip breaker is a piece
of metal clamped to the
rake surface of the tool
which bends the chip
and breaks it
• Chips can also be broken
by changing the tool
geometry,thereby
(a) Schematic illustration of the action of a
controlling the chip flow chip breaker .(b) Chip breaker clamped on
the rake of a cutting tool. (c) Grooves in
cutting tools acting as chip breakers
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Temperature In Cutting
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Factors influencing cutting process
Parameter Influence and interrelationship
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