
FEATUREARTICLE
Using Copper and Graphite Electrodes: Look at the Big Picture
Since graphite and copper provide approximately the same surface finish, one must consider the shop - floor environment - and examine the advantages and disadvantages before choosing a material.
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GETMOREINFO
For more information contact Stu Haley of Belmont Technologies, Inc. (Madison Heights, MI) at (800) 356-4811 or visit its website at www.belmont4edm.com.
Haley explains that choosing an electrode material is often a result of where you were born and what type of EDM equipment you use. "For example, graphite was basically developed in the United States back in the early 1960s, so the American EDM equipment manufacturers in those days concentrated on the graphite circuitry when designing their equipment," he says. "Whereas, since the European and Asian EDM equipment manufacturers didn't have access to graphite, they developed copper circuitry. "If you have newer equipment built after 1990, the electrode material of choice in North America is graphite," he adds. "This is used in 90 percent of the applications. In Europe and Asia, graphite is becoming more popular as an electrode material because of availability, machinability and speed of cutting." Following are some of the advantages and disadvantages of each material so that you can decide which is best for your application.
Graphite "Graphite machines very easily - you can mill it, grind it, turn it, drill it, tap it, even file it to whatever shape you want," Haley continues. "Another advantage of graphite is that it doesn't burr. You can put it on a duplicating machine or a graphite high-speed mill and cut out complex shapes and forms, and once it's cut you are finished - with no deburring." (See Figure 1)
Additionally, graphite's high melting temperature results in less wear than other electrode materials, so a mold could be cut with one or two electrodes on a CNC EDM machine with very little wear, Haley adds. "A CNC sinker may need a third or forth electrode to finish the mold," he notes. "It depends on the age of the EDM machines."
Limitations
Another important point to keep in mind is that the finish on any electrode is the finish that will be put in the mold. "So, if you have a lot of cutter or grinding marks on the electrode, you will reproduce that in your mold," Haley says. "Normally, the finish on the graphite should be as good as you need in the mold." (See Figure 3)
Copper
When you add tungsten to copper (copper tungsten), the result is an electrode material that has extremely good wear characteristics but is very difficult to machine, Haley notes. "When EDM'ing carbide, this is the best metallic electrode material to use. The best graphite material would be copper graphite, which is graphite impregnated with copper," he says.
According to Haley, there are alternative ways of machining copper - including coining (see Figure 5), forging, photo engraving/acid etching (see Figure 6) and stamping/forming. There are some shops that make a form and then copper plate it.
Limitations "The bottom line is use what you think will work best in your shop with the equipment that you have available," Haley continues. "If some electrodes are beyond your machining ability, have someone make them for you. You have to base it on your own experience and the resources you have available. Ask for suggestions from the equipment manufacturer or from your electrode material supplier. Regardless of what electrode material or combination of materials you decide on, be sure that you know the speeds and feeds to machine the material safely. When in doubt, ask."
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