
MACHINING
Making the Most of
High-Speed Machining
High-speed machining can cut mold manufacturing time in half, but only if it’s executed with an eye to the special needs of the tools and the process.
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LEARNMORE
Technology for Improving
Five-Axis Capability With five-axis in place, it’s time to look at the advantages of investing in new software technology to improve processes, new approaches to part setup and the factors to consider before your purchase. Thanks to advances in cutters (CNC control), milling machines and application software, high-speed machining has become a reality—and a significant aid to success—for companies that specialize in mold manufacture, prototype manufacture and other precision machining applications. High-speed machining (HSM) technology is helping moldmakers increase productivity and decrease costs. The right software maximizes the benefits of the high-speed hardware, protects it from damage, minimizes wear and tear, and simplifies the programming of toolpaths, so that even infrequent users can be productive. It also can help a company bring new products to market—or refurbish heavy manufacturing products—faster than competitors, and so capture markets that need those qualities. High-Speed Machining: Challenges and Solutions Speeds, Feeds and Tools of High-Speed Machining Because of the extreme speeds involved in high-speed machining, the technique places unique demands on every piece of hardware that’s used in the process. Milling machines, cutters, holders and other components must be designed to maximize stability and minimize vibration, since excessive vibration can damage surface finish, reduce the life of the cutter and other tools, and even ruin tools or jobs.
Automatic conversion of 3-axis to 5-axis toolpath with shorter tool for rigidity and high-speed machining. CNC machines are built for maximum rigidity and cast rate. Cutters are made from solid, sub-micro grain carbide for maximum strength and to tolerate heat expansion of the holders. Cutter holders employ shrink-fit technology to maximize balance and minimize air friction. For the control systems that translate the software commands into actions, digital drives and direct measuring systems are required to produce the highest possible precision, and most accurate repeatability. Characteristics of HSM Software 1. Tooling Stability
Golf club machining with 3+2 strategies. 2. Toolpath Efficiency For instance, the toolpath should be designed to get the maximum cutting from the largest possible tool in order to keep time and tool changes to a minimum. The toolpath design also should optimize toolpath routes to keep the cutter in contact with the material as much as possible. Minimizing fresh air cutting helps maximize the contact time of the cutter, and reduces cutter or insert wear by keeping cutter impact to a minimum. There are numerous other ways, some of which are extremely subtle, that the software does its job. One final example: when the tool does have to move from one surface to another at a sharp angle, the software should create a curved trajectory, in the air, rather than require an abrupt stop and start, in order to keep feedrates constant.
Five-axis swarf cutting. 3. Operating Performance 4. Ease of Use
Optimized roughing for soft material rendering. Allowing users to define tools from spreadsheets or other external files is one way to simplify programming; another is to employ intelligent defaults that automate the more sophisticated aspects of the cutting—accelerating and decelerating as the cutter goes into corners, for instance. And yet another is to let the programmer create stock models to show what the mold will look like at any point in the process, in order to make any adjustments that might be required during the roughing and finishing stages. Finally, the reliability and precision of the toolpaths themselves should permit the machine operator to let the machine operate in lights-out fashion—overnight and without an attendant. Summary |
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