
CUTTINGTOOLCASESTUDY
Faster Cavity Roughing
Fresh eyes and replaceable-tip cutters triple moldmaker’s cavity roughing rate.
|
|
LEARNMORE
Determining the Value of Your Cutting Tool How to reach the break even point of your cutting tool investment within hours. Plunge Milling Saves Time on Big Mold Cavities How to Retain Pin Bushings These days, domestic mold and die shops make it or not based largely on how fast they can hog out tool cavities. Faster cavity roughing gets the whole tool set out the door sooner, enabling you to compete better against offshore shops while still preserving your margins. So when you find a way to double or triple your cavity roughing rate, you jump on it. That’s exactly the case at B&J Specialty (BJS) in Wawaka, IN, which focuses on larger mold and die sets for the appliance and automotive industries. Today they’re roughing hardened A-2 die stock twice as fast as before. Moreover, they’re hogging out cavities in wrought H-13 and M-4 mold stock three times faster.
B&J Specialty’s cavity rough-milling is running a whole lot faster after retooling with Ingersoll Chip Surfer replaceable tip mills. Throughput rose sixfold on hardened A-2 steel and more than tripled on wrought H-13 and M-4. Photos courtesy of Ingersoll Cutting Tools. BJS process engineer Scott Sizemore had a hunch he could be roughing faster than 80 ipm if only he could find a cutter able to stand up. After all, their Makino V 550 vertical mill with a 20,000-rpm spindle had higher feed to spare. But whenever he turned up the feed, the solid carbide ball nose mill he was using—at $90 a pop—dulled out in just minutes. “Shows you what a fresh set of eyes can do,” says Sizemore, who led the change. First Impression “It was one of our bottleneck operations, so any improvement here would benefit the whole enterprise,” explains Sizemore. “If we go to the trouble to re-tool, we’d better make it count.” After studying the operation, Bair suggested that a recently introduced Ingersoll Chip-Surfer high-feed bull nose cutter with replaceable tips would improve the roughing rate on soft stock by at least three to one and reduce tooling costs to boot. For roughing the hardened A-2 stock (Rc 60), Bair recommended an Ingersoll toroidal cutter, projecting at least 60 percent higher throughput.
Ingersoll high-feed bull nose cutter hogs out cavity at 700 ipm in wrought mold block at B&J Specialty, up from 80 ipm with solid carbide ball nose mill. Despite the higher material removal rate, edge life per unit of material removal more than tripled. Tests Point the Way The next week, Sizemore tested the high-feed bull nose Chip Surfer at 600 ipm/0.020 DOC on the wrought mold stock. Spindle speed was 6800 rpm, unchanged from before. The tip was still sharp after an hour in the cut, which was how long the old solid carbide cutter has lasted—while cutting at only 80 ipm. He changed the tip anyway, a 20-second job with the Chip-Surfer shank still chucked in the spindle, and started right up again. With in-spindle tip changing, there’s no downtime touching off or reprogramming datum references. Doing the math, Sizemore concluded that he had found the solution for one bottleneck operation. The bottom line: 3.3 times faster material removal on wrought mold stock and three times longer service life of a cutting tip costing about 40 percent less than the cutter it replaces. The time saving for edge changing—20 seconds from STOP to START vs. five minutes before—was simply icing on the cake. Tests with the toroidal cutter on Rc 60 steel were just as conclusive. The cutter lasted a full hour in the cut, the same as before, but after feeding 4.5 times faster for the entire hour. The toroidal cutter made chips at 3750 rpm/175 ipm/0.012" DOC, vs. 3750/100/0.004" before. “While even a small percentage gain in rough-milling throughput would be important, here we’re talking order-of-magnitude increases, on both the wrought and hardened steels,” says Sizemore. Pushing the Envelope
Ingersoll rep Mitch Bair reviews results with B&J Specialty’s Scott Sizemore. To make a good first impression when he was assigned the B&J account, Bair spotted the way to debottleneck the moldmaker’s rough-milling operation. “We’re literally roughing 3.5 times faster and finishing six times faster than before with similar gains in edge life per unit of material removed,” says Sizemore. “In effect, eliminating this bottleneck has increased capacity of the shop as a whole, and enabled us to quote better deliveries. That gives us a key competitive edge over offshore shops ten thousand miles away that use lower technologies. We also can quote price with a sharper pencil and still maintain margins.” Geometry Matters And for milling the hard steels, the Ingersoll toroidal cutter boasts some of the same design differences over ball nose mill cutters, and more. The toroidal cutter also features six flutes instead of four, permitting 50 percent higher feeds without increasing cutting forces per flute. And again the radius is essentially constant over the entire cutting surface—keeping surface speed more uniformly optimized. With the shallow cuts characteristic of milling hard metals, this is a tremendous advantage. The tool design also recognizes that efficient cavity milling is essentially side milling, which involves higher lateral forces. The alloy tough shank handles lateral forces that would snap off a solid carbide cutter. |
| MoldMaking Technology Online is a trademark of Gardner Publications, Inc, copyright 2008. MoldMaking Technology and all contents are properties of Gardner Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |