18 resultados para surface finish


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The wire electrical discharge machining (EDM) of 6061 aluminium alloy in terms of material removal rate, kerf/slit width, surface finish and wear of electrode wire for different pulse on time and wire tension was studied. Eight experiments were carried out in a wire EDM machine by varying pulse on time and wire tension. It is found that the material removal rate increases with the increase of pulse on time though the wire tension does not affect the material removal rate. It seems that the higher wire tension facilitates steady machining process, which generates low wear in wire electrode and better surface finish. The surface roughness does not change notably with the variation of pulse on time. The appearance of the machined surfaces is very similar under all the machining conditions. The machined surface contains solidified molten material, splash of materials and blisters. The increase of the pulse on time increases the wear of wire electrode due to the increase of heat input. The wear of wire electrode generates tapered slot which has higher kerf width at top side than that at bottom side. The higher electrode wear introduces higher taper.

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This research work presents a machinability study between wrought grade titanium and selective laser melted (SLM) titanium Ti-6Al-4V in a face turning operation, machined at cutting speeds between 60 and 180 m/min. Machinability characteristics such as tool wear, cutting forces, and machined surface quality were investigated. Coating delamination, adhesion, abrasion, attrition, and chipping wear mechanisms were dominant during machining of SLM Ti-6Al-4V. Maximum flank wear was found higher in machining SLM Ti-6Al-4V compared to wrought Ti-6Al-4V at all speeds. It was also found that high machining speeds lead to catastrophic failure of the cutting tool during machining of SLM Ti-6Al-4V. Cutting force was higher in machining SLM Ti-6Al-4V as compared to wrought Ti-6Al-4V for all cutting speeds due to its higher strength and hardness. Surface finish improved with the cutting speed despite the high tool wear observed at high machining speeds. Overall, machinability of SLM Ti-6Al-4V was found poor as compared to the wrought alloy.

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The quality of a machined finish plays a major role in the performance of milling operations, good surface quality can significantly improve fatigue strength, corrosion resistance, or creep behaviour as well as surface friction. In this study, the effect of cutting parameters and cutting fluid pressure on the quality measurement of the surface of the crest for threads milled during high speed milling operations has been scrutinised. Cutting fluid pressure, feed rate and spindle speed were the input parameters whilst minimising surface roughness on the crest of the thread was the target. The experimental study was designed using the Taguchi L32 array. Analysing and modelling the effective parameters were carried out using both a multi-layer perceptron (MLP) and radial basis function (RBF) artificial neural networks (ANNs). These were shown to be highly adept for such tasks. In this paper, the analysis of surface roughness at the crest of the thread in high speed thread milling using a high accuracy optical profile-meter is an original contribution to the literature. The experimental results demonstrated that the surface quality in the crest of the thread was improved by increasing cutting speed, feed rate ranging 0.41-0.45 m/min and cutting fluid pressure ranging 2-3.5 bars. These outcomes characterised the ANN as a promising application for surface profile modelling in precision machining.