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INTRODUCTION
A broad range of metal removal and cutting methods are available to meet the differing
needs of manufacturers. Metal removal techniques and metal cutting processes are
discussed within the factsheet.
Milling
Milling is the process of machining flats, slots, grooves, etc in material by means of a rotating
cutter with multiple cutting edges. Two main types of milling machine exist: horizontal milling
machine and the vertical milling machine. Milling cutters usually have teeth cut on the
periphery and/or on the end of a disc or cylinder. Alternatively, ‘inserted tooth’ cutters with
replaceable teeth may be employed. In horizontal milling, ‘up-cutting’ is common practice,
but ‘down-cutting’ can also be performed. There are many types of cutter designed for many
different milling applications.
Drilling is the process of cutting holes in a component. A twist drill is a manually or machine
rotated tool with cutting edges to produce circular holes in a variety of materials (metals,
woods and plastics). It is manufactured from hardened steel bar with usually two helical
grooves, called flutes, terminating in two angled cutting edges. The flutes permit regrinding
of the drill bit, to retain its sharpness and hence accuracy and ability to cut, and assist in
swarf removal during drilling operations. Core drills have three or four flutes and are used to
open out existing holes. Drills vary in size from a fraction of a millimetre to over 100mm.
Drill bit grinding is best undertaken upon a special drill-grinding machine.
A reamer is used to finish a hole accurately with a high quality surface finish. It is a
periphery cutting tool, unlike the drill which is end cutting. Flutes may be straight or helical
(usually left handed). A hand reamer requires a long slow taper, but machine reamers have
a short 45o lead. The hole is drilled slightly smaller than the reamer diameter bearing in
mind that the allowance is about 0.015mm per millimetre, but this also depends on the
material. Taper reamers are used for finishing hole for taper pins.
Turning
Shaping is the process of producing flat surfaces and slots on a component. A shaping
machine consists of a reciprocating ram that carries a tool horizontally in guides or vertically
in a clapper box and is driven by a quick return mechanism. There are different types of
shaping machine including profilers - machines that follow a template to cut into blanks, and
pantographs - machines that use a plug (sample board) to trace the tool paths for the
cutting head to shape the blank.
Surface Grinding
Surface Grinding is the process of applying a high gloss finish to a metal component by
using an abrasive wheel. Grinding machines can produce flat, cylindrical and other surfaces
by means of a high-speed rotating abrasive wheel. Grinding is a means of giving a more
accurate surface finish to a pre-machined component but is also a machining process in its
own right as material is removed during the operation.
The main types of grinding machine are the surface grinding machine for flat surfaces and
the cylindrical grinding machine for cylindrical surfaces. More complex shapes may be
ground using shaped abrasive wheels called contour grinding wheels.
Grinding wheels use bonded abrasive powders typically based on the following materials:
Aluminium oxide (Al2O3), silicon carbide (SiC) and diamond dust.
Thread cutting machines may be used as an alternative to thread rolling machines whereby
the thread is formed by plastically deforming the metal component. Internal (tapped) thread
or external thread cutting machines may be employed for thread cutting operations.
Flame cutting, water jet cutting, laser cutting and plasma cutting are presented hereon.
Flame Cutting
Flame cutting is the process of cutting metal with an oxy-acetylene or oxy-hydrogen flame.
Oxy-fuel cutting applications are limited to carbon and low alloys steel. These materials can
be cut economically, and setup is simple and quick. For manual oxy-fuel gas cutting there is
no electric power requirement and equipment costs are low.
Water jet cutting is the process of cutting materials using a high-pressure (60 000 psi) water
jet with the addition of abrasive particles. This enables any geometry to be cut from any
material to be cut cleanly to close tolerances, squarely and with a good edge finish. Water
jet cutting creates super-smooth cut surfaces that have no heat affected zone, no burrs or
slag and can eliminate secondary finishing and hence reduce machining costs.
Laser Cutting
Laser cutting is the process of using a laser to make high quality cuts in a wide variety of
materials. All metals (excluding highly reflective metals), all plastics, glass, and wood can be
cut. Computer controlled laser cutting provides a fast, accurate and precisely repeatable
method of creating components of all shapes and sizes in small, medium or large batches
from flat sheet or tubular materials. Components that have been laser cut require a minimal
amount of finishing work.
Plasma (arc) cutting was developed in the 1950s for cutting of metals that could not be flame
cut, such as stainless steel, aluminium and copper. The plasma arc cutting process uses
electrically conductive gas to transfer energy from an electrical power source through a
plasma-cutting torch to the material being cut. The plasma gases include argon, hydrogen,
nitrogen and mixtures, plus air and oxygen.
The Cutting Edge provides Laser, Flame and Water cutting services in the UK.
http://www.thecuttingedge.co.uk/ the website provides some basic details and benefits of
each of the processes
Tesko Laser Division discusses the merits of laser, flame and plasma cutting.
http://www.teskolaser.com/laser_cutting2.html
http://www.teskolaser.com/flame_cutting.html
http://www.teskolaser.com/waterjet_cutting.html
The Modern Machine Shop Online (MMS Online) provides a number of articles on Electro
Discharge Machining.
The University of Edinburgh AMP Laboratory conduct Electrochemical Machining using their
Anodic Machining facilities. Their webpage provides background information on ECM.