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High-speed five-axis milling of hardened tool...
Journal article

High-speed five-axis milling of hardened tool steel

Abstract

This paper investigates critical issues related to high-speed five-axis milling of hardened D2 tool steel (hardness HRc63). A forging die cavity was designed to represent the typical features in dies and molds and to simulate several effects resulting from complex tool path generation. Cutting tool materials used were coated carbide for the roughing and semi-finishing processes and polycrystalline cubic boron nitride (PCBN) for the finishing process. The effects of complex tool paths on several critical machining issues such as chip morphology, cutting forces, tool wear mechanisms, tool life and surface integrity were also investigated. The main tool failure mode was chipping due to the machine tool dynamics. A five-axis analytical force model that includes the cutter location (CL) data file for computing the chip load has been developed. The effect of instantaneous tilt angle variation on the forces was also included. Verification of the force model has been performed and adopted as a basis for explaining the difficulties involved with high-speed five-axis milling of D2 tool steel.

Authors

Becze CE; Clayton P; Chen L; El-Wardany TI; Elbestawi MA

Journal

International Journal of Machine Tools and Manufacture, Vol. 40, No. 6, pp. 869–885

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 2000

DOI

10.1016/s0890-6955(99)00092-9

ISSN

0890-6955

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