Emuge Franken Solid Carbide Drills Withstand Shock, Chipping

End Mill Design Offers Heat Resistance

Probing has long been used for setup. With an inspection probe in its spindle, the machining center can touch a workpiece to quickly establish its location. Many manufacturers understand this, and many shops use the probe in this way. However, most of those shops fail to realize the many additional ways that on-machine probing can improve process efficiency. By using the probe strategically, a manufacturer can make 100% good parts—right the first time—in the lowest possible production time. The probe can even make it possible to do away with off-line inspection Carbide Turning Inserts as a regular part of production. Given all that the probe can do, calling it an "automation tool" is not enough. A probe is actually many automation tools in one.

The most effective machining processes use probing for different purposes throughout the cycle. Manufacturers that use probing only at the start, to locate parts and set tools, miss out on much of what probing can accomplish. Adaptive process control and part verification are where probing can deliver the greatest gains.

Here is how probing improves efficiency and accuracy at many stages throughout the machining cycle:

Absolutely. Most manufacturers will accept that probing can detect certain kinds of errors in the part, such as the errors resulting from tool wear or tool deflection. However, what so many manufacturers fail to recognize is that other sorts of errors can be detected as well. Machine tools today deliver accuracy and repeatability that can make them superb inspection devices. In addition, the performance of any particular machine can be established—and regularly checked—using easily accessible test and calibration technologies. One example is a telescoping ballbar, a machine-tool testing device that is affordable for almost any shop. When a precision machine tool is certified to be reliable and functioning well, that machine can be trusted to inspect its own work.

But what about thermal effects? Most machining doesn’t take place in a temperature-controlled environment, and thermal variation that affects machining accuracy would seem to affect the accuracy of probing, also. Can the machine tool be trusted to measure a hot part?

Yes! Even thermal effects can be overcome. By probing a calibrated "artifact"—an object that mimics the features, properties and dimensions of the part—the measurement can be adjusted for the prevailing thermal conditions at that moment. This artifact is part of the setup, and its dimensions are established in advance. If a measured dimension of the artifact is off by X because of thermal effects, and if the part and artifact are similar in size and composition, then a similar feature of the workpiece can be assumed to be off by X as well. The correction can automatically be factored into the measurement.

This method works. It produces a reliable means of automating High Feed Milling Insert inspection. Renishaw routinely uses this technique in its own machine shop. In fact, Renishaw routinely uses this technique to manufacture the components of probes—including the very probes that other manufacturers will use to put this method of automation to work.

The Carbide Inserts Website: https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005005875303527.html

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Emuge Franken Solid Carbide Drills Withstand Shock, Chipping