A new approach: with quick processing as a goal, a shop tried using a waterjet instead of a CNC mill for a job and it did so with success.Creative thinking and the ability to look at things from a different angle are characteristics that set East End Welding welding, process for joining separate pieces of metal in a continuous metallic bond. Cold-pressure welding is accomplished by the application of high pressure at room temperature; forge welding (forging) is done by means of hammering, with the addition of heat. , Tallmadge, OH, apart from its competitors. When faced with the need to have a slot in each end of a stainless steel stainless steel: see steel. stainless steel Any of a family of alloy steels usually containing 10–30% chromium. The presence of chromium, together with low carbon content, gives remarkable resistance to corrosion and heat. shaft, it looked beyond the obvious choice of CNC (Computerized Numerical Control) See numerical control. CNC - Collaborative Networked Communication milling and sought a different approach-a waterjet. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] With traditional CNC milling, the shaft would be mounted vertically in a fixture and clamped into position. A vertical mill would then take several passes until the slot depth of about 1" would be cut. The tools used would also have to be shaped to ensure that the bottom of the slot was flat with a minimal radius in the corners. Once the slot was completed, the shaft would be rotated rotated turned around; pivoted. rotated tibia see rotated tibia. 180[degrees] and the same procedure repeated; straightforward and not too difficult for a shop with machining experience. But, instead of turning the piece 180[degrees], East End Welding rotated its viewpoint. "We anted to be able to get these parts processed as quickly as possible," John Susong, owner of the company said. So he decided to try something else. The company operates a dual-head, high-definition, 5-axis plasma; a 30 'x 13' four-head waterjet cutting system; a dual-head 5-axis oxy-fuel cutting system; a 6-axis 4,000W laser, and a variety of CNC machinery including a 30' x 15'x 5' vertical mill. Few companies have such a range of manufacturing equipment under one roof. So it is always a challenge according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Susong, to see which process is best for each project and to see if a traditional method can be replaced by a more efficient, non-traditional process. In the case of cutting the slot, CNC machining, on the surface, was the obvious choece, but after some consideration of selected the waterjet. It offered several advantages: * With a four-head waterjet, four parts could be cut simultaneously. The parts could be cut simultaneously. The parts could be cut laid into a fixture so each shaft centered itself. * The slot at each end could be cut in one program, the waterjet cutting the slot at one end, then moving to the other end, cutting the other slot. * The fixture required minimal holding force of the shaft, a single clamp clamp (klamp) a surgical device for compressing a part or structure. rubber dam clamp a metallic device used to retain the dam on a tooth. clamp n. could hold the part during cutting. * The fixture could accommodate eight shafts--four shafts would be cut while another four were loaded. The waterjet could alternate between each set of four parts, with no dead tome between cutting. Production would be driven by the cycle time of the machine rather than the speed of the operator. * Cuts would be clean and meet specifications. * The fixture could be made from a flat sheet of steel, fabricated fab·ri·cate tr.v. fab·ri·cat·ed, fab·ri·cat·ing, fab·ri·cates 1. To make; create. 2. To construct by combining or assembling diverse, typically standardized parts: easily, cut with the four-head waterjet, and would not need to be saved. * Programming would be easy since no special skills or software are needed, [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] * The cost of making the parts would be less then milling with the CNC. * Using the waterjet would free the CNC to do work that only it could do. * No special operator training is needed to cut the parts. The waterjet operator would handle the job in the same manner as a flat sheet of material is cut. The Three R's East End Welding operates a waterjet cutting system from WARDJet, Tallmadge, OH. The cutting system has two 100 hp pumps, with 50 hp allocated to each of the four cutting heads. A 0.014" orifice orifice /or·i·fice/ (or´i-fis) 1. the entrance or outlet of any body cavity. 2. any opening or meatus.orific´ial aortic orifice combined with a 0.04" nozzle An orifice in an inkjet print head through which ink is sprayed onto the paper. Print heads with six thousand or more nozzles are common in today's printers. Nozzle , running at 60,000 psi PSI - Portable Scheme Interpreter with 1.3 Ib of 50 mesh garnet garnet, name applied to a group of isomorphic minerals crystallizing in the cubic system. They are used chiefly as gems and as abrasives (as in garnet paper). abrasive abrasive, material used to grind, smooth, cut, or polish another substance. Natural abrasives include sand, pumice, corundum, and ground quartz. Carborundum (silicon carbide) and alumina (aluminum oxide) are important synthetically produced abrasives. generates the cutting stream. All abrasive is recycled through the abrasive recycling system. With ebrasive as the largest cost of operating a waterjet abrasive recycling c an cut operating costs operating costs npl → gastos mpl operacionales . It is cost of abrasive to 20 percent of what it costs new. If abrasive is up to 50 percent of the total cost, recycling could reduce operating cost by as much as 40 percent. The Right Decision A multitude of shafts have been processed since the first set were completed using the waterjet. The decision to use waterjet to cut slots proved to easy, cost-effective, and successful. With eight parts loaded, and four parts being changed while the other four are cutting, production times and operating cost are predictable and quantifiable. "There is no doubt using the waterjet to process and cut these shafts is the right way to go," Susong said. "The focus of building our waterjets is to e true to our motto, Not Just a Waterjet" Richard Ward, president of WARDJet, said. The company's mission is to offer the advantages of waterjet cutting it users so it can so it can be viewed as a CNC platform with which many processes can be automated. WARDJet, Inc, Visit www.rsleads.com/812mn-203 for more information |
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