|
Feature Stories Archive
The Design of Plastic Cutting
Tools
Determining the correct plastic cutting
tool geometry begins by first understanding the plastic to
be cut.
BY VAN NISER
Routing and trimming has become one of the most common
operations performed during the manufacture of plastic
components and finished goods during the last 10 years. CNC
routing has taken those operations to the next level and
allowed plastic fabricators to put a finished edge on
products that previously may have needed further finishing
operations.
Interestingly, this ability was not an original intent of
the routing industry. Historically, routing was a means of
quickly shaping and cutting wood and aluminum with
occasional forays into the plastic and plastic composites
market. With the explosive growth of market demand for
thermoformed plastic components, point-of-purchase displays
and thermoset plastic goods, one router tooling manufacturer
began to develop a product that was dedicated solely to the
machining of plastics.
Wood tooling is generally a carbide tipped or solid
carbide tool with cutting geometry that allows the fibrous
material being cut to be sheared off cleanly, leaving no
chips or grain fuzzing. Designs have been further refined as
applications began requiring faster material removal rates
and better finishes, and as new wood composites enter the
marketplace. But the basic underlying cutting geometry
remained the same. A few specific combinations of rake angle
and clearance angle in conjunction with the helix angle of
the cutter (0 degrees for straight tooling and up to 35
degrees for spirals), combine to yield the results that the
wood fabrication industry desires.
Similar results are true for machining aluminum. Whereas
the wood industry sees only material variations such as
density and moisture content, aluminum machinists typically
need only to worry about the hardness and temper of the part
being cut. Using high speed steel or solid carbide spirals,
a few specific cutter geometries machine almost all of the
product being produced.
Plastics machining, on the other hand, has completely
changed the router industry's outlook on cutter design. Each
plastic manufactured can exhibit different cutting
characteristics and may respond differently to different
cutting geometries. This has led to an explosion in the
number of cutter styles offered to cut plastics as well as
the development of new technologies used in the manufacture
and development of the router bits. Because of the immense
number of variables associated with routing plastic
(composition, thickness, temperature) and the continuing
importance placed on the ability to produce a finished edge
without secondary operations, it has become necessary to
design tools that are extremely specific in their
application.
A general discussion on plastic cutting tool geometry
begins by dividing plastic into three general categories --
hard, soft and reinforced -- to reflect how they actually
respond to machining.
Soft Plastics
Soft plastics are routed by removing long, curly chips
from the face of the material being machined. Normally the
release of these chips is quite easy and there is little or
no instance of burring or fuzzing at the edge, as seen in
the comparable release of similar chips from wood or
aluminum. The nature of wood and aluminum necessitates that
the wedge angle of the router bit cutting edge be large.
This translates to a lower rake angle and a lower clearance
angle. If the wedge angle is reduced, premature wear of the
cutting edge occurs due to the abrasiveness and/or hardness
of the material being cut.
With soft plastics, however, the abrasive and impact wear
is greatly reduced and the rake angle can be increased
significantly, resulting in a much easier release of the
chip from the material. This allows faster feed rates and
less movement of the part due to cutting pressure.
The tradeoff of high rake angle in a cutting tool is that
it becomes very aggressive. If anyone has ever used
dedicated CNC plastic tooling in hand routers, he can attest
to the fact that it wants to "run" and can sometimes rip the
router from the user's grasp. The solution for this
aggressiveness has been to change both the angle and type of
clearance put on soft plastic tooling. By using a low angle
radial (or eccentric) relief grind on the clearance angle,
it is possible to "calm" the tool down and allow the high
rake angle to cut freely while still maintaining control of
the cutting tool. This radial clearance is designed to rub
ever so slightly along the cut surface and provide some
stability to the cutting tool. One or two degrees of too
much relief, and the cutting tool will begin to chatter. The
resultant knife marks along the cutting edge produce a
subsequent poor finish. One or two degrees of too little
relief and the router bit will rub too much, producing heat
and melting the material.
Additional factors in the design of soft plastic tooling
involve the removal of the chips once they have been cut
from the material. If the chips clog the passageway on their
journey out they will heat up very rapidly and cause poor
part finish and premature tool wear. The tooling design
solution has been to increase the flute area the chips are
allowed to flow in by reducing the number of flutes (thereby
increasing the allowable flute opening) and by using "O"
flute geometry. "O" flutes allow the chips to form naturally
and follow the natural flow of the cutting geometry without
hitting sharp corners that might slow their exit from the
cut passage.
Hard Plastics
Hard plastics machine much differently from their soft
plastic counterparts. The largest difference is in their
production of chips. Those machining wood, aluminum, or soft
plastic are used to the sight of large chips ejecting from
the router bit path and having enough weight to actually
carry for some distance before landing on the router table.
Hard plastic chips appear very different and are normally
very small shards that resemble crystalline fragments or
dust. Unlike soft plastic chips, hard plastic waste is
formed by frequently breaking small, individual chunks of
material from the base material. This necessitates different
cutter geometries from that seen in any other
application.
Like soft plastics, hard plastic tooling benefits from an
increased rake angle that allows the material to be broken
away much easier than if using a lower rake wood or aluminum
tool. Unlike soft plastic tooling, however, the need for a
dramatically increased rake angle is not present. Because of
the willingness of most hard plastics to release their bonds
in response to a sharp cutting edge, a moderate increase in
rake angle will usually produce the best results.
Commensurately, the clearance angle does not need to be
lowered as much to control the tool and frequently a
straight relief angle is all that is required to control the
tool and prevent chatter.
Hard plastic suffers from the same chatter and melt
problems as soft plastic and it must be controlled through
the same tight tolerances for rake and clearance angles held
by soft plastic cutting tools.
Hard plastics also exhibit a cutting effect that is
rarely seen in softer materials -- "cratering." Because of
the manner in which hard plastic is machined, if the rake
angle becomes too high, the tendency for the material to
break and release its bonds is greatly exaggerated and the
chips will actually pull additional material from within the
cut edge, leaving a "cratered" or dimpled surface along the
finished edge. By tightly controlling the designed wedge
angle of the cutting tool, this can normally be prevented
for a reasonable range of cutting speeds.
Whereas soft plastics respond best to "O" flutes, hard
plastics generally rout best with modified "O" flute or
straight rake face geometry. This combined with the smaller
chips produced, allow multi-fluted spirals to effectively
cut the material with a superior finish and good chip
extraction.
Reinforced Plastics
Reinforced plastics are frequently a polyester, epoxy, or
phenolic base with either a fibrous or glass material woven
or otherwise embedded to add rigidity to the composite.
While this can add significant strength to the material
itself, it causes it to be extremely difficult to
machine.
There are two different methods for attacking the tooling
design problem associated with machining abrasive plastics.
The first involves using a high rake angle and high
clearance angle to allow the bit to cut freely and
aggressively and reduce the amount of heat built up during
the cutting operation (this heat is a major factor of
accelerated tool wear in these operations). The adverse side
to this is that the resultant wedge angle is very small and
a weak cutting edge is continually presented to the
reinforced plastic, which can lead to chipping of the tool
and a general break-down of the cutting edge.
The other method employed in the design of these special
cutting tools is to present a very strong cutting edge to
the material by greatly lowering the rake angle and slightly
decreasing the clearance angle. This method reduces the
chipping of the cutting edge but can lead to tremendous heat
buildup. The best application of these tools requires
decreased spindle speeds to reduce the material heating, but
this can lead to increased cutting forces and cause part
movement.
Machining of reinforced plastics requires that great care
be made when choosing one of these two tooling types and
that the spindle RPMs and feed rates are matched to the
cutting tool selected, as each requires different cutting
properties and heat characteristics to function best.
Cutting tools typically consist of spirals and straight rake
face tools with either radial clearance (for low RPMs,
strong cutting edges) and straight clearance (for high RPMs,
free cutting action).
Tool Selection
The general groups listed above are just the beginning of
the categories for which plastic cutting tools are designed.
There are many sub-groups that require modification of the
basic cutting geometry formula to take into account
thickness, temperature, fixturing concerns, as well as the
combination of multiple materials such as acrylic/ABS (a
hard plastic and a soft plastic used in many bathtubs and
liners), laminated phenolics (desktops and lab tabletops),
and co-extruded PVC/ABS (fence posts).
CNC and non-CNC router tooling for plastics has increased
in both breadth and depth in the marketplace. Router bit
manufacturers must attempt to stay ahead of both the
burgeoning plastic development industry and the focused
attention that CNC router manufacturers have given the
plastic fabricators. This trend will continue and the number
of application specific tooling will increase
correspondingly along with the growth of the demanding
market. Continue to look for new innovations from the router
tooling market as both the quality and the speed of the cut
is increased in the next few years.
Click here to go
to the PMF feature archives.
Plastics Machining & Fabricating |
P: (847) 634-4347 F: (847) 634-4379 EMAIL: hfrankurba@aol.com |
P.O. BOX 1400 LINCOLNSHIRE ILLINOIS 60069 |
|