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Van Niser
Reduce Routing Cost$
By Van Niser
When the economy slows down and
orders become fewer in number and far more
competitive in terms of pricing, it is important to
find ways to reduce the cost of manufacturing. In
the routing industry there have been numerous
technological advances in machines, materials and
tooling aimed at raising the efficiency (and
therefore lowering the cost) of production. In the
last five years alone there have been great advances
in many of these areas. Machines have more than
tripled their rapid traverse rates and at the same
time managed to increase their rigidity through
advancements such as ceramic bearings and HSK tool
holders. Materials have increased their resistance
to crazing, scratching and breakage while being
offered in more colors, sizes and composite
formulations than ever before. New tooling
technology has brought about increased surface
finishes, longer tool life, faster feedrates and
less induced stresses on cut parts through better
materials and engineered geometries.
While these improvements have
undeniably helped to increase the state of the art
for plastic routing, the unfortunate truth is that
most application troubles are still the result of
basic and fundamental problems. These troubles, if
not found and eliminated, invariably cause increased
cycle times, cutter usage and higher machining
costs. Because they are core machining principles,
the solutions to these problems haven’t changed
since plastic CNC machining started its rapid growth
in the mid 1980s. For that reason, it is always a
good idea to occasionally get back to the basics and
review what makes for a successful CNC routing
operation.
The four core areas to address for
successful and profitable routing operations are:
Material, Rigidity, Tooling and Programming. By
reviewing the fundamentals involved with each of
these aspects of the routing operation before a job
begins, the shop owner, machine programmer or
machine operator can find opportunities to produce
better parts at a lower cost.
Material
With so many plastic grades in the
marketplace today, it makes no sense to ignore the
applications support that plastic manufacturers can
supply. The fabricator, acting as an intermediary
between the customer and the material supplier, has
the greatest opportunity to select a material which
meets the customer’s specifications but is easier to
machine than similar formulations. There are
numerous resources for machining information
available and they should be utilized as early as
possible to help the customer specify the best
material grade for all aspects of the design,
manufacture and final use of the product.
Whether published or residing in
the experience of a seasoned applications engineer,
router manufacturers typically have a wealth of
knowledge in regards to plastics machining. It is
always a good idea to contact the machine
manufacturer for some up-front advice on different
material styles.
Tooling companies can provide very
timely information on some of the newer materials as
well as the old stand-bys. Due to the expendable
nature of their product, tooling companies typically
have more involvement in the day-to- day machining
of products and may see a more varied spectrum of
successful applications. Knowledge of a material’s
benefits and limitations can be invaluable to
resourceful fabricators.
Lastly, and most importantly,
material manufacturers can be the best resource when
it comes to pre-job material selection. They
typically have specialized materials that are
designed with machining in mind and applications
personnel can assist both the fabricator and the
end-user in the selection of materials that are
router-friendly. Most larger companies publish
drilling, routing and sawing specifications for
their popular materials and many of them have joined
the
www.plasticrouting.com website to help develop a
centralized database allowing the comparison of
material machinability characteristics between
manufacturer, grade, color and thickness.
By reviewing the characteristics
of materials before a job begins in terms of
formability, resistance to damage, machinability and
customer specifications, the fabricator can help
reduce production costs while increasing the chances
of a satisfied customer.
Rigidity
Realistically, material
specification can be a difficult parameter for the
fabricator to control. Many times the specification
is already decided when the job is offered to the
fabricator. Fortunately, this is not the case for
the next most important variable in the job:
Rigidity. This parameter is entirely up to the
router operator and is the most critical parameter
over which the operator has control.
Rigidity applies both to the
machine itself and to the fixturing of the
components to be cut. (It can also be applied to the
tooling, but that subject is better dealt with in
the Tooling section.) A router that is poorly
maintained will never be capable of achieving the
results of even the oldest machine that has been
properly kept. Plastics machining is entirely
different than the routing of other materials in
that the feedrates are typically much faster than in
standard metal milling and the finish requirements
are much more precise than in wood routing.
Properly lubricated and maintained
machine slides and drive systems are essential to
maintaining optimum feedrates. Since plastic is so
sensitive to the relative motion of the cutter, any
backlash or worn track or ball areas can have a
visually noticeable effect on the part. Any play in
the table or spindle mounting systems can cause
erratic marring of the work surface. Failure to
follow a preventive maintenance schedule with the
spindle can cause concentricity problems so severe
that no tooling will produce an acceptable finish.
It is important to remember that routers are not
milling machines. They are typically much larger
than a standard horizontal mill and are built with
speed as a primary focus and rigidity as a second
focus (albeit, still a critical one). Routers are a
viable method of production if the operator
understands the limitations imposed when using a 10
foot aluminum table versus a 3 foot steel bed as a
work-surface. Preventive maintenance of CNC routers
is critical to long term operation when part surface
finishes are critical.
While machine rigidity is critical
to consistent performance, fixturing is equally
important to individual performance per part. As has
been stated in previous articles, surface finish for
metals and plastics is typically measured in
millionths of an inch. Consider that even .001” of
part movement is 50 times the magnitude of what is
generally considered a good surface finish. With
such a low margin of error, it is essential that
everything possible be done to allow the machine and
cutting tool a chance to produce optimum finishes.
Fixtures should be rigidly built
and mounted to the worksurface. Vacuum supply should
be oversized whenever possible and hard fixturing
should be securely mounted and without slop. When
dealing with 5-axis fixtures, unsupported overhangs
should be minimized and vacuum distribution should
be brought as close as possible to the area being
cut. Friction enhancements such as rubberized
coatings or gasketing sheet foam are always a good
idea.
Tooling
With the thousands of available
choices for tooling, this could seem to be a
difficult parameter to optimize. However, the
contrary is actually true. The reason for the large
selection of available tooling is the fact that it
has become so specialized over time. The best
methods for specifying tooling for a particular job
are either published resources or vendor
representatives. Published resources can be
recommendations from material suppliers, empirical
test data such as
www.plasticrouting.com,
or vendor catalogs with tool selection cross
references. Experienced vendor representatives or
applications engineers can also be of infinite value
because of their knowledge of similar applications
and the pitfalls to avoid.
The goal for best performance is
to find the tool geometry that was developed
specifically for the type of material being cut and
the machine being used (i.e. 3-axis, 5- axis,
carving, etc.). Additional factors that should be
considered are:
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Tool Material:
Carbide for finish, steel for sharpness,
diamond for life.
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Tool Diameter:
Is 1/4 inch required
or can 3/8 inch be used to produce a better
finish?
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Cutting Length:
Are stub length tools available for better
rigidity?
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Shank Diameter:
Cutting diameters smaller than the shank can lead
to tool breakage.
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Helix:
What are the part
hold-down parameters? Should low helix, high helix
or straight cutters be used?
Programming
Once material, machine rigidity,
fixturing and tooling have all been selected for
best operating practices, the final step is
programming the part path. There is a tremendous
amount of material published concerning this
process, but by just focusing on the basics a good
probability of success can be assumed. Some general
rules of thumb for routing of plastics:
Cut Direction Matters:
In almost all cases the conventional cut or climb
cut side will produce a better finish than its
counterpart. The best method for determination is
trial and error. Compare both the finished part and
the scrap for edge quality. If the scrap is better,
reverse the cut direction. For empirical data, once
again
www.plasticrouting.com
can be consulted. As a starting point, larger tool
diameters typically work better in a conventional
cut presentation and smaller diameters are
work-piece specific.
Chiploads:
Chipload
is the size of the chip being formed. It is the
result of the number of cutting edges, the spindle
RPM and the feedrate. Router bits work best at a
very specific chipload and can perform quite poorly
even a few .001 inch from the optimum value. Consult
with the tooling manufacturer for a good starting
point and then vary feedrates or RPMs to determine
the best cutting zone for the particular job.
Cutter Entry:
Router bits that plunge directly into the work piece
can wrap long chips, deform part edges or melt the
surrounding surface. Always ramp or helically plunge
into a scrap area and rout to the part edge to
prevent these problems.
Scrap:
Try to
minimize the amount of unsecured scrap and thin wall
scrap that is present. Poor scrap control can lead
to part ejection, vibration and broken cutters. A
thorough review of each of these fundamental areas –
Material, Rigidity, Tooling, and Programming – can
eliminate many of the problems that arise every day
in the routing industry. Far too often fabricators
have spent money and time fine tuning programs and
part paths for optimum cycle times when building
better fixtures or selecting different tooling could
have doubled feedrates with minimal additional
effort. Poor programming has been solved many times
with custom (i.e. expensive) tooling when rewriting
cutter entry cycles or part paths could have
resulted in immediate solutions and the use of
off-the-shelf tooling.
Perhaps the worst example and
unfortunately the most common is the application
where the machine must be run at a minimal feedrate
to prevent chattering of the part. If machine
condition is preventing fast feedrates, fix the
machine – do not decide that the maintenance cost is
prohibitive or the downtime is not possible. Once
machine wear begins, it accelerates quickly. It must
be caught in the beginning and fixed promptly to
prevent a myriad of problems later.
With a solid return of Back to the
Basics fundamentals in the routing process, delays
can be eliminated, cycle times optimized and costs
reduced.
If you would like to contribute a question or topic for a future article, please submit it to VanNiser@Onsrud.com or fax it to (847) 362-5028.
To view previous articles by Van Niser, visit
www.PlasticRouting.com.
Click here to go back to the PMF feature articles.
Plastics Machining & Fabricating |
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