6533b861fe1ef96bd12c41e7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Surface finish generated in hard turning of quenched alloy steel parts using conventional and wiper ceramic inserts

Wit GrzesikT. Wanat

subject

Surface (mathematics)Engineering drawingBearing (mechanical)business.industryMechanical EngineeringAlloy steelSkewSurface finishengineering.materialIndustrial and Manufacturing Engineeringlaw.inventionMachininglawvisual_artengineeringSurface roughnessvisual_art.visual_art_mediumCeramicComposite materialbusiness

description

Abstract Significant progress has already been achieved in green manufacturing including dry and hard, often high-speed, machining technologies. For instance, the demand for higher productivity has resulted in the wider application of ceramic and PCBN tools with special multi-radii (wiper) geometry. This paper reports some important characteristics of the surface roughness produced in the turning of a hardened low-chromium alloy steel using mixed alumina–titanium carbon (TiC) ceramic cutting tools equipped with both conventional and wiper inserts. The characteristic geometrical features of surfaces obtained in both these turning operations have been assessed by means of representative two-dimensional (2D) surface roughness parameters, and some 3D visualizations, which allowed more complete characterization of the surface topography and prediction of its service properties. Results show that keeping equivalent feed rates, i.e. 0.1 mm/rev for conventional and 0.2 mm/rev for wiper tools, the surfaces obtained have similar 3D height roughness parameters, and comparable values of skew and kurtosis. At defined cutting parameters, surfaces produced by wiper tools contain blunt peaks with distinctly smaller slopes resulting in better bearing properties. Only marginal changes of Ra parameter were recorded during 15 min machining trials.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmachtools.2006.01.009