Design of an Ultra-Light Portable Machine Tool

Designing machine tools for in situ machining is a challenging task due to their unique structures and restrictive functional requirements. Such a machine tool should be characterized by low mass, adequate machining accuracy and high machining stability. The paper presents the design of an ultra-lig...

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Main Authors: Pawel Dunaj, Michal Dolata, Bartosz powalka, Piotr Pawelko, Stefan Berczynski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2021-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9380287/
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spelling doaj-339baa9f1e0a49d49db67381e59acdab2021-03-30T15:24:06ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362021-01-019438374384410.1109/ACCESS.2021.30666909380287Design of an Ultra-Light Portable Machine ToolPawel Dunaj0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6866-2586Michal Dolata1Bartosz powalka2Piotr Pawelko3Stefan Berczynski4Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Mechatronics, West Pomeranian University of Technology, PolandFaculty of Mechanical Engineering and Mechatronics, West Pomeranian University of Technology, PolandFaculty of Mechanical Engineering and Mechatronics, West Pomeranian University of Technology, PolandFaculty of Mechanical Engineering and Mechatronics, West Pomeranian University of Technology, PolandFaculty of Mechanical Engineering and Mechatronics, West Pomeranian University of Technology, PolandDesigning machine tools for in situ machining is a challenging task due to their unique structures and restrictive functional requirements. Such a machine tool should be characterized by low mass, adequate machining accuracy and high machining stability. The paper presents the design of an ultra-light, axisymmetric, portable machine tool for in situ flange face milling. Due to a high compliance of the designed machine tool and a need of maintaining its low mass, structural modification aimed at stability increase were highly limited. Therefore, it was decided to select the spindle ensuring machining stability. The selection of the spindle was supported by finite element analysis. Based on numerical analyzes results a prototype with a proper spindle was build. Then, the accuracy of the finite element model and the predicted stability were experimentally verified, showing a good agreement with the real counterpart. Finally, two general conclusions were formulated: (i) in the case of machine tools characterized by high compliance and limited possibility of modifying their design a good choice may be the selection of a spindle that allows to obtain parameters that ensure stable machining, and (ii) it is possible to build low-dimensional, reliable finite element model without using substructuring or reduction methods, and a well-thought-out discretization and replacement elements of complex load bearing systems instead.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9380287/Dynamic stiffnessfinite element modelingflange facerin situ machiningonsite machiningportable machine tools
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pawel Dunaj
Michal Dolata
Bartosz powalka
Piotr Pawelko
Stefan Berczynski
spellingShingle Pawel Dunaj
Michal Dolata
Bartosz powalka
Piotr Pawelko
Stefan Berczynski
Design of an Ultra-Light Portable Machine Tool
IEEE Access
Dynamic stiffness
finite element modeling
flange facer
in situ machining
onsite machining
portable machine tools
author_facet Pawel Dunaj
Michal Dolata
Bartosz powalka
Piotr Pawelko
Stefan Berczynski
author_sort Pawel Dunaj
title Design of an Ultra-Light Portable Machine Tool
title_short Design of an Ultra-Light Portable Machine Tool
title_full Design of an Ultra-Light Portable Machine Tool
title_fullStr Design of an Ultra-Light Portable Machine Tool
title_full_unstemmed Design of an Ultra-Light Portable Machine Tool
title_sort design of an ultra-light portable machine tool
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Designing machine tools for in situ machining is a challenging task due to their unique structures and restrictive functional requirements. Such a machine tool should be characterized by low mass, adequate machining accuracy and high machining stability. The paper presents the design of an ultra-light, axisymmetric, portable machine tool for in situ flange face milling. Due to a high compliance of the designed machine tool and a need of maintaining its low mass, structural modification aimed at stability increase were highly limited. Therefore, it was decided to select the spindle ensuring machining stability. The selection of the spindle was supported by finite element analysis. Based on numerical analyzes results a prototype with a proper spindle was build. Then, the accuracy of the finite element model and the predicted stability were experimentally verified, showing a good agreement with the real counterpart. Finally, two general conclusions were formulated: (i) in the case of machine tools characterized by high compliance and limited possibility of modifying their design a good choice may be the selection of a spindle that allows to obtain parameters that ensure stable machining, and (ii) it is possible to build low-dimensional, reliable finite element model without using substructuring or reduction methods, and a well-thought-out discretization and replacement elements of complex load bearing systems instead.
topic Dynamic stiffness
finite element modeling
flange facer
in situ machining
onsite machining
portable machine tools
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9380287/
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AT bartoszpowalka designofanultralightportablemachinetool
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