Tool wear monitoring in face milling

The purpose of this thesis is to investigate tool wear monitoring using Fourier Series simulation of steady state cutting forces. These simulations show that mean and fundamental values are all that is required to accurately predict immersion and tool wear (high frequency terms are ignored). It is...

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Main Author: Hosepyan, Yetvart
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29973
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-299732018-01-05T17:45:23Z Tool wear monitoring in face milling Hosepyan, Yetvart The purpose of this thesis is to investigate tool wear monitoring using Fourier Series simulation of steady state cutting forces. These simulations show that mean and fundamental values are all that is required to accurately predict immersion and tool wear (high frequency terms are ignored). It is found that the ratio of the magnitude of the fundamental values of force over the quasi-mean resultant force are insensitive to wear, while the same ratio is found to change markedly with immersion. Due to the nature of wear and different cutting conditions, two different wear identification methods are proposed. The first type of wear is chipping of the primary edge; the ratio of quasi-mean resultant force over mean torque gives the necessary indication without being affected by normal wear. The second type of wear studied is the normal wear band, where the axial force, F[formula omitted], (which was modelled using equivalent chip thickness, h[formula omitted], and equivalent approach angle,[formula omitted]) is found to be useful in the identification of this type of wear. The mean value of F[formula omitted] over the mean value of torque gives information about the state of normal wear while being insensitive to chipping. Work on an insitu sensor is also reported. Preliminary investigation shows that a deposit comprising a hybrid resistor on the flank face of a throw-away insert has the potential to monitor wear due to the permanent increase in resistance of the deposit as cutting proceeds. A U.S. patent has been obtained for this idea. Applied Science, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Department of Graduate 2010-11-16T18:46:03Z 2010-11-16T18:46:03Z 1991 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29973 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
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language English
sources NDLTD
description The purpose of this thesis is to investigate tool wear monitoring using Fourier Series simulation of steady state cutting forces. These simulations show that mean and fundamental values are all that is required to accurately predict immersion and tool wear (high frequency terms are ignored). It is found that the ratio of the magnitude of the fundamental values of force over the quasi-mean resultant force are insensitive to wear, while the same ratio is found to change markedly with immersion. Due to the nature of wear and different cutting conditions, two different wear identification methods are proposed. The first type of wear is chipping of the primary edge; the ratio of quasi-mean resultant force over mean torque gives the necessary indication without being affected by normal wear. The second type of wear studied is the normal wear band, where the axial force, F[formula omitted], (which was modelled using equivalent chip thickness, h[formula omitted], and equivalent approach angle,[formula omitted]) is found to be useful in the identification of this type of wear. The mean value of F[formula omitted] over the mean value of torque gives information about the state of normal wear while being insensitive to chipping. Work on an insitu sensor is also reported. Preliminary investigation shows that a deposit comprising a hybrid resistor on the flank face of a throw-away insert has the potential to monitor wear due to the permanent increase in resistance of the deposit as cutting proceeds. A U.S. patent has been obtained for this idea. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Mechanical Engineering, Department of === Graduate
author Hosepyan, Yetvart
spellingShingle Hosepyan, Yetvart
Tool wear monitoring in face milling
author_facet Hosepyan, Yetvart
author_sort Hosepyan, Yetvart
title Tool wear monitoring in face milling
title_short Tool wear monitoring in face milling
title_full Tool wear monitoring in face milling
title_fullStr Tool wear monitoring in face milling
title_full_unstemmed Tool wear monitoring in face milling
title_sort tool wear monitoring in face milling
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29973
work_keys_str_mv AT hosepyanyetvart toolwearmonitoringinfacemilling
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