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Cbn Inserts

June 4th, 2010 admin No comments

Cbn Inserts

BECKER 2 Edge Full Tip CBN Insert VBMW 332T VBMW 160408T Grade 1MC S4
BECKER 2 Edge Full Tip CBN Insert VBMW 332T VBMW 160408T Grade 1MC S4
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CeramTec 2 Edge TiAlN CBN Insert VBMW 332 E A2 VBMW 160408 E A2 Grade WBN750
CeramTec 2 Edge TiAlN CBN Insert VBMW 332 E A2 VBMW 160408 E A2 Grade WBN750
Paypal   US $500.00
Seco 06585 CCGW120408E L1 B CBN200 Carbide Inserts
Seco 06585 CCGW120408E L1 B CBN200 Carbide Inserts
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Ceram Tec 2 Edge CBN Insert VBMW 332 E A2 VBMW 160408 E A2 Grade WBN750
Ceram Tec 2 Edge CBN Insert VBMW 332 E A2 VBMW 160408 E A2 Grade WBN750
Paypal   US $400.00
Ceram Tec 2 Edge CBN Insert DCMW 3252 DCMW 11T308 T A2 Grade WBN500
Ceram Tec 2 Edge CBN Insert DCMW 3252 DCMW 11T308 T A2 Grade WBN500
Paypal   US $300.00
CNMA 433 MITSUBISHI CBN INSERTS 50 PCS ALL NEW
CNMA 433 MITSUBISHI CBN INSERTS 50 PCS ALL NEW
Paypal   US $250.00
10 PCS FULL ROUND TOP USA CBN CARBIDE INSERTS RNG 43 FOR HARD TURNING OF STEEL
10 PCS FULL ROUND TOP USA CBN CARBIDE INSERTS RNG 43 FOR HARD TURNING OF STEEL
Paypal   US $229.00
25 SUMITOMO ELECTRIC CNMA432 CBN TIPPED CARBIDE INSERTSNEW
25 SUMITOMO ELECTRIC CNMA432 CBN TIPPED CARBIDE INSERTSNEW
Paypal   US $202.50
KENNAMETAL High CBN Turning Insert RNM42T0820 KD200 TiN Qty 1 Z99]
KENNAMETAL High CBN Turning Insert RNM42T0820 KD200 TiN Qty 1 Z99]
Paypal   US $150.00
10 PCS SUMIBORON CBN INSERTS VBMW 2152 110208 BNC80 GOLD 2 TIP
10 PCS SUMIBORON CBN INSERTS VBMW 2152 110208 BNC80 GOLD 2 TIP
Paypal   US $119.00
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS DCMT 3252 GRADE BN600
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS DCMT 3252 GRADE BN600
Paypal   US $109.00
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS DCMA 3252 09T308 BN300 2 TIP
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS DCMA 3252 09T308 BN300 2 TIP
Paypal   US $109.00
Circle TPCB 221 CBN6 TPCB110204 CBN6 015R 67053 Diamond Tipped Carbide Insert
Circle TPCB 221 CBN6 TPCB110204 CBN6 015R 67053 Diamond Tipped Carbide Insert
Paypal   US $108.62
VPGN332 KD100 KENNAMETAL CBN INSERT
VPGN332 KD100 KENNAMETAL CBN INSERT
Paypal   US $100.00
CNMA 433 CBN250 DIAMOND TIPPED CARBIDE INSERTS HE186
CNMA 433 CBN250 DIAMOND TIPPED CARBIDE INSERTS HE186
Paypal   US $99.99
14 PC SUMITOMO CBN INSERT ASSORTMENT TNGA 331 332
14 PC SUMITOMO CBN INSERT ASSORTMENT TNGA 331 332
Paypal   US $99.00
10 SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS DNGA 432 BN600 JUMBO TIP
10 SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS DNGA 432 BN600 JUMBO TIP
Paypal   US $99.00
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN TIP INSERTS TPG 321 GRADE BN600 CARBIDE
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN TIP INSERTS TPG 321 GRADE BN600 CARBIDE
Paypal   US $99.00
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS DNGA 433 GRADE BNX20
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS DNGA 433 GRADE BNX20
Paypal   US $99.00
15 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS TNGA 331 BN250 JUMBO TIP
15 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS TNGA 331 BN250 JUMBO TIP
Paypal   US $99.00
10 SUMITOMO CBN TIP INSERTS TPG 321 GRADE BNX20 CARBIDE
10 SUMITOMO CBN TIP INSERTS TPG 321 GRADE BNX20 CARBIDE
Paypal   US $99.00
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS DCMA 3251 GRADE BN600
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS DCMA 3251 GRADE BN600
Paypal   US $99.00
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS TNGA 431 BNX20 JUMBO TIP
10 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS TNGA 431 BNX20 JUMBO TIP
Paypal   US $99.00
20 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS TNGA 333 BN250 JUMBO TIP
20 PCS SUMITOMO CBN INSERTS TNGA 333 BN250 JUMBO TIP
Paypal   US $99.00
Tungaloy 2QP CNGA120412 L BX330 T CBN Inserts R$90
Tungaloy 2QP CNGA120412 L BX330 T CBN Inserts R$90
Paypal   US $89.99
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Cbn Inserts

Analysis of Milling on a Grinding Machine

When the word "multitasking" is applied to machine tools, the term generally refers to a machine that is capable of both turning and milling. That definition is fine as far as it goes. However, turning and milling are two fairly similar operations. They both use a cutting edge to make a chip, and they both occur at roughly the same stage in a production process. If the argument for multitasking has to do with reducing both the delay and the potential for error that come from transporting parts between different machines, then that argument gains strength if the multitasking machine can combine operations that are even further removed from one another in the production process.

For example, what about combining milling and grinding?

Grinding, of course, is typically thought of as a finishing operation. Milling is more about removing a stock envelope. In many plants, these two operations are performed in different locations. In an even larger number of plants, they are performed by different employees who have different skills. Combining the two operations would not seem to be an obvious choice.

However, certain profile grinding machines have developed in the direction of this type of multitasking, even when combining operations was not necessarily the goal. The MFP-TC grinding machine pictured, from Magerle (represented in the United States by United Grinding Technologies, Miamisburg, Ohio), provides an example. To support an increasing role for creep-feed grinding (a higher-metal-removal rate process than grinding just for finish), this machine features a powerful spindle and stiff hydrostatic ways. Further, because wheel types such as conventional abrasive, plated CBN and vitrified CBN all excel in different applications, the machine has been equipped with the capability to store different wheels and automatically switch between them.

This latter feature relies on proven technology. Specifically, it relies on a toolchange arm like that of a machining center, along with toolholders (or wheelholders in this case) that use the HSK interface of a machining center's toolholders. Taken together, this machine's tool changing, spindle power and rigidity produce the equivalent of a highly capable machining center. Precise heavy milling can be performed on this machine, and milling and drilling tools can be stored in the tool magazine alongside the grinding wheels.

Minimal Milling

Chris Stine is a vice president of United Grinding Technologies. He says performing chip-making operations such as milling and drilling on a grinding machine is best suited to certain types of parts. It also requires a particular mindset about production.

For a part to benefit from milling or drilling on a grinder, the cycle should consist of mostly grinding. The MFP-TC machine cited above remains a grinder first and foremost, offering precision beyond what might be associated with even a higher-end machining center, he says. As a result, the machine can't compete economically against a machining center if traditional metalcutting makes up most of the work.

However, many ground parts do feature a small but critical amount of this metalcutting. Even on a grinding machine equipped with multiple wheels and capable of high metal removal rates, there are plenty of features that simply cannot be ground. Holes, pockets and slots that don't run completely through the workpiece are examples. When the part has one or more features such as these, performing these cuts on the grinder can save considerable cost by eliminating the need to set up on multiple machines. This is particularly true for parts such as airfoils, in which the location of machined features may be defined with respect to ground surfaces that have complex geometries.

Another argument for consolidating operations relates to the part's size. Large parts magnify the savings in floor space that might result from combining grinding and machining center operations into one machine. Labor savings might also be more significant. The bigger the part, the better it is to set it up in just one place.

For particularly large parts,such as jaw crusher,grinding mill,stone crusher,milling machine,rock crusher,crusher etc. Mr. Stine says that the range of potential operations expands to include turning. A rotary table that can turn at 70 rpm can deliver 1,500 sfm of cutting speed to a turning tool that cuts at a diameter of 7 feet. This is exactly the solution that GE Gas Turbines (Greenville, South Carolina) adopted for machining large turbine wheels. Parts that used to be machined on a grinder, a vertical lathe and a boring mill now receive all of this machining on one Magerle machine tool. The change saves about 6 hours of setup time and 2 days of queue time, according to engineers at the plant. Overall, there has been a 30 percent cycle time reduction.

Process Perspective

These savings overcome the fact that the multitasking grinder is unlikely to be cost-efficient when it comes to milling or turning as isolated operations. Accepting this seeming inefficiency within the machining cycle, for the sake of a more efficient process overall, is part of the recipe for implementing these machines effectively.

Different manufacturing organizations view their costs differently, and the need for this process-wide outlook is part of why identifying the right applications for these machines is not necessarily cut and dried.

A traditional manufacturing mindset looks at a part's features and tolerances to see the particular machine tools best suited to produce all of that geometry. This part-centered perspective may optimize machining time and machining cost, but it may do so at the expense of less easily quantifiable costs related to handling the part.

Mr. Stine says a different mindset focuses on a particular unit cost. The part has to be produced to meet a certain price, after all of the costs both on and off the machine tool have been factored in. In this view, the efficiency with which each feature is machined is less significant as long as the overall process is as efficient as it can be. This latter view, he says, is the one that is more likely to realize the value of consolidating the work of various diverse machine tools into one.

Turning On A Grinding Machine

"Hard turning" usually refers to the turning of workpieces that have Rockwell C hardness values in the range of 50 or 60. It typically involves a rigid lathe and a hard cutting tool material such as PCBN. The S242 machine from Studer (represented by United Grinding Technologies) is the latest machine from this company able to perform OD grinding and hard turning within a single cycle.

John Richard, senior sales manager for Studer, explains why the two processes are complementary. If the tolerance is tight enough, he says, then turning will not do. A turning insert's dimensions slowly change while the insert cuts, affecting machining accuracy and finish. A grinding wheel is continually reconditioned while it machines, but this is not the case with a turning insert.

On the other hand, the turning insert can deliver a performance advantage that a grinding wheel can't. If heat treating introduces variations in the geometry of a rotating part, then a grinding wheel is going to begin by finding the high spot of the workpiece every time. The grinding cycle will vary. By contrast, a turning insert can withstand a slightly varying depth of cut for the sake of beginning the machining at the same diameter every time, to make the machining time consistent from piece to piece.

About the Author

David ZHENG is the CEO of http://www.grinding-mill.com . A company specialized in selling all kinds of engineering machines such as jaw crusher,grinding mill,stone crusher,milling machine,rock crusher,crusher etc.