Production Machining

SEP 2017

Production Machining - Your access to the precision machining industrial buyer.

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productionmachining.com :: 43 CNC Broaching with a Driven Broach Head :: During the production of motor shafts, the company switched from broaching keyways with the motion of the lathe turret to the use of a driven broach head. dramatically improved the cycle times and could reach the recommended surface feet per minute (SFM) that was not previously possible using only the turret movement. e driven broach head changes the rotary motion of the turret drive into a linear, reciprocating motion with a drop down on the retract stroke for tool clearance. A 4-to-1 geared down ratio for extra torque provides an immediate start and stop that the turret cannot achieve. Without the driven broach head, when only the turret is providing the motion, the programmer must allow space for the turret to accelerate to full speed before it hits the part. (CNC Broach Tools recommends 0.750 inch to 1 inch of space between the cutting edge of the insert and the part being cut.) is spacing essentially creates a longer length of stroke. Starting too close to the part forces the turret to gear up within the cut, which could cause deflection as the insert hits the part at slow speed. John Gardner of CNC Broach Tools compares the situation with chopping a tree down with an axe. "If you start too close and do not hit the tree with any force, the axe bounces off. But if you swing the axe back farther to allow you to hit the tree with speed, the cutting edge bites in," he says. When using the turret, the need for space applies after exiting the slot or spline as well, and the cutting edge of the insert must be programmed to stop 0.060 inch to 0.100 inch after the outside corners of the carbide broach insert exit the material. Without this relief space for deceleration, a lip or taper at the end of the keyway may result as the turret slows the broach insert within the material. MD Tooling's driven broach head significantly reduces the space needed to accelerate and decelerate because it can start and stop almost instantaneously. Having less space to travel means improved cycle time. is benefit is particularly evident when broaching blind keyways or splines with a limited relief area, because stopping closer to the end of the keyway in a blind key situation allows more relief space to be used by the chip. e customer's application had a keyway 3 / 16 inch and 1.9 inch long, exiting into a 1 / 8 -inch relief groove. Using the turret, the cutting edge of the insert would need to stop 0.060 inch into the relief space, potentially pressing the 1.9-inch-long chip into the opposing wall of the relief. e MD Broach head allows stopping as little as 0.010 inch past the end of the material without fear of decelerating in the material. e additional space provides plenty of room for the chip to float free. e redesign of CNC Broach Tools' tool shank produced impressive results for the client. Previously, broaching the keyway using the turret motion took two to three minutes. With the MD broach head, the cycle time was reduced to 24 seconds. Previously the client was running the CNC across all three shifts. e cycle time improvement allowed the relocation of one of the operators and provided the other two the ability to run other products, taking advantage of capacity that was not available prior to the improvements. CNC Broach Tools has released an entire line of tooling for broaching keyways and splines that fit the MD Tooling driven broach head, and the company stocks carbide inserts with two cutting edges. For more information from CNC Broach Tool LLC, call 877-248-1631 or visit cncbroachtools.com. For similar articles about cutting tools and related processes, visit PM's Cutting Tools Zone. short.productionmachining.com/cutting

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