Overview
ABSTRACT
Machining chatter correspond to an oscillating movement between the cutting tool and the workpiece, generating degradations of the surface finish.This article shows the multifaceted aspect of the problem, because these vibrations pose problems due to noises, degraded surface conditions, tool breaks or premature machine wear. The associated measuring methods are then detailed and analytical or numerical models integrating the machine, tool, workpiece and cutting conditions are presented. Finally, the various usable solutions are methodically reviewed.
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Read the articleAUTHOR
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Lionel ARNAUD: Teacher-researcher - LGP (Production Engineering Laboratory) - UTTOP (University of technology Tarbes Occitanie Pyrénées), France
INTRODUCTION
In 1907, in his seminal work on the art of metal cutting, Frederick Winslow Taylor said: "Chatter is the most obscure and delicate of all problems facing the machinist". In 2018, studies on the subject reported that vibration remains a major issue for machining, and that many manufacturers still identify it as one of the most limiting factors in the process.
The costs associated with this problem are rarely quantified, and the machinist naturally anticipates them, especially when machining particularly flexible parts or tools.
The car manufacturer Renault was able to put a figure of precisely three million per year on this cost for cylinder blocks machined in series. In this case, the extra cost was linked to premature tool wear, and in 2002, for example, represented exactly €0.35 per part, or €120,000 per year.
Estimates show that the majority of extra costs are linked to lost productivity and time lost for set-ups or rework, followed by tool and machine wear, and finally scrap parts.
The solutions found by machinists are often the result of trial and error and the fruit of experience: modify the speed, change the tool, increase the number of passes, clamp the part differently, fit rubber elements, etc. The result is a significant reduction in productivity.
The theory of "stability lobes", which appeared in the 1950s, seemed to provide a global solution, but it's clear that it's not so easy to apply and doesn't solve the majority of problems.
So, as Taylor already said, there is still a crying lack of robust predictive methods and a lack of overall logic to tackle the problem in concrete terms.
The first objective of this article is to present the many facets of the problem, which is most often characterized by characteristic vibration noises and degraded surface finish, but also by tool breakage or premature spindle wear. It is important to be able to pinpoint these events and their links with vibratory phenomena, in order to get to the root of the problem. It also shows how these vibrations can be measured in practice, and how they can provide early warning indicators to anticipate problems.
The second objective is to present models of the phenomenon of chatter, which is a particular category of machining vibration (the one most often involved in the problems mentioned), in order to highlight the main influencing parameters. Machining is an operation that involves a large number of parameters, but it is possible to group them together, prioritize them and identify the parameters to be systematically monitored.
The third aim of this article is to show that there are a number of tried-and-tested...
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KEYWORDS
vibration | chatter | surface finish | stability lobes | variable pitch tool | damped tool | machining
This article is included in
Noise and vibration
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Machining vibrations
Bibliography
Digital media
Videos
Vibrations during thin-wall machining :
Machining vibrations during turning (continuous cutting) :
Vibrations during HSM machining...
Websites
Machining vibrations :
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vibrations_d%27usinage
Machining thin walls :
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usinage_de_paroi_mince
Vibraction (author's...
Software tools
Harmonizer :
CutPro and MachPro :
Production Module :
...Events
Industrie trade fairs (Paris or Lyon, alternately): new machining products are presented ( http://www.industrie-expo.com )
Conference proceedings
INTERCUT/MUGV/Manufacturing'21
Conferences that bring together industrialists and academics in a pragmatic way.
Standards and norms
- Cutting tool operating range – Tool-material pairing; The "pairing" method – tool – material" is presented, enabling you to methodically identify the most productive machining conditions for machining a given material with a given tool. The key idea is to measure the cutting forces at different speeds and engagements, and thus identify different operating regimes. - NF E66-520 - 1997, 1999, 2000
- Mechanical vibration...
Regulations
European Directive 89/392 (1989) and associated French decrees.
These regulations define acceptable noise limits and the actions to be taken to protect operators.
Patents
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Tools with variable pitch, variable helix or special shapes to reduce vibration:
WO 2009124851, Sandvik, 2009, End mill with varying helix angles.
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Tool holders with active damping :
EP1677932B1, TEENESS, 2008, Arrangement for damping of vibrations in a tool holder.
There...
Research laboratories (very short list)
Manufacturing Automation Laboratory, University of British Columbia, Vancouvert, Canada
IDEKO, IK4 Research Alliance, Elgoibar, Spain
Arts et Métiers ParisTech, Paris
LaBoMaP, Ensam, Cluny
École Centrale, Nantes
ENIT, Tarbes
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