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Sometime in the
early 1980’s, dedicated router tooling for plastics began to take
shape. Since then there have been leaps in technology from all areas
in the primary plastics market including material composition, fabrication,
machines, and machining. Each area has gone through growth spurts that
has surpassed the capabilities of the other areas, which in turn has
led the other industry sectors to improve their R&D work and leap
ahead again. While this rapid growth has created a large and viable
plastics market, it has also lead to confusion about methods and practices
when it comes to producing these in-demand plastic products. With an
ever increasing burden on the plastics fabricator to produce parts faster
and with better finishes, companies are looking for more and more technical
assistance from suppliers in solving these problems.
Onsrud Cutter has spent twenty years visiting these plastic producers
and plastic fabricators as well as the machinery manufacturers that
utilize the router tooling market in order to gather information to
help with both advanced tooling design and application support. Over
this time, a number of application problems have been observed that
are significant to a large segment of primary and secondary fabricators.
In line with this experience, OC will present 12 scenarios over the
course of the next 4 articles that illustrate real life applications
and the actual tooling solutions that were implemented to solve either
a manufacturing problem or a production problem.
SCENARIO 1
Material Cut:
ABS
Product: Thermoformed tractor shrouds and fuel tanks Router
Type: Hand held air router
Feeds & Speeds: Manual operation at 21,000 RPM
Initial Tooling: HSS Pilot bits and standard Carbide Tipped V
flute bits
Problems:
Tool breakage
Production bottleneck
Poor part finish
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The first
problem in this plant was the tooling choice. Earlier articles
have stated the need for dedicated plastic tooling to achieve
maximum feed rates and optimal finishes. Tooling that works well
in ABS probably won’t perform as well in polycarbonate.
Tooling that leaves a clear edge in cast acrylic may melt and
scar extruded acrylic. With this in mind, the single edge solid
carbide straight “O” flute was replaced with a similar
spiral “O” flute. This replacement had geometry designed
specifically for melt-prone plastics. This instant solution cleared
up the melt problem and saved on both inspection and rework time
for the fabricator.
The solution for the second problem, the wrap-up of the paper
masking, followed as a direct result of the correct tool choice.
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The solution
for the second problem, the wrap-up of the paper masking, followed
as a direct result of the correct tool choice. The plastic geometry
spiral “O” flute was designed to handle a high chip
load and thereby reduce heat build up during cutting. By doubling
the feed rate to 200ipm and reducing the spindle speed to 14,000RPM
the cutter stayed cool enough to prevent the tacky glue from warming
and adhering to the cutter body while still maintaining a good
part finish. By changing cutters to a dedicated plastic tool,
the fabricator walked away from this problem with a number of
benefits: production speed nearly doubled, inspection time was
reduced and rework time due to machining inconsistencies nearly
eliminated. The tooling was nearly identical in dimensions to
the original and therefore required no reprogramming or refixturing.
(see Figure C)
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SCENARIO 2
Material Cut:
Extruded (soft) Acrylic
Product: Various Point-of-Purchase displays
Router Type: 3-axis CNC in excellent condition
Feeds & Speeds: 100ipm at 18,000 RPM
Initial Tooling: Generic solid carbide “O” flute
Problems:
Tool breakage
Production bottleneck
Poor part finish
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This company
had “lived with” the routing department as it was
for quite some time and only recently completed a study that pointed
to that area as a root cause for some less than desirable production
bottlenecks. After visiting the plant it was apparent that the
routing group needed both a tooling and an application change.
The HSS pilot bits were being used with a guide template to cut
holes in the fuel tanks but were breaking when used for fast,
hand fed free routing operations. The continuing bit breakage
was causing short but frequent downtime when the collets and nose
guards were disassembled to replace the tooling. The carbide tipped
bits were resistant to the breakage associated with the pilot
bits, but were producing a poor finish with evident chatter. (see
Figure A)
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HSS double
edged O flutes designed specifically for air-routers were tested
on site and were able to immediately replace the carbide tipped
double edge V flutes. These O flutes are dedicated plastic tools
designed for cutting soft plastics and their open flute shape
allowed the ABS to naturally curl when cut, eliminating the chatter
of the straight faced carbide tipped tooling. Their feed was also
more controlled while still being easier to push – eliminating
some production personnel complaints. When the HSS double edge
“O” flutes were tested against the pilot bits their
feed speed
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and pressure
were an improvement but they lacked a method of guiding on the
templates used for production of the fuel cells. In order to solve
this problem in previous applications, the air-router O flute
design had been changed to give an extended overall length. This
allowed the tool to seat normally in the collet, protrude through
the nose bearing of the router (giving important extra stability)
and through an additional guide bushing. By utilizing this guide
bushing, the routing department made new templates for the fuel
cells and virtually eliminated breakage. (see Figure B)
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SCENARIO 3
Material Cut:
½” to 1” Thick corrugated paper core with plastic laminate
(both sides)
Product: Custom packaging
Router Type: 5-axis CNC
Feeds & Speeds: variety tested, initial production run
Initial Tooling: variety tested, initial production run
Problems:
Unable to cleanly cut the material
Lifting of material from vacuum fixturing
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More and
more router owners in the plastic industry have questions about
corrugated or honeycomb panels that have plastic, composite, or
aluminum laminated skins. The high strength-to-weight ratio of
these structures has led to their use in aerospace and marine
applications. Their high cost and technical machining requirements,
however, had previously kept them from widespread market acceptance.
With falling prices and advanced tooling rising to the challenge,
markets that had previously ignored composite sandwich panels
are starting to use them in everyday applications such as custom
packaging.
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This particular
fabricator had tried both high speed steel and solid carbide straight
and spiral tooling in this application. The HSS tooling wore down
quickly due to the abrasive paper core and the solid carbide straight
tooling could not produce an optimal edge on both the top and
bottom surface. The solid carbide downcut spirals worked the best
– solving the fabricators hold down problem, but still leaving
a frayed bottom panel.
The final tooling solution was a special compression router bit
that was designed for the wood composites market and has been
a staple in the honeycomb and laminated composites industry for
many years. The mortise compression spiral is a hybrid cutter
that uses a .200” long upcut spiral near the tip of the
tool and an extended downcut spiral that overlaps the upcut by
about .060” and continues up the cutting edge. While it
is a non-traditional plastic tool, the combined cutting action
of the opposing spirals in conjunction with the location of the
overlap allowed this tool to shear the laminated materials toward
the center of the corrugated materials and produce an excellent
edge finish on both the top and bottom of the part. The short
upcut allowed the router to run without tool changes because the
same tool could cut materials ranging in thickness from ¼”
to 1-½”. (see Figure D)
The best edge finish of both the paper core and the plastic laminate
was obtained at 450ipm and 18,000 RPM, but at these feed rates
the material normally lifted from the fixture with other types
of tooling. Because of the long downcut length of the mortise
compression spiral, extra downward holding pressure was generated
from the router bit itself and the material stayed securely fixtured.
The right tool for the job is a critical component of each fabrication
or trimming process. As materials change and multiply, tooling
must keep pace. New router bits for plastic are designed every
month and their proper use can help ensure optimum productivity.
Look for more specific applications in the months ahead.
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