The development of a testing machine for machinability tests

It is a well established fact that all materials have a difference in chemical composition and show different physical properties. Long experience with the machining of materials had shown this investigator that in many respects the machining of each material differed slightly from the machining of...

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Main Author: Wykes, Stanley A.
Other Authors: Industrial Engineering
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53460
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-534602020-12-19T05:32:07Z The development of a testing machine for machinability tests Wykes, Stanley A. Industrial Engineering LD5655.V855 1946.W943 Metals -- Machinability -- Research It is a well established fact that all materials have a difference in chemical composition and show different physical properties. Long experience with the machining of materials had shown this investigator that in many respects the machining of each material differed slightly from the machining of any other material. This led to the idea that perhaps the one factor which had been overlooked by other investigators in the field of machinability was the factor of time. The question was, “Could a machine be built which was capable of measuring the differences in materials in terms of the variation in the times required to remove metal under a given set of conditions?” The first step in the program to answer this question was to build a machine which would be rugged enough to make heavy cuts possible, and still be sensitive enough to measure what might turn out to be very small variations in time. This machine has now been built. While it still has a long way to go to become perfected the results are encouraging enough to create the desire to continue with the work along this line. The second step in the program was to design tests which would not only serve to test the functioning of the machine, but would serve to indicate along what lines the future work should follow. The one hundred and twenty-five tests made have proved two facts quite conclusively. The first fact is that the idea on which the testing machine was designed is fundamentally sound. Time variations can be used to measure machining characteristics of different materials. The second fact proved by these tests is that the machine is not only capable of measuring the differences existing between various materials, but that it can be used to test such factors as the proper tool angles to use in machining a given material, the force required to remove a given volume in a given time, and the best speeds to use to give the smallest time per unit volume. It was evident during these tests that several minor changes could be made to improve the performance to the point where it would be even more capable of showing the time variations which occur. These changes have been incorporated in the following section of the thesis. Master of Science 2015-06-23T19:12:10Z 2015-06-23T19:12:10Z 1946 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53460 en_US OCLC# 24514946 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 76 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1946.W943
Metals -- Machinability -- Research
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1946.W943
Metals -- Machinability -- Research
Wykes, Stanley A.
The development of a testing machine for machinability tests
description It is a well established fact that all materials have a difference in chemical composition and show different physical properties. Long experience with the machining of materials had shown this investigator that in many respects the machining of each material differed slightly from the machining of any other material. This led to the idea that perhaps the one factor which had been overlooked by other investigators in the field of machinability was the factor of time. The question was, “Could a machine be built which was capable of measuring the differences in materials in terms of the variation in the times required to remove metal under a given set of conditions?” The first step in the program to answer this question was to build a machine which would be rugged enough to make heavy cuts possible, and still be sensitive enough to measure what might turn out to be very small variations in time. This machine has now been built. While it still has a long way to go to become perfected the results are encouraging enough to create the desire to continue with the work along this line. The second step in the program was to design tests which would not only serve to test the functioning of the machine, but would serve to indicate along what lines the future work should follow. The one hundred and twenty-five tests made have proved two facts quite conclusively. The first fact is that the idea on which the testing machine was designed is fundamentally sound. Time variations can be used to measure machining characteristics of different materials. The second fact proved by these tests is that the machine is not only capable of measuring the differences existing between various materials, but that it can be used to test such factors as the proper tool angles to use in machining a given material, the force required to remove a given volume in a given time, and the best speeds to use to give the smallest time per unit volume. It was evident during these tests that several minor changes could be made to improve the performance to the point where it would be even more capable of showing the time variations which occur. These changes have been incorporated in the following section of the thesis. === Master of Science
author2 Industrial Engineering
author_facet Industrial Engineering
Wykes, Stanley A.
author Wykes, Stanley A.
author_sort Wykes, Stanley A.
title The development of a testing machine for machinability tests
title_short The development of a testing machine for machinability tests
title_full The development of a testing machine for machinability tests
title_fullStr The development of a testing machine for machinability tests
title_full_unstemmed The development of a testing machine for machinability tests
title_sort development of a testing machine for machinability tests
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53460
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