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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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"Bert Hickman" wrote in message
... However, much of the above is moot since most EDM'ing is done under a dielectric fluid using actual mechanical contact and high pulse currents to "blast" away the small areas that make contact as the working tool/wire is slowly advanced into the work piece. NO physical contact, Bert. Ever. Physical contact and a short circuit, or even an arc that lasts more than a few milliseconds, usually will destroy the workpiece and/or the electrode. As I said, servomechanisms are employed to keep the gap somewhere in the range of 0.0002 in. - 0.005 in., more or less, depending upon the other operating conditions. Fine finishes are obtained at gaps of less than a thousandth of an inch. EDM as we know it today is indeed run in a liquid dielectric, but the precursors to EDMs, called "tap busters," used air. These machines are still made. I don't know who's in the business today but two of them that were around at least through the '80s were Electro-Arc and Camman. Maybe there is some info about them on the web that would tell you their operating voltages. In my shop we had a crude air-dielectric tap buster sold by Do-All. It had a 240V transformer, but it's not a good example because it had no automatic servo. It often *did* achieve contact, but it didn't matter, because we weren't trying to machine accurately, as one does with an EDM machine today. I just looked at the parameters published for some currently-marketed ram-type EDMs, and I see that open-circuit voltages fall into the range of 50V - 300V, which is about where they have been since the beginning. These machines use a light mineral oil for dielectric. Also, wirecut EDMs, which use deionized water for dielectric, seem to run around 90V open-circuit. Ed Huntress |
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