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-   -   General term for operations inside the material? (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/24318-general-term-operations-inside-material.html)

Tom Walz July 28th 04 04:10 PM

General term for operations inside the material?
 
Is there a general term for tool operations where the cutting is done
inside the material such a sawing, drilling, honing cylinder walls,
etc?

Thank you
Tom Walz

Tim Williams July 28th 04 10:23 PM

General term for operations inside the material?
 
You mean like boring, hole saw, etc.? You're being a bit ambiguous.

Tim

--
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"Tom Walz" wrote in message
om...
Is there a general term for tool operations where the cutting is done
inside the material such a sawing, drilling, honing cylinder walls,
etc?

Thank you
Tom Walz




Lennie the Lurker July 29th 04 03:35 AM

General term for operations inside the material?
 
(Tom Walz) wrote in message . com...
Is there a general term for tool operations where the cutting is done
inside the material such a sawing, drilling, honing cylinder walls,
etc?


Maybe, Internal?

jim rozen July 29th 04 03:25 PM

General term for operations inside the material?
 
In article , Lennie the Lurker
says...

(Tom Walz) wrote in message
.com...
Is there a general term for tool operations where the cutting is done
inside the material such a sawing, drilling, honing cylinder walls,
etc?


Maybe, Internal?


I've seen "ID work" used on occasion.

Jim

==================================================
please reply to:
JRR(zero) at yktvmv (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com
==================================================


Tom Walz July 29th 04 04:24 PM

General term for operations inside the material?
 
Sorry for the ambiguity

Brief background
Coated carbide, Cermets and ceramics are superior to uncoated carbide
in many applications however they are hard to braze. This means they
can be used very successfully in "external" operations where there is
room for mechanical clamping but cannot be used in "internal"
operations where there is no room for mechanical clamping. One of
our customers makes saw blades than have kerfs thinner than dimes, for
example.

Anyway we developed technology to successfully braze cermets and some
ceramics the same way you braze carbide. This means you can use them
on saw blades, hones, drill bits, etc.

I have a report on research that Forintek (www.forintek.ca) did for us
and I am writing press releases about it. My background is material
science and not machining unfortunately so my knowledge of processes
and the language is largely theoretical. I worked my way through
college on plant floors and I know how much the college guys don't
know about how things get made so I was looking for help with the
right term.

What I was looking for was a term to describe machining operations
where a brazed part is required because there is no room to hold the
tip mechanically.

Tom Walz
www.carbideprocessors.com

Robert Scibienski July 29th 04 05:54 PM

General term for operations inside the material?
 
Why not come at it from the other side and write "operations requiring
permanently fixed cutting edges" or something similar?
Bob S.




On 29 Jul 2004 08:24:11 -0700, (Tom Walz) wrote:

Sorry for the ambiguity

Brief background
Coated carbide, Cermets and ceramics are superior to uncoated carbide
in many applications however they are hard to braze. This means they
can be used very successfully in "external" operations where there is
room for mechanical clamping but cannot be used in "internal"
operations where there is no room for mechanical clamping. One of
our customers makes saw blades than have kerfs thinner than dimes, for
example.

Anyway we developed technology to successfully braze cermets and some
ceramics the same way you braze carbide. This means you can use them
on saw blades, hones, drill bits, etc.

I have a report on research that Forintek (
www.forintek.ca) did for us
and I am writing press releases about it. My background is material
science and not machining unfortunately so my knowledge of processes
and the language is largely theoretical. I worked my way through
college on plant floors and I know how much the college guys don't
know about how things get made so I was looking for help with the
right term.

What I was looking for was a term to describe machining operations
where a brazed part is required because there is no room to hold the
tip mechanically.

Tom Walz
www.carbideprocessors.com



michael July 30th 04 08:00 PM

General term for operations inside the material?
 
Tom Walz wrote:

Sorry for the ambiguity

Brief background
Coated carbide, Cermets and ceramics are superior to uncoated carbide
in many applications however they are hard to braze. This means they
can be used very successfully in "external" operations where there is
room for mechanical clamping but cannot be used in "internal"
operations where there is no room for mechanical clamping. One of
our customers makes saw blades than have kerfs thinner than dimes, for
example.

Anyway we developed technology to successfully braze cermets and some
ceramics the same way you braze carbide. This means you can use them
on saw blades, hones, drill bits, etc.

I have a report on research that Forintek (www.forintek.ca) did for us
and I am writing press releases about it. My background is material
science and not machining unfortunately so my knowledge of processes
and the language is largely theoretical. I worked my way through
college on plant floors and I know how much the college guys don't
know about how things get made so I was looking for help with the
right term.

What I was looking for was a term to describe machining operations
where a brazed part is required because there is no room to hold the
tip mechanically.

Tom Walz
www.carbideprocessors.com



Tom,

Is my impression correct that your company is the only one currently
brazing cermet/ceramic tooling? I'm thinking the optimum application
because of the lack of mechanical clamping is in the small/micro type
tooling, yes? If true, I think initially stating this type tooling is
available, then expanding with details regarding different internal
operations like pocketing, grooving, and boring would make sense.

Whatever you come up with, I would be interested in getting info when
available, as I am in business cutting metal, etc.

michael

dan July 30th 04 11:16 PM

General term for operations inside the material?
 
What's that Lassie? You say that Tom Walz fell down the old
rec.crafts.metalworking mine and will die if we don't mount a rescue
by 28 Jul 2004 08:10:50 -0700:

Is there a general term for tool operations where the cutting is done
inside the material such a sawing, drilling, honing cylinder walls,
etc?


Low clearance?
--

Dan


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