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Five-Axis Machining Is a Key Requirement for High-Precision Molds Design and fabrication capabilities of advanced tool-cutting processes give toolmakers an edge in developing new business. By Patrick A. Toensmeier The aerospace and defense industries have a history of developing products that cross over into mainstream use. One notable example is the global positioning system, the ubiquitous directional aid. Both industries may be about to change the dynamic of moldmaking with another crossover technology—five-axis machining, a highly specialized capability that offers a number of benefits in mold design and fabrication.
“Quite a range of industries would benefit from five-axis machining due to the complexity of their shapes,” says Vynce Paradise, Director of NC CAM Marketing for software supplier UGS (Plano, TX). A versatile cutting capability is what makes five-axis machining so important in aerospace and defense work, and why it is almost mandatory for moldmakers. A five-axis machine can cut complicated shapes for parts like engine-turbine blades, which require toolpaths that follow undercuts and other nonlinear shapes. Even simple geometries like electronic boxes that need holes machined into them for wiring and other connections, can be finished quickly and with less labor—and sometimes better quality—by a cutter programmed to work on five sides without resetting the fixture. Since these capabilities can be applied to molds with undercuts and other complex shapes, the process has the potential to improve a moldmaker’s design and fabrication work while reducing machining time and the labor it requires. Five-Axis Machining Five-axis machining adds rotary motion in an A and a B axis to the linear motions of the X, Y and Z axes. The additional axes broaden the toolpaths of a cutter and the depth it goes without increasing tool length. The A axis usually pivots and the B axis is generally a swinging motion. The five axes combined cover virtually all cutting paths and angles and can be used to create dozens of machining configurations. An important advantage of five-axis machining is the ability to cut deep features with a short cutting tool. A short tool is less prone to vibrations that could damage or shatter it during cutting, notes Hari Sridharan, Vice President of Engineering and Business Development at Cimatron Ltd. (Novi, MI). Short-tool cutting is achieved by using the A axis to tilt the cutter away from a wall so it can be guided deep into a cavity without the shank colliding with the vertical surface. Short tools also maintain fast feedrates, a tradeoff with long cutting tools. Edwin Gasparraj, a Product Manager at UGS, says that tool deflection rises with cutter length and feedrates decline. “Anytime you increase tool length by 20 percent, deflection goes up by 50 percent and feedrates drop by 30 percent.” He says that a five-axis capability would permit a moldmaker to cut a 60-mm. cavity with a 30-mm. tool, a more stable and thus more efficient operation than with a longer version. Another example of the benefit an A axis provides, Gasparraj says, is in machining shallow surfaces with a ball-and-mill. Many moldmakers use a fixed-axis ball-and-mill for this operation. But though the center point of the tool is in contact with the surface, it usually doesn’t produce a good finish because it doesn’t cut as effectively as the outer edges. Running the ball-and-mill on a tilted axis would move the center of the tool away from the surface, yielding a better cut and finish, he claims. Trends
Offshore Outsourcing Expertise in five-axis machining could be an important route to more business and closer relationships with customers. One corollary benefit for aerospace and defense, or any other major industry, experts say, is the ability a five-axis machine gives moldmakers to do more high-value work for prime contractors, many of which are under corporate mandates to reduce suppliers. If a company puts out five requests for quotes and the specs for three are too complex for a moldmaker, Levine, for one, says it’s likely that a program manager will look for a shop that can do all five parts rather than parcel out work to two or more. And in the case of defense work, that mold shop doesn’t have to be in the U.S. “We can have subcontractors based offshore,” says Ben Hirschenfang, Deputy Program Director for JASSM (Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile) at Lockheed Martin, one of largest military and aviation contractors in the world. “There are no requirements to do all our business in the U.S.” Levine notes that the average cost of a five-axis machine, including the skilled operator who runs it, is about 30 to 50 percent more than for a three-axis unit. “But that machine has a premium in the market and will more than pay back the investment by giving the shop higher margins,” he adds. Investments in Five-Axis Machining and Software Yield Big Payback Accu-Tec Enterprises Ltd. (Coweta, OK) machines aerospace parts. The company’s output ranges from components fabricated from new designs to parts that are so old CAD models need to be developed from blueprints. Though Accu-Tec doesn’t make molds, its experience with five-axis machining is representative of the advances in productivity and profitability that moldmakers can achieve with the capability. Accu-Tec had relied on three-axis machining centers. When five-axis capability was needed, parts were transferred to different fixtures to achieve A and Z axes of motion. As aerospace components became more complex and utilized irregular shapes that required high-quality finishes, the decision was made to add a five-axis MU400 horizontal machining center from Okuma (Charlotte, NC). After evaluating different CAD/CAM software, Accu-Tec settled on PowerMILL from Delcam.
Steeber says projections were that the company would reduce cycle times by up to 66 percent with five-axis machining, and decrease deburring operations 75 percent due to better finishes. He notes that it took as long as four months to produce tooling for five-axis components prior to acquiring the Delcam software and Okuma machining center. The same tooling can now be produced in three weeks with less fixturing. The PowerMILL software has many features that optimize five-axis machining. These include: three-axis swarf machining to finish vertical walls, as well as flat walls with a draft angle the same as the cutter’s angle of taper; programming that permits effective plunge milling without damage to spindle and cutter; adding tool-path points to improve finishing and reduce cutter wear; and error checks during simulation that permit programming changes prior to machining. Accu-Tec’s experience with five-axis machining has worked so well that the company plans to add a second unit, a move Steeber says will further improve cycle time and part quality. Engineering and Advanced Mold Design Capabilities When it comes to aerospace and defense work, high-value engineering and advanced mold design capabilities are givens for any company that wants in. And at present, both industries offer a lot of potential for business. Civilian aerospace suppliers are experiencing a cyclical upturn from air-traffic growth of 5 percent/yr., much of it driven by demand for planes from developing nations in Asia and elsewhere. The upturn is expected to continue for the foreseeable future. Defense spending has grown to more than $400 billion in the U.S., though programs are always at risk of being trimmed or cut. Nevertheless, while part volumes in both industries, especially defense, pale in comparison to consumer markets like packaging and automotive, programs tend to run for years and can provide steady sales and revenue. “A high-production missile will require several hundred parts a month,” according to Hirschenfang, “but a typical program lasts eight to 10 years.” Like big consumer markets, aerospace and defense are price-sensitive. Moldmakers who know how to remove cost from their processes, though, can count on decent margins. Materials The inherent weight reduction and part-consolidation features of molded thermoplastics, thermosets and of composites make them ideal for use in many components, including load-bearing assemblies. Defense contractors and, increasingly, civilian aircraft builders are breaking ground in the use of advanced composites for structural applications. Examples include fighter planes like Lockheed Martin’s F-22 Raptor, which has a carbon fiber-reinforced epoxy body; Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner, a passenger jet with body and wings made of advanced composites; and the U.S. Navy’s DDG 1000 Class destroyers, being built by Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics, that feature a composite deckhouse to reduce weight, minimize radar signature and accommodate the ship’s electronics-rich network.
The tight tolerances and repeatability of molded parts, combined with the experience most mold shops have in meeting international quality standards, fit well with the demands of work in these areas. Good molds yield repeatable parts, says Hirschenfang, and consistent quality is critical to the performance of the products Lockheed Martin and other prime contractors supply. Five-Axis Software
CimatronE NC is a program developed for maximum design and machining flexibility. Sridharan says that unlike some five-axis software that is for specific applications like turbine blades or inlets, Cimatron’s program can be used to design and machine virtually any type of product. Features include a full set of surface creation and editing tools, collision-avoidance functions that generate smooth tool motions and advanced simulation modules. One of the simulation features, “knowledge of remaining stock,” automatically keeps tabs on how much metal has been cut and how much remains to be machined. Sridharan says this promotes process efficiency and reduces machining time. Open Mind Technologies’ main product for five-axis machining is hyperMILL, which Levine describes as a highly modular software package with as many as 40 machining strategies. The latest version is designed to permit automated operations of different functions for ease of operation and repeatability. The software can standardize recurring and similar geometries to automatically program repeat steps. Collision-avoidance algorithms are said to provide balanced machine movement and assure smooth toolpaths. Corners of cavities with sharp edges can reportedly be machined with a high degree of precision.
Before machining takes place, molds and products need to be designed and evaluated. SolidWorks Corp. (Concord, MA) offers programs that optimize the design process for critical applications like aerospace and defense, and can link with five-axis machining systems. Suchit Jain, Vice President of Analysis Products, says features of the software include MoldflowXpress from Moldflow Corp. (Framingham, MA), which creates a 3-D model of an injection molded part and assesses its moldability based on various engineering and process criteria. SolidWorks’ eDrawings collaboration program permits e-mailing of 2-D drawings and 3-D models to customers for input and modification. Engineers can tap into COSMOSWorks Designer from Cosmos (Los Angeles, CA) to identify potential part weaknesses that could lead to product failure, and use COSMOSExpress to determine optimum pressures and injection points across a mold for process uniformity. In a related area, Pinion Software Inc.(Austin, TX) is touting Pinion Desktop Packager as a secure format for sending, receiving and reviewing confidential part-design files. Since moldmakers will almost always be part of a product-development chain of Second Tier subcontractors when working in aerospace and defense, the ability to securely review design plans is critical, especially since a shop could be exchanging plans with another contractor across the country or halfway around the world.
Five-Axis Machining Equipment
Mikron U.S. (Lincolnshire, IL) offers the HPM 1850U. Designed for workpieces weighing up to 4 tons, the machining center is said to provide accurate roughing and finishing, stable operation and user-friendly access and controls. Spindle speeds of 15,000 or 24,000 rpm are available, and the magazine holds 200 tools. Summary Aerospace and defense work can be an attractive, reliable and profitable source of business for moldmakers. Like all high-tech industries that place a premium on innovations in design and engineering, they require a willingness from suppliers to acquire the tools necessary to maintain leading-edge capabilities. Five-axis CAD/CAM software and machining centers give moldmakers a clear advantage in these markets, and will doubtless shape their competitiveness and value to end-users in other areas. As Paradise of UGS notes: “It’s the latest technology in moldmaking.” Reprinted with permission of MoldMaking Technology magazine, copyright 2006, Gardner Publications, Inc, USA. Be a TPN Guest Speaker! If you'd like to submit an article for a future issue of the TPN, please contact Editor Cyndi Kustush at editor@tooling-product-news.com for editorial guidelines. Be sure to provide complete contact information and any proposed topics or ideas. |