Zone: Aerospace Machining

No Need For Speed

SNK five-axis profiler In this shop, high speed machining makes sense at 4,000 rpm. While the disciplines the shop put in place made a new 15,000-rpm profiler dramatically more productive, high speed machining would have remained valuable even if the new machine never came. A co-owner of this shop describes why high speed machining has....

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The New Rules of Cutting Tools -- Introduction

hard turningAdvertorial, part of a series. Cutting tool technology is evolving rapidly to respond to changing demands and more challenging workpiece materials. Shops today need to look at cutting tools differently. They need to look at cutting tool suppliers differently as well.

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Abrasive Waterjet Helps Make Composites Affordable for Boeing
8/5/2008 Modern Machine Shop
Boeing overcame fixture costs and other challenges of machining large composite parts by opting for waterjet instead of milling.
Drilling CFRP: What About Stacked Materials?
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Veined PCD drills prove effective for composite/titanium stacks.
Composites Keep A Big Machine Busy
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On-machine inspection is part of the way this shop machines large composite structures efficiently.
Striving To Be Partners, Not Shops
6/9/2008 Modern Machine Shop
The two divisions within this business machine complex parts for the medical and aerospace industries. So in that sense they’re shops. However, in order to grow with their customers, they realized they had to be more than just providers of good parts. They needed to serve as their customers’ manufacturing partners.
How To Machine Composites, Part 1 -- Understanding Composites
8/15/2008 Modern Machine Shop
Composites are replacing metal in certain applications. What does this mean for machining?

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Overview Of:

Aerospace Machining

Aerospace Machining refers to all of the CNC machining involved in making aircraft of all types, including commercial and military jets, as well as corporate jets, rotorcraft, and even missiles and spacecraft.

Machining of aircraft parts can be divided among two distinct parts of the plane: the structure and the engine. Machined components in these two areas present two different sets of machining challenges.

Machining of the structure has traditionally involved machining considerable amounts of aluminum. In the future, composites will play a larger role in aircraft structures, but the amount of machined aluminum will continue to be substantial. An aircraft structural component machined out of solid aluminum may require as much as 80 to 90 percent of the mass of an aluminum block to be milled away, so high metal removal rates are important. Specifically, high speed machining is likely to be important. Another technology important to machining of aircraft structural components is five-axis machining, because the aerodynamic curves of aircraft structures requires machined parts that are similarly contoured.

In machining of engine components, the challenge relates more to machining titanium alloys and nickel-based alloys. Many of the same properties that allow these materials to withstand the heat of a jet engine also make them among the most difficult metals to machine with acceptable productivity and tool life. Composites play a growing role in aircraft engines as well, so machining of composites (as well as machining of titanium) is a discipline that is equally relevant to both types of airplane parts.


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