Get the most out of your coolant sump
Source: Release Date:2009-09-28 103
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冷却液及金属加工液的润滑、冷却、清洗、除锈等作用不可小觑,本文将为您详细介绍冷却液在带锯中的作用以及如何选择质优价廉的切削液
Most machine shop operators think of coolant or metalworking fluids (MWF) as a necessary nuisance, something that blows chips off the part. But the most important job of coolant is keeping the tool cool so it lasts longer, and lubricating the tool edge so that it makes a faster and cleaner cut. This article will help users understand the role of coolant in band saw and how to select the right cutting fluid including the cost of coolants. Role of coolant in band saw One of the most common complaints from band saw owners is the 揵reaking blades?problem. By using high - quality, properly mixed coolant saw owners can extend blade life substantially. Too many saws are operating with coolant designed and mixed for other machines. While a particular kind of coolant may work miracles in a turning center, it could be disastrous when used in a band saw. The role of coolant is to keep the tool and the material cool. In a lathe you have a fairly large tool removing fairly small amounts of material from the workpiece. In effect, the tool is larger than the chip. The tool and the workpiece are directly exposed to flood coolant. The chips that are being removed are not as big as the tool. The instant the chip is removed it is flushed away from the cutting action. In band saw cutting, the tool is very small. Only the very tip of the tooth does much work. The rest of the tooth is designed simply to hold the tip in place. The chip remains curled up in the blade during the cut. The function of coolant in band saw cutting is as much lubrication as it is cooling. Note that not all cutting fluids are suitable for all materials. Cutting fluid also prevents chip welding to either the blade or the parent material by chemical and/or thermal interface. When chips weld to the blade, the tooth form is changed resulting in cut deviation or lack of penetration. If the chips weld to the parent material, the usual result is a stripped blade. Cutting fluid lubricates the blade and, more importantly, the chips as they pass up into the gullets of the blade. It tends to cool the blade and the material being cut by absorbing heat. Heat is always generated because 搘ork?has occurred from the cutting action, as well as from friction. Note that when wide material is being cut, the blade gets much hotter than when narrow material is cut. This happens even when both materials are cut at the same rate in square inches per minute. Coolant is so important it cannot be over stressed. A good quality cutting fluid in a band saw is one of the most important factors in straight cutting. If cutting fluid is unable to cool the blade teeth, they will soften and become dull. If the cutting fluid is distributed to only one side of the blade, the opposite side will become dull. This will cause the blade to cut toward the side that has the most cutting fluid and the cut will be crooked. If we compare sawing to milling, we immediately see that in sawing there is much less room for the chip. The chip must lodge in a small place between the teeth and be carried smoothly out of the cut. Selecting a cutting fluid Coolant is categorized into four main groups, and each group is available in many different formulations. Oil Soluble: contains 60-85% mineral oil and emulsifies into water, Semi-Synthetic: contains 5-50% mineral oil and emulsifies into water, Full Synthetic: contains no mineral oil, and Straight Oils: contains 70-85% mineral oil and is not water-miscible. Without proper cutting fluid one of two things will happen. First, the chip may become welded to the tooth. This will change the form of the tooth, which, in turn, will change the amount of force required for the blade to cut. The result is an unbalanced blade that will produce a crooked cut. The second possibility is that the chip will wedge in the cut. Since tNike
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