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Hundreds of Sheet Metal parts form the Car body
 
 Manufacturing Process Manufacturing Process Non Metals (Injection moulding)
 
 Metals
 
 Joining (welding, riveting)
 
 Shaping
 
 Melting (Casting)
 
 Material removal (machining)
 
 Plastic deformation
 
 others
 
 Bulk forming Forging Rolling
 
 Sheet forming Deep drawing
 
 Extrusion, wire drawing
 
 Stretch forming Shearing, bending etc.
 
 Bulk forming and sheet forming 𝑺𝒖𝒓𝒇𝒂𝒄𝒆 𝒂𝒓𝒆𝒂 𝒗𝒐𝒍𝒖𝒎𝒆 𝒐𝒓 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒄𝒌𝒏𝒆𝒔𝒔
 
 • Low -> Bulk forming http://bharatforge.com/facilities/forging.html
 
 • High-> Sheet metal forming https://www.thyssenkrupp-steel-europe.com/en/press/press-releases/press-release-6553.html
 
 Work of deformation • Uniaxial tension – Plastic True Stress, 𝜎
 
 𝜀
 
 𝜀
 
 𝑊=
 
 True Strain, 𝜀
 
 𝜎 . 𝑑𝜀 0
 
 𝜀
 
 𝜀 𝑛 . 𝑑𝜀
 
 𝑊=𝐾 0
 
 𝑊=
 
 𝐾𝜀 𝑛+1 𝑛+1
 
 =
 
 𝐾𝜀 𝑛 𝑛+1
 
 𝜀 = 𝜎𝑎𝑣𝑔 𝜀
 
 – Assuming Holloman relation, 𝜎 = 𝐾𝜀 𝑛 𝜎𝑎𝑣𝑔
 
 𝐾𝜀 𝑛 = 𝑛+1
 
 Work of deformation •
 
 Multiaxial – Plastic
 
 Effective Stress, 𝜎
 
 𝜀
 
 𝜀
 
 𝑑𝑊 =
 
 𝐾𝜀 𝑛+1 𝑊= = 𝜎𝑎𝑣𝑔 𝜀 𝑛+1
 
 𝜎 . 𝑑𝜀 0
 
 𝜎𝑎𝑣𝑔 •
 
 𝐾𝜀 𝑛 = 𝑛+1
 
 Effective Strain, 𝜀
 
 Load required for deformation
 
 𝑝 = 𝜎𝑎𝑣𝑔 . A
 
 (𝑝= average load A= instantaneous area)
 
 ‘W’ here refers to the ideal work required to deform a material to a given shape
 
 𝑑𝑊 = 𝜎1 . 𝑑𝜀1 + 𝜎2 . 𝑑𝜀2 + 𝜎3 . 𝑑𝜀3
 
 Deformation efficiency • (a) to (b) - Ideal deformation – Ideal work - 𝑑𝑊 =
 
 𝜀 𝜎 0
 
 . 𝑑𝜀
 
 • Additional work due to – Friction (by frictional forces) – Redundant deformation (c )- (b)
 
 • Total work=𝑊𝑡𝑜𝑡𝑎𝑙 = 𝑊𝑖𝑑𝑒𝑎𝑙 + 𝑊𝑓𝑟𝑖𝑐𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛 + 𝑊𝑟𝑒𝑑𝑢𝑛𝑑𝑎𝑛𝑡 • (a ) before deformation (b) Ideal frictionless deformation (c) Actual deformation
 
 Efficiency=𝜂 =
 
 𝑊𝑖𝑑𝑒𝑎𝑙 𝑊𝑡𝑜𝑡𝑎𝑙
 
 Source : Kalpakjain and Schmid, Manufacturing processes for Engg Materials
 
 Analysis of deformation processes • • • •
 
 Slab analysis Slip line field theory Upper and lower bounds Finite element method
 
 • Material factors – Yielding (yield criteria), friction, temperature & strain rate effect
 
 Forging
 
 • • •
 
 One of the oldest metal working operations (5000 BC) Compressive forces Applications – – – – – –
 
 •
 
 Cold, warm and hot forging
 
 Rolling • > 90% of all metals by metal working • >6 mm- plate and < 6mm- sheet • Various flat rolling and shape rolling operations
 
 Automotive axles, crank shafts, wheels etc Gears Turbine disks Valve bodies Rails And a lot more
 
 Source (Wikipedia)
 
 Roll flattening and spreading Roll flattening Need for camber
 
 Spreading Need for edger mill
 
 Source : Kalpakjain and Schmid, Manufacturing processes for Engg Materials
 
 Defects in rolling • Camber defects
 
 Insufficient camber (a): edge wrinkling (b), warping (c), centerline cracking (d), and residual stresses (e).
 
 Hosford, Metal forming :Mechanics and Metallurgy
 
 Defects in rolling • Camber
 
 Effects of over-cambering (a): wavy center (b), centerline splitting (c), edge cracking (d), and residual stresses (e).
 
 Hosford, Metal forming :Mechanics and Metallurgy
 
 EXTRUSION
 
 Direct
 
 Indirect Direct
 
 http://www.allproducts.com/manufacture97/opoint/showroom1.html http://www.designworldonline.com/misumi-highlights-its-aluminum-extrusions-and-accessories-at-atx-west-2010/#_ http://www.alproextrusions.com/ http://lakelandplastics.com/about-us/guidelines/
 
 Defects in extrusion • Surface cracking – High temp, friction and velocity – Reduce billet temp & speed
 
 • Extrusion defect (piping) – Drawing impurities to centre – Modify flow pattern, control friction, remove surface scale
 
 • Internal cracking – Secondary tensile stress – proper die geometry and extrusion variables Text in italics and blue font indicates solutions
 
 http://vosbltd.com/images/Extrusion%20Defects/pdf2.PDF Source : Kalpakjain and Schmid, Manufacturing processes for Engg Materials
 
 Wire and rod drawing Drawing Extrusion
 
 • Push force • Friction b/w billet and container • Usually hot working
 
 Source : Kalpakjain and Schmid, Manufacturing processes for Engg Materials
 
 http://www.dreamstime.com/stock-image-old-bicycle-wheel-grunge-wall-image39791771
 
 • Pull force • No friction b/w billet and container • Usually cold working
 
 Sheet metal forming •
 
 Sheet metal forming is a process of imparting a desired geometry to a work piece by plastically deforming it using a set of tools (punch, die and blank holder) • Several processes – shearing , blanking, bending, coining, deep drawing, stretching, roll forming, flanging…. etc.
 
 Source: www.nd.edu/~manufact/pdfs/Ch16.pdf
 
 Sheet Metal Bending Bending: In this operation, the material in the form of flat sheet or strip, is uniformly strained around a linear axis which lies in the neutral plane
 
 and perpendicular to the lengthwise direction of the sheet or metal
 
 V-bending
 
 Edge bending
 
 Sheet metal bending
 
 Bending • Bend allowance 𝐿𝑏 – length of neutral axis
 
 • Usually neutral axis – no change in length w
 
 • 𝐿𝑏 = 𝑅 +
 
 𝑡 2
 
 𝛼 = 𝑅+𝑘𝑡 𝛼
 
 – k=0.5 for larger bend radius (R/t >2) and k=0.3 for small radii (R/t 0.5, then its deep drawing
 
 Stages in deep drawing
 
 Metal flow during deep drawing
 
 Deep drawing factors • Punch radius-4 to 10 times metal thickness; for lesser radius, restrike • Draw radius-4 times thickness, excessive radius lead to wrinkling – Shallow draw without blank holder- 6 to 8 times thickness
 
 Draw radius nomograph
 
 Deep drawing - % reduction D
 
 • P=( D-d)*100/d • P- percent reduction • Theoretical max P- 50%; better to restrict to 40%
 
 d h
 
 Deep drawing –no of stages • h/d is another indicator of deep drawing • Max h/d per stage 0.75 • If h/d > 0.75, introduce another stage
 
 Blank size determination
 
 Aluminum Two-Piece Beverage Cans
 
 Top of Aluminum can
 
 Metal-Forming Process for Beverage Can The metal-forming processes involved in manufacturing a twopiece aluminum beverage can
 
 Shearing
 
 Shearing, blanking, trimming, piercing, fine blanking….. © wikipedia
 
 Shearing - clearance • Clearance – important role
 
 Excess clearance leads to tensile pulling of material into die
 
 Source: Dieter, Mechanical Metallurgy, Kalpakjain and Schmid, Manufacturing Processes for Engineering Materials, 5th Ed
 
 Shearing process- Force • Punch force depends upon – Material shear strength – Cross section area • Empirical relation • 𝐹 = 0.7 ∗ 𝑈𝑇𝑆 ∗ 𝑡 𝐿
 
 – t=sheet thickness – L=shear length Source: Dieter, Mechanical Metallurgy, Kalpakjain and Schmid, Manufacturing Processes for Engineering Materials, 5th Ed
 
 Cutting force calculation - Blanking • A mechanical press of maximum 1 tons is used to punch a square hole of 8 mm from an 1 mm thick sheet. Find the feasibility for – Material A- UTS=400 MPa – Material B- UTS=600 MPa
 
 • Is it possible to reduce the cutting force during blanking ?
 
 Reduction of blanking load • Stepped punch
 
 • Shear on tools • Upto 30% reduction in cutting force possible in shear • Double shear better as it is balanced • Blanking- shear in die • Piercing- Shear in punch
 
 Shearing
 
 (a) Shaving a sheared edge. (b) Shearing and shaving, combined in one stroke.
 
 Fine blanking
 
 Shaving
 
 Trimming
 
 Tool design
 
 http://calculusdesigns.com/press_tool_design.html
 
 Die, fixtures, layout etc..
 
 Sheet metal –die design
 
 Image source: http://www.thyssenkrupp-system-engineering.com/en/automotive-industry/prototypes/prototype-tools-parts.html
 
 Traditional die design
 
 Die design
 
 Die manufacturing
 
 Tool tryout
 
 FE based die design
 
 http://www.deskeng.com/de/optimize-sheet-metal-forming/ http://www.autoform.com/en/products/autoform-diedesigner-plus/
 
 Die set • Punch and Die mounted on punch holder and die shoe respectively • Advantage – alignment • At least 16 mm clearance to be given between punch and guide block for resharpening • Sufficient allowance in the die shoe for mounting
 
 Types of dies- few eg • Punch attached to die shoe and die to punch holder Advantage : 1) Less bending and useful in thin sheets Disadvantage 1) High cost
 
 Progressive die • Many stages are combined in a single die. • Each station has one operation done in the strip. • Station to Station distance constant • Disadvantage- less support
 
 Compound die • Multiple operations in a single station • Slower than progressive die • Closer tolerance • Small press for large components
 
 Combination die • Similar to compound die. • Difference-At least one noncutting operation is combined
 
 Stamping press • Sheet metal working tool with a stationary bed and a powered ram driven towards the bed or away from the bed to apply force or required pressure for various metal forming operations
 
 Components of a typical mechanical drive stamping press
 
 Components of Presses •
 
 A frame: that supports
 
 the
 
 bolster (2) that is a plate attached to the bed. The bolster has tapped holes, T-slots, or other means for
 
 attaching the bottom die to the press. •
 
 A drive mechanism (3) that moves the slide (4) at a right angle to the bolster
 
 •
 
 The Gibs
 
 (5)
 
 that guide the
 
 reciprocating motion of the slide and ensure the parallelism of the slide to the bolster
 
 Metal forming press • Press: Machine tool that apply force to change the shape of metal • Classification of presses Frame type – Mechanism • Hydraulic • Mechanical
 
 – Function • Stamping, forging, press brake
 
 – No. of slides • Single action • Double action • Triple action
 
 • C frame • OBI etc
 
 Different press frames
 
 Open Back Inclined (OBI) C frame
 
 Open Back
 
 Widely used for blanking and piercing of small work pieces
 
 Mechanical press •
 
 A mechanical press drive consists of an electric motor, a flywheel, a clutch/brake, a drive shaft, a connection (also called
 
 a
 
 pitman
 
 arm
 
 or
 
 connecting rod), and a slide (ram) guided by the gibs. •
 
 Depending on the design, a press may have gear set(s) to reduce
 
 the
 
 speed
 
 increase the torque
 
 and
 
 Drives in mechanical press
 
 Drives in mechanical press
 
 (a) Simple crank drive (b) slide motion
 
 Crank drive • Crank link is attached to a drive shaft • Crank link rotates with the drive shaft and is attached to a connecting rod by a rotational joint • Connecting rod rocks back and forth during the motion of the crank • The ram operates in a slider joint and travels a one dimensional path in both directions
 
 Eccentric drive • Motor drives an eccentric shaft, rotating in a connecting rod • The connecting rod moves a ram in a slider joint • As the motor rotates, the center of the drive remains stable but the overall center of the shaft changes. This causes the shaft to change position, providing motion
 
 Knuckle drive • The knuckle joint press translates the energy of a motor through a powerful linkage design, and is capable of delivering a tremendous amount of force • The drive shaft crank rotates completely. The links are well grounded to support such pressure
 
 Rack and pinion drive • The rack and pinion press delivers the motors energy from a gear directly connected to the drive shaft • The rack is actually a round gear of infinite radius
 
 • A rotating gear (pinion), provides force through the rack. This gives the one dimensional,
 
 translational
 
 desired of press machines
 
 motion
 
 Screw drive • It uses rotational energy of a motor to turn a large screw. • Typically, a friction disk is used to translate the force from the drive shaft to the screw's head. The screw pushes a ram with great mechanical advantage. • Screw presses are similar to hydraulic presses in that they are relatively slow and require a longer contact with the work. • Some screw press machine tools in modern industry
 
 can
 
 produce
 
 (62,000,000 lbs), of force.
 
 31,000
 
 tons,
 
 Gear Reduction • In mechanical press, to increase energy per stroke, gear reductions are used.
 
 (a) Direct drive (non-geared), (b) single gear reduction-single end drive, (c) single gear reduction-twin end drive, and (d) double gear reduction.
 
 Single ,double and triple action press
 
 Single action https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QpHoKDkQ0FM
 
 Double action https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoGvVC5QQbQ
 
 Selection criteria for stamping press • • • • • •
 
 Type of forming operation, and dies and tooling required Size and shape of work pieces Length of stroke of the slide, stroke per minute, speed and shut height (distance from the top of the bed to the bottom of the slide, with the stroke down) Number of slides (single action, double action and triple action) Maximum force required (press capacity, tonnage rating) Safety features
 
 Schematic illustration of types of press frames for sheet- forming operations
 
 Mechanical press Vs. Hydraulic press  The main difference between a hydraulic and mechanical press is the drive mechanism
 
 Servo press • Main motor, flywheel, and clutch, replaced with a servomotor that focused energy only where needed and, in effect, made the ram a controllable axis • The stroke, slide motion, slide position, and speed are programmable to allow many different combinations that can work with a wide variety of dies, part types, and production speeds
 
 Servo press
 
 Injection molding • Injection molding is generally used to produce thermoplastic polymers
 
 • The plastic material is received by the molder in granular form • It is placed in the hopper of an injection-molding machine, from which it is fed to a heated cylinder • Mold defines final shape as material cools and solidifies
 
 Characteristics of injection moulding process • Intricate parts in large quantities • One molded part can replace what would otherwise be an assembly
 
 of components • Secondary finishing operations are not necessary • Suited for lower stressed application area • Housings and covers are common uses rather than, for example, frames and connecting rods
 
 • Production must be large enough so that the mold cost can be amortized over the quantity manufactured; >10,000 parts
 
 Design for Injection moulding • Gate and ejector pin locations • Surface finish of the part depends upon the location of gate and ejector pin • Ejector pins usually located on the underside of a part if it has an both outside and an underside • Gates can be located in a number of locations
 
 Various Gating Systems in Injection moulding
 
 • In case of round and cylindrical parts center gating is preferred and for
 
 large area parts near center-gating is recommended
 
 Design guidelines
 
 Maintain uniform wall thickness and avoid abrupt change in wall thickness and make it gradual change
 
 Design guidelines
 
 Minimum spacing for holes and sidewalls
 
 Design guidelines
 
 Minimum spacing for holes and sidewalls
 
 Design guidelines • Through hole is preferred than a blind hole • Hole in the bottom of the part is preferable than the side • Blind hole should not be more than two diameters deep. If the diameter is 1.5 mm or less, then one diameter is recommended
 
 Recommended depth limits for blind holes.
 
 Design guidelines • To increase the depth of a blind hole steps are used thereby enabling employment of stronger core pin
 
 If a blind hole must be deep, use a stepped diameter
 
 Design guidelines • For through holes, cut-out sections in the part can shorten the length of a small diameter pin
 
 Improved design on the right provides better rigidity of the mould core pin
 
 Parting line rules • Parting line should not adversely affect the appearance or function of the part • It is preferred to keep the parting line at the edge of the part where
 
 already a sharp edge exists. • If it is not possible to keep the parting line at the edge, a bead on the parting line facilitates removal of the mould flash
 
 Not this
 
 This
 
 or This