The machining of Heavy components presents several challenges when compared to the fabrication of smaller, lighter components. Namely, oversized parts oftentimes must be moved quickly between tools or locations. Machining parts that are too heavy, large, or bulky to be easily moved by a single human being requires specialized equipment. Heavy components may also be too large to readily fit into the work zones of most common CNC machine tools.
Why Heavy Component Machining is Different
Heavy component machining may require extra steps or possess additional factors that need to be taken into account, magnified, or multiplied in order to get the job done effectively. Some of these include:
Accuracy
Factors that typically influence machining accuracy in a negative way are magnified when parts are larger. This means that careful consideration needs to be placed on monitoring and countering these factors. Temperature is one of the more notable and significant examples of this. The process for machining massive parts generates larger amounts of heat, so users must compensate for this heat to maintain integrity of the final part.
Stress
Material stress is yet another factor that’s frequently overlooked when smaller parts are being fabricated. Workpieces of a conventional size often leave some room for error here, but Heavy components do not. Stress-related distortions must be located and fixed promptly in order to keep them from negatively impacting finishing accuracy.
Tooling
In the case of large five-axis machine spindles, the range of rotary-axis travel is essential. Machining Heavy components quickly means that the tooling range must account for the size of the design to ensure that time is not lost per part. Spindles that can reach all holes on a part at once make for faster work.
Tolerances
As these parts have a larger surface area, additional quality checks may be required to ensure that parts are being fabricated with reliable repeatability. Performing semi-finish passes and setting aside the time to measure between them before taking one or more finishing passes can be key to achieving strict tolerances.
Challenges Facing the Heavy component Machining Industry
Heavy component machining offers a range of unique challenges. When implementing new processes, keep the following three obstacles in mind:
1. Implementing Large Manufacturing is a Tough Process
Implementing Heavy component machining capabilities can be a stressful process. Investments in equipment capable of machining larger parts involves a certain amount of risk. Staff will require additional training on the new equipment to successfully fabricate oversized parts, which may cause some internal frustration or pushback from the workforce.
2. Buying in at the Shop-Floor Level
The individuals who will be doing the legwork behind large manufacturing need to be invested in the process. Any shop relies on the experience and abilities of its workforce to drive success. Without support at the ground level, new Heavy component initiatives will suffer.
3. Don’t End Experiments Prematurely
It takes more time than many professionals may expect to fine-tune a Heavy component manufacturing process and get it right. Stumbling along the way and needing to adjust your process is normal, but not everybody has an easy time coming to terms with this. It’s easy to think your process is broken or ineffective when it’s in its infancy, and this is how many larger projects fail.
For more information about our Heavy component machining capabilities, or if you’re interested in what Heavy component machining could mean for your organization, please contact us or email us at bell@openex.com.cn.