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MILLING TITANIUM  Applications



                        The main operations performed by FF tools are rough milling pockets and cavities
                        (“pocketing”), pre-shaping complex surfaces (“profiling”) and plane faces (“facing”). Some
                        of the tools feature side plunge milling capabilities (“side plunging”). Milling pockets and
                        cavities are the most common cutting operations performed in producing titanium parts.
                        It is worth noting however, that fast feed face milling titanium is still not as
                        popular as steel. The reason is, again, heat. Thick chips, produced by an
                        FF tool, makes heat removal from the cutting zone more difficult.
                        Also, face mills generally feature relatively large diameters that increase the
                        contact of an insert with the machined material. This results in intensifying
                        the heat load on the cutting edge and shortening tool life.
                        By contrast, applying FF tools to pocketing enables decreasing the bending
                        force in high feed milling and therefore this method is recommended for rough
                        machining pockets and cavities in thin-walled and low-rigidity parts.


                         Fast Feed Facing
                         Initially the FF cutters were considered mainly as tools for productive rough milling of cavities and
                         punches in die and mold applications. The FF approach was later applied to face milling.
                         Fast feed face milling ( “fast feed facing” or, simply, “triple F”) with the use of indexable cutters,
                         opened another application field for FF tools.


                             An FF tool generates a machined surface with cusps. The cusp height diminishes with reducing
                         width of cut ae. It is recommended that the width of cut be no more than diameter DC (Fig. 20)
                         to prevent tooth overloading, because of excess machining allowance in the produced cusps.









                                                                           Cusp
                                              Stepdown


                                                              DC
                                                             ae >DC       ap>apmax

                        Fig. 20 Width of cut and cusps in fast feed milling
                        In CNC programming, an FF tool is often specified as a milling cutter with a corner radius. The
                        radius is calleda "radius for programming" (R in Fig. 21). It defines the maximum thickness of
                        a cusp – a mismatch, produced by such specification (correspondingly t in the same figure).







                                                                                       t

                                                                                 R


                        Fig. 21 Radius for programming








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