Feature Article A
Practical
Guide To
Presetters
Every machine shop has a tool measurement device, says Richard McCarthy. In some shops, the tool measurement device is the machining center itself. That can be an expensive way to go. Mr. McCarthy is a national sales manager for tool measurement systems with Big Kaiser Precision Tooling (Elk Grove Village, Illinois). The tool measurement devices he helps shops to implement are commonly known as “presetters.” The term may be somewhat misleading, because shops using these devices enjoy a range of benefits even if they don’t literally “preset” their tools. Typically, the most significant of these benefits is saving time at the machining center. As an alternative to using feeler gages and test cuts to determine tool offsets at the machine, using a presetter to perform independent tool measurement away from the machine can free up considerable productive time. Who Needs A Presetter
However, even facilities with long stretches of time between tool replacements might benefit from off-line measurement. An additional advantage relates to the impact of runout on tool life and productivity. By using a presetter to set up its tools, a shop can detect runout problems and hold each tool to a defined runout limit. Without this kind of control, machining with too much runout accelerates tool wear by forcing one edge to perform the brunt of the cutting. A shop that doesn’t recognize this problem may run slowly or take shallow cuts just to preserve the life of the tool. By identifying and curing the problem, the shop can realize more aggressive material removal. Controlling runout is particularly important for small-diameter tools because the acceptable runout for any tool is proportional to its size. According to Mr. McCarthy, this is the reason why one high-volume manufacturer implemented presetting. While time lost at the machining center was not a concern, the shop believed tool runout might be a significant problem for its small-diameter tools. After discovering runout error resulting from the toolholders, the shop switched to holders that permitted faster production. Without using the presetter to perform this diagnosis, the shop may never have considered this fix. Prerequisites This centralization is just one of the requirements for successful off-line tool measurement, Mr. McCarthy says. Another requirement is an investment in having a sufficient number of tools and holders on-hand. If the shop is no longer doing tool measurement at the machining center, then it should have enough extra tooling to run production while the presetter measures the tools that will be needed next. Which Presetter Is Right
The contact presetters are the least expensive. The noncontact models tend to be both more accurate and more efficient. Mr. McCarthy points out that optical models are upgradeable, so it’s usually not necessary to begin with an aggressive menu of capabilities. “About the only thing we can’t expand is the iron,” he says—meaning the presetter’s size should be carefully chosen to match the largest tool the shop is likely to need to measure in the future. The other fundamental consideration is accuracy. If the shop accepts the rule that gages should have 10 times better accuracy than the part tolerance, then this rule can suggest the required accuracy of the presetter. For example, if parts are to be machined to accuracies as loose as ±0.005 inch, then tools can be inspected to ±0.0005-inch accuracy using a contact presetter, Mr. McCarthy says. At ±0.002-inch part tolerances or tighter, an optical system is necessary to achieve the corresponding accuracy of tool measurement. Getting The Data To The Machine To avoid the potential for error even in this tool loading, a still more aggressive approach is the use of tool ID tags capable of storing electronic data at each toolholder. With a system such as this, the presetter can write tool offsets to each tool-and-toolholder assembly. The CNC using a reader for these tags can identify the tool automatically, read its offsets, and cycle the tool magazine around to the right pocket for loading. Qualified Tools A few types of machines demand these qualified tools because they have no freedom to apply offsets. These machines include transfer lines, twin-spindle machines that use identical tools in parallel processes, and five-axis machines with CNCs that lack the capability to adapt complex tool paths for tool offset changes. Boring tools also have to be preset to specific dimensions. Apart from these applications, most users of presetters employ the device to measure the tool as it is. However, the potential to take this opposite approach—determining the offset first and setting the tool to match—illustrates the increased range of options the shop has available with a presetter. The need to transfer data to the CNC can be rendered unnecessary as the shop applies the presetter to standardize the tool dimensions and achieve even greater control over the management of its tools. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
MMS Online is a trademark of Gardner Publications, Inc, copyright 1997-2008. MMS Online and all contents are properties of Gardner Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |