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Terminology and Formulae, Milling

This document contains terminology, formulae, and examples related to milling. It defines terms like milling cutter diameter, average roughness, number of cutting edges, and provides formulae for calculating spindle speed, feed per turn/tooth, cutting speed, feed rate, and material removal rate. It also discusses adjusting feed values for milling operations with low radial cutting depths, like disc or groove milling, through a feed factor compensation example.

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Saso Sokoleski
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
144 views2 pages

Terminology and Formulae, Milling

This document contains terminology, formulae, and examples related to milling. It defines terms like milling cutter diameter, average roughness, number of cutting edges, and provides formulae for calculating spindle speed, feed per turn/tooth, cutting speed, feed rate, and material removal rate. It also discusses adjusting feed values for milling operations with low radial cutting depths, like disc or groove milling, through a feed factor compensation example.

Uploaded by

Saso Sokoleski
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Tools with ISO elements | Technical appendix | Terminology and formulae milling

Terminology and formulae, milling

Milling cutter diameter Dc [mm] κ

A
90° 75°
A
B

Dc

Average roughness Ra [µm] ap [mm]

Average roughness depth Rz [µm] ae [mm]

Number of cutting edges z

ap
ap

Spindle speed n [U/min] ae ae

Formulae

mm
Feed per turn fu = [ –––– ] fu = z · fz
U

mm vf
Feed per tooth fz = [ –––– ] fz = –––––––––
Zahn n·z

fz during face milling:


5 4 32 1
5

1
4

fz 2 3
fu

186
Tools with ISO elements | Technical appendix | Terminology and formulae milling

1 vc · 1000
Spindle speed n = [ –––– ] n = –––––––––
min �·D

ae
Average chip thickness hm = [ mm ] hm = sinκ · fz · ––––
D

m � · Dc · n
Cutting speed vc = [ –––– ] vc = –––––––––
min 1000

mm
Feed rate vf = [ –––– ] vf = fz · z · n
min

cm3
Material removal rate Q = [ –––– ] Q = ae · ap · vf
min

Disc, groove, shoulder milling


fz 0,1
Feed value compensation
Machining steps with low radial cutting depth such as
disc milling, groove milling or milling a shoulder require
correction of the feed at the cutting edge as it enters
the workpiece.
20
10
5
1.5
0.5

The calculated and actual feed can vary depending on 0,0


0,02

the cutting depth and the milling cutter diameter. 9


0,04

0,0
7

If a shoulder with a cutting depth of only 0.5 mm is


machined using a milling cutter ø 40, the feed must be
multiplied with a factor of 5 to arrive at the actual feed
or fz 0.1 (see example below). Example:

A major advantage of the application of this formula is Tool: Milling cutter ø 40 mm


the increase in the productivity on the effective usage z: 5
of the milling cutter. fz: 0,1 mm/rev
f: 0.5 mm/rev

Radial cutting depth Feed per tooth Maximum chip thickness


Required vf to obtain fz 0.1 Increase factor
[ap] [fz] [hmax]

20 0,1 0,1 1.000 1,00


10 0,1 0,09 1.111 1,11
5 0,1 0,07 1.429 1,43
1,5 0,1 0,04 2.500 2,50
0,5 0,1 0,02 5.000 5,00

Note: Based on the above example, the feed per tooth can be increased with a low ap/D ratio or a setting angle < 90°.
Technical
appendix

187

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