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Rumbling

Rumbling

Rumbling

(OP)
Hi All,
Just trying to work out do many people use 'Rumblers' to rumble laser cut parts after cutting and before despatching them? If so is this to stainless parts, mild steel parts etc... or all parts???

thanks, Sjclaser.

RE: Rumbling

helps clean the edge on O2 cut parts, deburs all parts

Chris Krug http://krugtech.com/
Maximum Up-time, Minimum BS

RE: Rumbling

I have seen them around. I could confirm that two out of 50 customers of my have them. I have heard them referred to as bead blasters. I assume its the same thing.

I do like the may it makes the parts look. Completely uniform, sides, top, holes. Easy to paint, easy to weld.

RE: Rumbling

A bead blaster is not what the OP is talking about. I'm pretty sure "rumbling" is the Brit way of saying "vibratory deburring".

Timelord

RE: Rumbling

Have seen them used a lot to round the edges of parts to make painting or plating easier. They will not remove burr edges simply make it not so sharp but will still be there. Is a cheap alternative to something like a lismac or webber edge rounding system.

Stainless steel parts still get the edge rounding but takes ALOT longer maybe 5 hours to round the edge.

RE: Rumbling

We use several of them, mainly for Inconel alloys. As Shaun says, they will not remove anything more than light burrs, so parts with heavy dross must be hit with a belt sander before being tossed in. Cycle times will vary greatly based on piece size, material and media, but our cycles for Inconel run from 2-5 hours normally. Aluminum is closer to a half hour.

Note that this isn't the greatest process if you're going to paint or weld right after...the ground stone slurry created in the tumbler gets into all the crevices and laser grooves in the part. Welding is dirty unless all the edges are cleaned thoroughly afterward.

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