GJdW
Mechanical
- Jul 23, 2003
- 4
Everyone
I am involved in a workshop area where huge (up to 7 ton) rollers (at a steel plant) are reconditioned. This involves recentering after welding it up and heat treatment, followed by machining down to size.
The current cracked chuck of the recentering lathe has 4 jaws, each approximately 70mm (2.76’’) wide, 90mm (3.54’’) long (griping area). The jaws of the replacement chuck is much narrower, only 30mm (1.18’’). The machinist working for 20 odd years on the lathe refuses to use the new chuck and I must convince him otherwise.
We all know that the magnitude of the contact area between the jaw and workpiece should not affect the gripping force (friction force caused by the clamping force due to the friction coefficient between the jaw and work piece). The surface pressure obviously increases as the contact area is reduced, but the gripping friction force should remain unchanged if the clamping force stays the same. However, in the limit, if one uses 4 knife-blades (assumed to be indestructable) to clamp the workpiece, in theory the gripping force should remain unchanged, but practically there must be a limit (apart from the obvious exceeding of the work piece’s elastic stress limit).
Moreover, the driven rolls (most work pieces) have non-circular cross sections where only half of the jaw width is actually clamping to the workpiece, reducing the contact area further.
Can anyone advise me on the effect of the magnitude of the contact area between the jaws and work piece and the practical narrowest limit, or give any relevant information to either support the machinist’s view or persuade him to use the new chuck?
Regards
GJdW
I am involved in a workshop area where huge (up to 7 ton) rollers (at a steel plant) are reconditioned. This involves recentering after welding it up and heat treatment, followed by machining down to size.
The current cracked chuck of the recentering lathe has 4 jaws, each approximately 70mm (2.76’’) wide, 90mm (3.54’’) long (griping area). The jaws of the replacement chuck is much narrower, only 30mm (1.18’’). The machinist working for 20 odd years on the lathe refuses to use the new chuck and I must convince him otherwise.
We all know that the magnitude of the contact area between the jaw and workpiece should not affect the gripping force (friction force caused by the clamping force due to the friction coefficient between the jaw and work piece). The surface pressure obviously increases as the contact area is reduced, but the gripping friction force should remain unchanged if the clamping force stays the same. However, in the limit, if one uses 4 knife-blades (assumed to be indestructable) to clamp the workpiece, in theory the gripping force should remain unchanged, but practically there must be a limit (apart from the obvious exceeding of the work piece’s elastic stress limit).
Moreover, the driven rolls (most work pieces) have non-circular cross sections where only half of the jaw width is actually clamping to the workpiece, reducing the contact area further.
Can anyone advise me on the effect of the magnitude of the contact area between the jaws and work piece and the practical narrowest limit, or give any relevant information to either support the machinist’s view or persuade him to use the new chuck?
Regards
GJdW