buckley8
Mechanical
- Jul 8, 2005
- 14
I am trying to find a machining process for making 63,000 very small (.020” dia) holes through .200” thick 6061 aluminum with .050” layer of epoxy (Scotch-Weld, Shore D hardness = 55) bonded to it. Hole spacing is .056” resulting in 318 holes per square inch. The holes do not have to be perfectly round, and the diameter tolerance is generous (.019-.024”)
This is for a rub strip over the rotor on a turbofan inlet for a test rig. The epoxy serves as a sacrificial abradable surface in case the rotor tips contact the nacelle and this is the only approved method/material for doing so. The holes are the focus of acoustic testing so they are not negotiable.
EDM can not be used since it requires electrically conductive material and epoxy is not.
Electron beam drilling (e.g. Acceleron Inc.) can not be used as the epoxy will off-gas and ruin the laser hardware. Anyway, this process is limited to .200” deep holes.
I fear that good-old-fashioned mechanical drilling is the only way this can be done and I figure that it will take 3 months or more to make this part (at 30 seconds per hole, 8 hours per day)= $$$$.
To make matters worse, the rub strip is not a flat plate but is a cylinder, 22” ID, 3” long.
I would also appreciate suggestions to "build-up" the aluminum/epoxy rub-strip with holes instead of drilling the holes from the rub-strip.
Jim Buckley
ASRC Aerospace
at NASA Glenn Research Center
Cleveland, OH
This is for a rub strip over the rotor on a turbofan inlet for a test rig. The epoxy serves as a sacrificial abradable surface in case the rotor tips contact the nacelle and this is the only approved method/material for doing so. The holes are the focus of acoustic testing so they are not negotiable.
EDM can not be used since it requires electrically conductive material and epoxy is not.
Electron beam drilling (e.g. Acceleron Inc.) can not be used as the epoxy will off-gas and ruin the laser hardware. Anyway, this process is limited to .200” deep holes.
I fear that good-old-fashioned mechanical drilling is the only way this can be done and I figure that it will take 3 months or more to make this part (at 30 seconds per hole, 8 hours per day)= $$$$.
To make matters worse, the rub strip is not a flat plate but is a cylinder, 22” ID, 3” long.
I would also appreciate suggestions to "build-up" the aluminum/epoxy rub-strip with holes instead of drilling the holes from the rub-strip.
Jim Buckley
ASRC Aerospace
at NASA Glenn Research Center
Cleveland, OH