Dear Gbent
As most practical specialists, you think that machinability is an academic issue rather than a vital problem which any practical engineer faces every and single day. Well… what could I answer? I think that the answer to this question is given in a quote from CIRP working paper “A recent survey by a leading tool manufacturer indicates that in the U.S.A. the correct cutting tool is selected less than 50% of the time. The tool is used at the rated cutting speed only 58% of the time, and only 38% of the tools are used up to their full tool-life capability…” If we recall that the U.S spends more than $120 billion annually to perform its metal removal tasks using conventional machining technology, the price of neglecting the discussed issue as well as the theory of metal cutting is a bit too high. Don’t you think so?
Now about Young’s modulus. Unfortunately, it has a little to do with machinability because it relates to elastic properties of a material. On the contrary, metal cutting involves significant plastic deformation of the work material so strain hardening and strain at fracture should be considered if one tries to correlate the mechanical properties of a work material with its machinability. The product of stress at fracture by strain at fracture gives you a good estimation of energy you have to spend for cutting of this material. If you use this parameter, it would become clear why machinability of Ti is much worse than a medium carbide steel although their “standard mechanical characteristics” (I could not stand this expression) could be the same.
As for materials of various tool and carbide (and other tool materials-PCD, HSS…) companies. Although some of them have extensive testing program, they do not know what they are doing. The logic is very simple – lets try and see. What to try and how to see? Cutting tests are very expensive and time consuming. Moreover, they require very expensive measuring equipment (Kistler dyno’s, data acquisition systems, FFT, laser measuring equipment (vibration and alignment), digital high speed infrared cameras, etc.) and high qualification of test specialists. On the top of that, one should have a suitable experimental methodology and a way to extend the results of a given test on different conditions (similarity theory). Now, you have three attempts to name a tool producers that has all these. As a result, many of them do only very general, superficial test to make sure that “everything is OK in principle” and then use us, users (as Microsoft does) as a laboratory animals to test their product.
If you do not believe, just try to call a tool company (please, select a respectful one to avoid misunderstanding) and ask a contact person to quote you a cutting insert for turning of a very particular work material (hardness, train at fracture, stress at fracture, grain size, chemical composition, inclusions, etc.) on your particular machine (you specify its stiffness, static and dynamic rigidity, range of cutting speeds and feeds, available control unit, etc.), the needed productivity and quality (diametric accuracy, surface integrity and residual stresses including their signs and distribution. You should see his/her reaction (smile, you are on …camera) – they simply do not know more than a half of these technical terms.
Regards
Viktor
Viktor