Delcam’s Vortex headed for MACH
    Delcam
 will preview its new Vortex strategy for high-speed area clearance on 
stand 4011 at the MACH exhibition to be held in Birmingham from 16th to 20th
 April.  Vortex will be the major enhancement for the 2013 release of 
Delcam’s PowerMILL CAM system for high-speed and five-axis machining.  
The new strategy will also be added to the FeatureCAM software for 
feature-based programming and the PartMaker system for Swiss-type lathes
 later this year.
    Vortex, for which Delcam has a patent pending, has 
been developed by the company specifically to gain the maximum benefit 
from solid carbide tooling, in particular those designs that can give 
deeper cuts by using the full flute length as the cutting surface.  It 
can be used for two- and three-axis roughing, positional five-axis area 
clearance and for rest machining based on stock models or reference 
toolpaths.
Like other Delcam roughing strategies, Vortex 
toolpaths are calculated to give more efficient machining by following 
the shape of the part and by keeping air moves to a minimum.  This is 
particularly important for rest machining operations.
   One fundamental problem with conventional area 
clearance strategies is that the optimum cutting conditions only occur 
during a straight line cut.  Any internal corners within the model 
significantly increase the engagement angle of the cutter.   To protect 
the cutter, this increase needs to be balanced by setting a lower feed 
rate.  The user then has the choice of using this lower rate over the 
whole toolpath, which increases the machining time, or varying the feeds
 and speeds as the cutter moves around the model and so increasing wear 
on the cutter.
   Unlike other high-speed roughing techniques that 
aim to maintain a constant theoretical metal-removal rate, the Vortex 
strategy produces toolpaths with a controlled engagement angle for the 
complete operation.  This maintains the optimum cutting conditions for 
the entire toolpath that would normally be possible only for the 
straight-line moves.  As a result, the cutting time will be shorter, 
while cutting will be undertaken at a more consistent volume-removal 
rate and feed rate, so protecting the machine.
   Because Vortex toolpaths have a controlled 
engagement angle, tools will never be overloaded and so will achieve the
 maximum tool life.  Shock loading caused by changes in contact angle 
are eliminated, preventing chipping of the flutes.  In addition, the 
stability of the cutting conditions gives constant edge temperatures so 
prolonging the life of the tool coating and removing heat damage to the 
surface of the part.  Finally, the ability to use stepdowns of up to two
 or even three times the tool diameter spreads the tool wear evenly over
 the cutting surface of the tool, again contributing to longer tool 
life.
   "Anyone using the Vortex strategy will be able to 
hear the difference immediately", claimed Mark Forth, Product Manager 
for Delcam’s Advanced Manufacturing Solutions.  "Conventional roughing 
produces a sound of varying pitch, which indicates tool overload and 
chatter, while Vortex roughing gives a constant pitch showing that the 
tool is operating under consistent conditions.  Users will also be able 
to see the difference in the regular size and thickness of the chips 
produced, providing further evidence of the consistency of the cut."
   The new Vortex toolpaths benefit from the general 
advantages of PowerMILL, including support for 64-bit computing and 
multi-processor operation to minimise calculation times, plus the 
comprehensive options for leads and links.  Furthermore, they can be 
used in association with the step-cutting strategy introduced in 
PowerMILL 2012 R2.  This approach minimises the terracing that can 
result from using a large stepdown by moving back up the part and 
automatically generating extra toolpaths to remove additional material 
at intermediate slices.  It optimises the amount of material that can be
 removed with a single tool as well as helping to maintain a more 
consistent removal rate by increasing the feed rate for the intermediate
 slices.
Noticia del 16 de Marzo de 2012
 
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