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From Cutting Tool Engineering

Determining burn depth: General Industry Coverage

Estimating burn depth is tricky. It depends on the thermal conductivity and specific heat capacity of the workpiece material, the maximum surface temperature reached and, most importantly, the time the wheel is in the grinding zone.

April 15, 2012By Jeffrey A. Badger, Ph.D.

Dear Doc: We surface grind to a total depth of 0.1 “. Some of the operators burn the workpiece material during the several roughing passes and rely on the finishing pass to remove the burn. Is this safe and reliable in terms of guaranteeing a burn-free part? And, if so, is there a way to estimate burn depth.

The Doc Replies: “Safe” is a relative term. If you’re grinding turbine blades for jet engines, for everyone’s sake, please don’t use this approach. But I have seen companies get away with it when grinding cheap, hardened-steel drill bits.

Estimating burn depth is tricky. It depends on the thermal conductivity and specific heat capacity of the workpiece material, the maximum surface temperature reached and, most importantly, the time the wheel is in the grinding zone. If the time in the grinding zone is short, such as when grinding with a fast table speed, the heat has a brief time to penetrate into the workpiece, and the temperature-vs.-depth gradient is steep (see figure above). If the time in the grinding zone is long, such as when creep-feed grinding, the heat has more time to penetrate the workpiece, and the temperature-vs.-depth gradient is not steep.

Think about passing your hand over a lit candle. If you slowly move your hand, you’ll burn it. But if you pass your hand quickly—even in a back-and- forth manner where your hand is in constant contact with the flame—you won’t burn your hand. This is because the heat has less time to enter a particular point on your hand before the flame touches another point.

G-Doc figure.tif

Courtesy of J. Badger

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