Brushing away burrs

Author Cutting Tool Engineering
Published
April 15, 2020 - 03:00pm

Burrs on machined metal parts come in a variety of shapes and sizes but have one thing in common: They must be removed.

JR Precision & Welding LLC generates light, medium and heavy burrs when machining 4140 steel muzzle brakes. Removing the burrs is challenging, said James Mawazeb, director of operations and lead engineer at the Houston-based machine shop, which was founded in 2017.

A muzzle brake, or compensator, is a device connected to the barrel of a rifle or pistol to help control recoil and the rising of the barrel that normally occurs after firing. Muzzle brakes utilize slots, vents, holes, baffles or similar features to redirect a portion of propellant gases to counter recoil. Burrs form on the oval-shaped gas ports of parts.

Mawazeb said the shop initially took additional passes with the cutting tools that had been used to machine the parts.

“It never helped us remove any of the burrs,” he said.

JR Precision & Welding next sought whether another company could deburr the parts with aluminum-oxide sandblasting or even glass beads, but the processes proved ineffective, Mawazeb said.


A 4140 steel muzzle brake is shown before and after deburring. image courtesy of JR Precision & Welding

Manually deburring light burrs with a hook-shaped deburring tool and removing large burrs with a Dremel rotary power tool outfitted with a sander were effective but inefficient methods.

“We pumped out 500 parts within about 10 days,” Mawazeb said, “and it took us an extra six days just to deburr all those parts. Even after we got done with deburring them, I still had to make sure every part was right. A lot of people consider me a stickler for that, but if you are going to put your name on a product, you have to make sure it’s right.”

He defined a light burr as one that can be removed with a thumbnail and said large burrs can’t be. The largest burrs the shop sees are about 3.175 mm (0.125") high.

Adding to the challenge was that the bar stock JR Precision & Welding previously machined was from a supplier that sold only heat-treated 4140 steel bars, Mawazeb said. The shop eventually switched to a supplier of annealed stock, which is easier to machine and deburr.

For a solution, JR Precision & Welding turned to Houston-based tool distributor Bass Tool & Supply Inc., which suggested testing an abrasive brush with filaments angled down. He said results were unimpressive.

“When it would go over the part,” Mawazeb said, “it would be like it was a toothbrush just rubbing over the metal. So it didn’t actually remove anything. It actually scuffed up the part more and left a horrible finish.”


A composite hub abrasive nylon wheel brush handles challenging deburring applications. Image courtesy of Brush Research Manufacturing

By switching from a four-flute endmill to a five-flute endmill, JR Precision & Welding reduced average burr size but still needed an efficient solution. Bass Tool & Supply recommended an abrasive brush from another toolmaker that the distributor carries: Los Angeles-based Brush Research Manufacturing Co. Inc. He wasn’t convinced that a different brush would do the job but sent parts to test at Brush Research Manufacturing’s surface finishing laboratory. After a test in which an abrasive disc brush didn’t sufficiently remove burrs, Brush Research Manufacturing deburred a part with a 152.4 mm-dia. (6"-dia.) abrasive nylon wheel brush that has filaments made of silicon carbide.“It was able to easily get into the slots, push the burrs out and remove them,” said Elysha Cole, product support specialist at Brush Research Manufacturing.

The filaments self-sharpen. As a brush contacts a work surface, filament grit wears off and exposes new cutting particles. This action enables a brush to remain sharp even after repeated use.

After the concept was proven in a lab, JR Precision & Welding purchased an 80-grit 76.2 mm-dia. (3"-dia.) brush. The shorter trim fill has less give and delivers a more aggressive deburring force than the larger version. In addition to removing midsize and large burrs without altering the surface finish, the brush provides a soft edge break to the four gas ports so they are not razor sharp. Mawazeb said deburring a part with the brush takes about a minute. The shop purchased the brush in August and had yet to replace the brush after months of use.

To remove light burrs, it’s more efficient to run a secondary operation using a 4.7625 mm-dia. (0.1875"-dia.) two-flute chamfering tool, which would break when removing heavier burrs, he said.

“We eyeball to determine burr size,” Mawazeb said.  

 

End User

JR Precision & Welding LLC, 972-322-2718

Solution Providers

Bass Tool & Supply Inc., 800-442-0042www.basstool.com

Brush Research Manufacturing Co. Inc.323-261-2193www.brushresearch.com

Challenge

Remove burrs from 4140 steel muzzle brakes for firearms.

Solution

An abrasive nylon wheel brush.

 

 

Related Glossary Terms

  • abrasive

    abrasive

    Substance used for grinding, honing, lapping, superfinishing and polishing. Examples include garnet, emery, corundum, silicon carbide, cubic boron nitride and diamond in various grit sizes.

  • burr

    burr

    Stringy portions of material formed on workpiece edges during machining. Often sharp. Can be removed with hand files, abrasive wheels or belts, wire wheels, abrasive-fiber brushes, waterjet equipment or other methods.

  • chamfering

    chamfering

    Machining a bevel on a workpiece or tool; improves a tool’s entrance into the cut.

  • chamfering tool

    chamfering tool

    Cutter or wheel that creates a beveled edge on a tool or workpiece.

  • endmill

    endmill

    Milling cutter held by its shank that cuts on its periphery and, if so configured, on its free end. Takes a variety of shapes (single- and double-end, roughing, ballnose and cup-end) and sizes (stub, medium, long and extra-long). Also comes with differing numbers of flutes.

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