Within reach

Author Cutting Tool Engineering
Published
July 01, 2010 - 11:00am

However you define them, extended-reach toolholders are indispensible in certain applications.

Choosing the right toolholder can mean the difference between making good parts and making scrap. And the rule of thumb is keep the tool assembly—the toolholder and the cutting tool—as short as possible for the intended application.

But what if parts and part features require a relatively long reach? Extended-reach toolholders are used regularly in aerospace and die and mold machining, two industries with many applications that require long, slender toolholder configurations. The holders are used to reach into large workpieces fixtured on tombstones, and in deep-pocket milling and deep-hole boring.

“Extended-length toolholders typically are used in situations where, due to the part geometry or the fixturing, you need a slim profile to reach the work area,” said Jeff Keith, product manager, tooling components, Schunk Inc., Morrisville, N.C. “Dies and molds where you have to get deep down into contours would be good examples.”

The definition of an extended-reach toolholder varies among the tooling manufacturers interviewed for this article; there is no set standard or limit. Some consider extended reach to be 6 " and over, some 8 " and over. The maximum is usually 12 " or 14 ", but holders can be much longer.

“It is usually a length-to-diameter ratio,” said Mike Gadzinski, a member of the Special Tooling Team at Iscar Metals Inc., Arlington, Texas. “When you start getting past an 8 times diameter ratio, it starts to become pretty unique.”

Machining Operations

Extended-reach toolholders can be used in most types of machine tools and for most types of machining operations. “Extended-length toolholders can easily be used in any operation with linear cutting, such as drilling, reaming and tapping,” said Justin London, sales engineer/draftsman, Briney Tooling Systems, Bad Axe, Mich. “Those operations have single-axis travel that follows the linear centerline of the toolholder.” Therefore, most of the cutting forces are going to be axial and directed into the spindle.

Things become more complicated when milling and boring. “With milling and boring, the forces are transferring from axial to more radial, which forces the toolholder to start to bend,” said Jack Burley, vice president of sales and engineering, BIG Kaiser Precision Tooling Inc., Hoffman Estates, Ill. “Bending creates vibration problems. So the only thing you can do is reduce the bending moment by reducing the speed and feed and taking a lighter DOC.”

In general, milling with a long overhang is for lighter cutting with lower metal-removal rates. “Operations where you have heavy side loading, such as aggressive milling where you are removing a lot of material, are the most difficult,” Keith said. “You just need to be careful that you are not overloading your tools.”

Trochoidal milling, however, can be done efficiently with extended-reach toolholders. Trochoidal milling paths change the cutting forces to be less radial and more axial, which means users can increase machining parameters. “Trochoidal works very well,” Gadzinski said. “It has to do with ‘radial thinning.’ Trochoidal milling removes a very small amount of material in a circular path at high speeds. Removing less material reduces the amount of twisting and bending you have with an extended-length toolholder.”

Kaiser_CKN_ Modular_Boring.tif

Courtesy of BIG Kaiser

With BIG Kaiser’s CKN Connection modular system, the desired length of a large boring tool can be achieved fairly easily without adding excessive weight. The black pieces are made from aluminum.

Rigidity Challenge

The main challenge with extended-reach toolholders is rigidity. “Anytime you are hanging out from the nose of the machine tool spindle, you are giving up rigidity,” said David McHenry, product engineer, Rego-Fix Tool Corp.,Indianapolis. “You’re giving up a lot of your machining capability because you are out so far. You can’t push the tool as hard, you can’t go as fast or as deep and, generally, you have to decrease the feed rate.”

Strong contact between the toolholder and the machine tool spindle provides rigidity. Unlike single-contact taper toolholders, dual-contact toolholders have simultaneous taper and face contact. “This added rigidity helps support long, heavy tools and reduce the problems associated with toolholder ‘droop’ and runout,” said BIG Kaiser’s Burley.

One-piece, solid construction provides the highest possible rigidity and accuracy for extended-length toolholders. Typically, holders are made of a conventional tool steel, such as 4340. As an alternative, extended-reach toolholders are made from heavy metal, such as tungsten, according to Gadzinski of Iscar. “This material is a lot more dense, which reduces bending and vibration,” he said. “But because heavy metal can be expensive, people only use it if they have to.”

Dampening Vibration

The greater the density of the toolholder material, the more harmonics dampening properties it has. To help combat vibration in extended-reach applications without using expensive heavy metals, Rego-Fix fuses two types of steel pieces for its new Xtended Length toolholders. The fusing process creates a microfriction dampening effect, which breaks up harmonics. The company developed the MFD technology specifically for extended-length toolholders.

Another vibration-dampening technology is Sandvik Coromant’s Silent Tools technology for its extended-reach boring bars and milling tools. “With this technology, a dampening device—a tungsten rod suspended in oil—inside the milling tool or boring bar, which is made from tool steel, counteracts any vibration that occurs with a long overhang,” said Jim Grimes, machine integration manager for Fair Lawn, N.J.-based Sandvik Coromant Co. 

Briney Shrink-fit Extended Holder 2.tif

Courtesy of Briney Tooling

A CAT 50 shrink-fit tool assembly machining flats.

Silent Tools technology lets users keep the same DOCs, feeds and speeds as shorter tools. “You might have to make some adjustment, but the dampening device helps the tools react the same way a shorter tool would,” Grimes said.

The Modular Connection

Extended-length toolholders made of solid tool steel can be somewhat unwieldy, according to Burley. “For toolholders more than 12 " long, when you make them out of a piece of steel, they also become heavy,” he said. “For example, an integral CAT 50 toolholder made from high-alloy tool steel can exceed 30 lbs. Although this may not seem that heavy, it is the tool’s weight moment (calculated by multiplying the tool weight by the distance to its center of gravity from the gauge line) that is the issue. Many machine tools can handle the weight, but the automatic toolchanger can struggle with the moment.”

As a possible solution, BIG Kaiser offers a modular toolholder, called CKN Connection, which users can build up to the length they need. Mating components in the middle are made of aluminum, which helps reduce weight. A three-screw connection provides rigidity and high clamping forces, according to the company (see photo on page 39).

Other companies offer modular extensions as well, which they say provide sufficient rigidity. “We can build extensions with interchangeable pieces that can shorten or lengthen the overall length of the toolholder assembly and still not lose a lot of the rigidity,” Gadzinski said. 

In addition to solid one-piece toolholders with extended-reach capability, Schunk offers three types of extensions—hydraulic, shrink-fit and polygonal clamping. “If someone has a base holder (Schunk or another brand) that is too short to reach, and they don’t want to invest in a longer-length holder, they can simply buy an extension,” Keith said.

Shrink-fit toolholders, in particular, have proven effective for extended-reach applications. “Shrink-fit systems provide much less loss of concentricity and a high clamping strength for extended-length toolholders,” Gadzinski said. “Other methods, such as hydraulic clamping, provide good clamping pressure, but shrink-fit is the best system for users who need a slim design without a lot of extra bulk.”

Balancing Act

Users can purchase toolholders prebalanced from the manufacturer, but it makes more sense to balance the entire tooling assembly, according to Gadzinski. “You have to balance the finished assembly to have it considered balanced,” he said. “I could have a toolholder that doesn’t have a cutting tool in it that is balanced. But when I put the tool in, it might change the balance completely.”

Balancing is typically performed on a dedicated balancing machine. Standard machines can balance long toolholders, typically up to 16 ". Otherwise, a special balancing machine may be required.

090322.tif

Courtesy of Sandvik Coromant

Long boring bars with Silent Tools technology from Sandvik Coromant feature a dampening device inside the bar that counteracts vibration.

Users must decide between single-plane and two-plane balancing. “With an extended-length toolholder, you want to do a two-plane balance, which is called dynamic balancing,” Burley said. “Unlike static, or single-plane, balancing, dynamic balancing measures in two planes, usually near the V-flange of the toolholder and the end closest to the cutter itself. So you are measuring balance near the spindle side and also near the cutting tool side.”

Balanced toolholders are essential when high-speed machining. “Typically, high-speed machining starts at 8,000 rpm, but I’ve seen some very long toolholders working at spindle speeds of 10,000 rpm and above,” Gadzinski said. Those applications involved tools 1⁄4 " or less in diameter, extremely light DOCs and typically aluminum workpieces.

However, the definition of HSM is open to interpretation. And suppliers disagree about using extended-reach toolholders for those applications.

“When you have a tool hanging out so far, you really don’t want to push the spindle speeds,” McHenry said. “If the tool breaks or has a problem, the tool becomes a whip at the end of the spindle.” Rego-Fix balances its extended-reach toolholders to 5,000 rpm.

Sandvik Coromant’s Grimes agreed. “You don’t see a lot of high-speed machining with the longer lengths,” he noted. “You can run normal cutting parameters with extended-length toolholders, but high-speed machining is difficult. You have to run in the 4,000- to 5,000-rpm area.”

Longer Can Be Better

Contrary to the popular belief that the shorter the tool, the better, increasing a toolholder’s length-to-diameter ratio may actually reduce vibration and result in more productive milling operations.

REGO-FIX PG-Xtended-Length-Toolholder3.tif

Courtesy of Rego-Fix

Xtended Length (XL) toolholders from Rego-Fix provide reach up to 14 ".

“I always tell people that, in some milling operations, a little bit longer toolholder can be a good thing,” Burley said. “Depending on the application, if you make something 2 " longer and you have little room to change the operating parameters, you can actually improve the operation because you have modified the natural frequency to an area that is in the tool’s sweet spot.”

Typically, the sweet spot is found by time-consuming trial and error. Some companies, such as Blue Swarf, offer vibration measuring systems that monitor existing harmonics within a specific machine tool and tooling assembly and then specify a speed and feed to minimize harmonics for that machine and tool combination.

“However, this does not automatically make that assembly the absolute most efficient it can be,” said Briney’s London. “It merely gives you the speed and feed. Coupling the process with other standard quality tooling practices yields the greatest results in improvement to throughput or efficiencies.” CTE

About the Author: Susan Woods is a Contributing Editor to Cutting Tool Engineering. Contact her by e-mail at susan@jwr.com.

Mix and match tools for extended-reach applications 

When choosing cutting tools for an extended-reach toolholder, there are several factors to consider. “Generally, if you have an extended-reach toolholder, particularly in milling, you need a cutting tool with a relatively sharp cutting edge, one that is designed to reduce the amount of pressure inside the cut,” said Mike Gadzinski of Iscar Metals Inc. “Using smaller corner radiuses might be a solution. That type of tool is designed to work at a light DOC.”

There are also cutting tools that have a long cutting area. So how do users know if they should use an extended-reach toolholder with a standard cutting tool or a toolholder with a cutting tool that can cut long areas of material?

“Most cutting tools designed for longer lengths of cut, meaning the actual cutting area is longer, usually are only used in roughing,” Gadzinski said. “The user is probably better off doing the operation in a couple steps. To remove as much material as possible quickly, the user goes in with the long cutting tool, then comes back to finish with an extended-reach toolholder.

“It is very common for someone to buy the long cutting tool for roughing and then switch to a shorter cutting tool with a longer toolholder,” he added. “But it depends on the job. If you only have 10 parts to make, you can get by with just one tooling assembly. But for a dedicated system, it might be worth it to use both types of tools.”

—S. Woods

Contributors

BIG Kaiser Precision Tooling Inc.
(888) 866-5776
www.bigkaiser.com

Briney Tooling Systems
(800) 752-8035
www.brineytooling.com

Iscar Metals Inc.
(877) BY-ISCAR
www.iscarmetals.com

Rego-Fix Tool Corp.
(800) 734-6349
www.rego-fix.com

Sandvik Coromant Co.
(800) SANDVIK
www.sandvik.coromant.com/us

Schunk Inc.
(919) 572-2705
www.schunk.com

Related Glossary Terms

  • automatic toolchanger

    automatic toolchanger

    Mechanism typically included in a machining center that, on the appropriate command, removes one cutting tool from the spindle nose and replaces it with another. The changer restores the used tool to the magazine and selects and withdraws the next desired tool from the storage magazine. The changer is controlled by a set of prerecorded/predetermined instructions associated with the part(s) to be produced.

  • boring

    boring

    Enlarging a hole that already has been drilled or cored. Generally, it is an operation of truing the previously drilled hole with a single-point, lathe-type tool. Boring is essentially internal turning, in that usually a single-point cutting tool forms the internal shape. Some tools are available with two cutting edges to balance cutting forces.

  • boring bar

    boring bar

    Essentially a cantilever beam that holds one or more cutting tools in position during a boring operation. Can be held stationary and moved axially while the workpiece revolves around it, or revolved and moved axially while the workpiece is held stationary, or a combination of these actions. Installed on milling, drilling and boring machines, as well as lathes and machining centers.

  • feed

    feed

    Rate of change of position of the tool as a whole, relative to the workpiece while cutting.

  • gang cutting ( milling)

    gang cutting ( milling)

    Machining with several cutters mounted on a single arbor, generally for simultaneous cutting.

  • milling

    milling

    Machining operation in which metal or other material is removed by applying power to a rotating cutter. In vertical milling, the cutting tool is mounted vertically on the spindle. In horizontal milling, the cutting tool is mounted horizontally, either directly on the spindle or on an arbor. Horizontal milling is further broken down into conventional milling, where the cutter rotates opposite the direction of feed, or “up” into the workpiece; and climb milling, where the cutter rotates in the direction of feed, or “down” into the workpiece. Milling operations include plane or surface milling, endmilling, facemilling, angle milling, form milling and profiling.

  • swarf

    swarf

    Metal fines and grinding wheel particles generated during grinding.

  • tapping

    tapping

    Machining operation in which a tap, with teeth on its periphery, cuts internal threads in a predrilled hole having a smaller diameter than the tap diameter. Threads are formed by a combined rotary and axial-relative motion between tap and workpiece. See tap.

  • toolchanger

    toolchanger

    Carriage or drum attached to a machining center that holds tools until needed; when a tool is needed, the toolchanger inserts the tool into the machine spindle. See automatic toolchanger.

  • toolholder

    toolholder

    Secures a cutting tool during a machining operation. Basic types include block, cartridge, chuck, collet, fixed, modular, quick-change and rotating.