Custom tools tackle complex aerospace applications.
As machined parts become more complex, require tighter tolerances and have higher value, the tools and processes to make them must become more sophisticated.
Aerospace components are a good example. Requirements for reliability, efficiency and performance drive aerospace part manufacturers to make them stronger, lighter and more precise, while employing advanced workpiece materials. In addition, aerospace parts are typically produced in small volumes, often from proprietary designs. Accordingly, the processes and the tools to make the parts are, in many cases, customized to their applications. According to various estimates, 75 percent or more of the tools used in certain aerospace manufacturing operations are specials.
Courtesy of B. Kennedy
The variety of carbon fiber-reinforced plastic materials and manufacturing methods used in the aerospace industry require custom-designed tool geometries, such as these compression routers from Amamco with separate sets of left- and right-hand flutes that overlap to push and then cleanly cut the material’s layers.
What exactly determines if a tool is a special is a matter for discussion. A custom tool can be an endmill with minimally altered geometries or a one-of-a-kind, massive milling cutter that starts as a blank CAD screen. Andrew Gilpin, business development manager for toolmaker Amamco Tool, Duncan, S.C., said his basic definition of a custom tool is “anything other than a traditional standard endmill or jobber length drill. You take a regular 4-flute endmill, put a 15.5mm radius on the corner, and that becomes a custom.” However, that simple definition can change.
An example would be the compression routers Amamco produces for trimming the edges of the carbon fiber-reinforced plastics applied in aerospace parts. The tools have separate sets of left- and right-hand flutes that overlap to push and then cut the composite layers cleanly.
When developing compression routers for aerospace manufacturers, Gilpin said, “The tools are definitely custom designs all the way through the R&D and the tweaking phase of the part manufacturing process. But when the aircraft goes into production, and the manufacturer starts buying the tools in mass quantities, then it’s no longer a custom tool to us; it’s a ‘standard custom tool,’ if you will.”
Even when produced in large quantities, custom tools lack the economy of scale characteristic of standard tools. John Aiello, a business development specialist and aerospace industry veteran with experience in both cutting tool manufacturing and distribution, said a part maker’s willingness to pay a premium and take advantage of specials depends largely on the shop culture.
“Standard tooling is cheaper, but there is value in the more expensive custom tools; they offer more capability,” he said. “If a shop uses the custom tools properly, their productivity can go way up and their profits can go way up too.” With many operations reluctant to make large capital purchases, a custom tool may enable a shop to increase productivity without purchasing new equipment.
Convenient vs. Custom
Convenience or complacency may also affect a shop’s decision to employ specials. Peter Diamantis, Amamco plant manager, said some shops try to make do with tools that are not customized, or optimized, for a particular operation. “They will have headaches with them, but the tools are readily available and they don’t have to wait 4 to 5 weeks to get them.”
Courtesy of Greenleaf
This special aerospace grooving tool from Greenleaf illustrates a development process that supplements detailed data regarding the specific application with information from Greenleaf 's database of previous special designs.
He pointed out that large aerospace manufacturers regularly use custom drills because they generally provide longer tool life and better hole quality, and the cost of reworking out-of-spec holes can easily exceed the custom tools’ cost. Those manufacturers plan months ahead in most cases.
However, according to Diamantis, other shops serving the aerospace industry are not as proactive with inventory. A shop may deplete its supply of a certain diameter custom drill and then rush to find a standard drill in that diameter. “They will put it out there and let the machine operator fight it because it’s convenient.”
Planning ahead can produce multiple benefits. Diamantis cited a shop that was machining a stainless steel missile component, which included drilling, reaming, counterboring and chamfering a hole with four different tools. Amamco designed and made a multifunction tool to handle all four steps in one pass. “Cycle time went from 5 minutes down to about 1½ minutes, and they don’t have to keep four different tools in inventory,” Diamantis said. The trade-off is that the shop now has to order the tools 4 weeks in advance.
While specials do require longer lead times, they help shops avoid production problems, according to Don Hughes, applications and project development engineer for toolmaker Greenleaf Corp., Saegertown, Pa. “We have witnessed instances where, due to time constraints, customers have had to dramatically alter a standard tool on their own to begin prototype production,” he said.
Courtesy of AMEC
Allied Machine & Engineering Corp. engineers custom Gen3sys combination tools like this for use in special applications in aircraft landing gear, engine components and hinges.
While the modified tool may be able to machine the prototype parts, it may not work the best, and may result in an unstable condition with a longer cycle time. In many of those cases, Hughes said, Greenleaf can analyze the application and engineer a special with the rigidity necessary for increased metal-removal rates and reliability, often utilizing Greenleaf’s WG300 or WG600 ceramic inserts or one of the company’s high-performance coated carbide grades. “We can focus on the problem features, or we can be called in at the very earliest stages of process planning,” he said. “In general, we like to be called in early so we can develop a tool layout.”
Greenleaf develops the layouts by gathering machine, part and fixturing information from the customer. Greenleaf’s design engineering department then reviews the company’s database of proven concepts for industry- similar features. Tool layouts often include multiple sheets to illustrate all the standard and special tool bodies and inserts necessary to machine various part features. “Tool layouts are a great way to communicate and brainstorm ideas back and forth between Greenleaf and our customers,” Hughes said.
Custom Timeline
Time pressures involved in the development of custom tools generally depend on when the toolmaker gets involved, according to Rob Brown, product manager at toolmaker Allied Machine & Engineering Corp., Dover, Ohio. “If you are working with the manufacturer’s R&D lab in developing the process itself, you have more time because that process has not yet been released to the floor,” he said. “But once the process has been released to the floor, they have parts to make.”
After that, the time availability “goes the other way—if they have a problem, they need a quick answer,” he said. “Then you are rushing because they have to stop production until they get the tools they need to move forward.” In problem- solving cases where tooling from another company may be involved, a toolmaker must adapt its tools to established setups, Brown noted. As for introducing custom tools for productivity improvements, he said, “Quite honestly, if they are not having problems, we can preach that we can make the hole faster but they are probably not real interested because of the issues involved in approving process changes.” After a process is approved and running, it’s locked in and manufacturers are reluctant to experiment with new tools.
Courtesy of Kennametal
Kennametal built a “tunable” milling cutter assembly to machine this aerospace component, solving a vibration problem.
Custom tool design may involve an amalgamation of several different standard products. Brown said AMEC has produced custom variations of its Gen2-TA and Gen3sys tools for the aerospace industry, involving coating and substrate changes as well as advanced geometry.
In some cases, a custom tool may be the only way to produce a complex aerospace part, according to Mark Huston, vice president, engineered solutions for toolmaker Kennametal Inc., Latrobe, Pa. For example, an aerospace manufacturer required an extended-shank milling cutter to reach around a flange and mill underneath it. The initial design’s long tool length and high forces in the cut combined to produce uncontrolled vibration. Kennametal was tasked with producing a “tunable” milling cutter assembly. In a tunable tool, a mass on the assembly’s front end is suspended between two elastomers, which can be adjusted to provide different dampening levels.
“You put the tool at the extension at which it will operate and tune it at that length-to-diameter ratio to make it dynamically stable,” Huston said. Tuning consists of striking the tool assembly with a special instrumented hammer and adjusting the dampening until unwanted vibrations are eliminated. “It works whether you are an inch into the part or 13 ' into the part because you tune the dynamics of the overhanging mass,” he said. The tunable tool solved the vibration problem.
Customs Standardized
Aerospace manufacturers can also benefit from a new approach to the idea of custom tools, according to Chris Mills, U.S. senior project manager of aerospace development for toolmaker Sandvik Coromant Co., Fair Lawn, N.J. “Our goal has been to shrink the requirement for specials in aerospace,” he said. “Because special tools are more expensive than standards and have longer lead times, customers don’t like specials.” There’s also the pioneer factor to consider: a special, by its nature, hasn’t been subject to the extensive field development of a standard, so the user is the first one to test it.
Courtesy of Sandvik Coromant
“Industry-specific” standards can provide an alternative to the longer lead times and expense of custom tools. For example, Sandvik Coromant created a list of common machining features of aerospace components and engineered this “industry-specific” standard modular toolholding blade system to machine them, eliminating the need for a custom tool in some applications.
One solution is a group of products Mills calls “industry-specific” standards. Sandvik Coromant analyzed typical aerospace components and created a list of common machining features. “The same feature may appear on different parts, so we pulled out dedicated concepts for aerospace,” Mills said. He used the company’s SL70 system as an example. “We found there was a very high requirement for specials in profile turning of large diameters with deep pockets. The SL70 system’s modular blades accept ceramic, round carbide and CoroCut grooving tools and “all these blades fit on the same adapter, and they have clearance for face grooving and internal machining, so they can go in any orientation. With a relatively small program, we’ve covered a wide range of applications; the grade and the geometry are dedicated standards for aerospace,” he said. The inserts, toolholders and adapters are standard items, available for next-day delivery compared to a 10-week lead time for a special. Industry-specific standards are also free of the exclusivity restrictions common with tools customized for one manufacturer.
Mills said an increase in the number of standard tools available for aerospace applications will benefit manufacturers. “For too long the aerospace industry has not demanded standard tools. It is a huge industry and the more they can standardize, the better they can cope with the increased volumes anticipated for the future.” CTE
About the Author: Bill Kennedy, based in Latrobe, Pa., is contributing editor for Cutting Tool Engineering. He has an extensive background as a technical writer. Contact him at (724) 537-6182 or by e-mail at billk@jwr.com.
Contributors
John Aiello
(425) 357-8607
Allied Machine & Engineering Inc.
(800) 321-5537
www.alliedmachine.com
Amamco Tool
(800) 833-2239
www.amamcotool.com
Greenleaf Corp.
(800) 458-1850
www.greenleafcorporation.com
Janicki Industries Inc.
(888) 856-5143
www.janicki.com
Kennametal Inc.
(800) 446-7738
www.kennametal.com
OSG Tap & Die Inc.
(800) 837-2223
www.osgtool.com
Sandvik Coromant Co.
(800) 726-3845
www.sandvik.coromant.com/us
Courtesy of Janicki
Janicki Industries developed 5-axis machine tools to machine tooling and parts for aerospace applications. The Janicki Mill 6, shown top, has a work envelope of 100 '×20 '×8 '. The bottom photo is a closeup view of a composite-drilling operation.
One and done holemaking
Janicki Industries Inc., Sedro-Woolley, Wash., began as a developer and producer of large, 5-axis machine tools and applied them to manufacture large tooling for boat hulls. It then began providing machining services for other industries, including aerospace. Its machining capability includes 5-axis milling that can hold 0.003 " tolerances over the entire length of its 100 ' work envelope.
Today, Janicki Industries develops and manufactures tooling for manufacturing composite parts for projects that include NASA spacecraft, the Boeing 787 and the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II. Janicki has also delved into part production in support of similar programs.
“Right now, working with Amamco Tools, we are tackling drilling and trimming composite panels for the F-35,” said Eric Friesen, program manager. “The autoclaved, cured, high-performance carbon fiber laminates are strong and difficult to cut. Lockheed Martin, Amamco and Janicki have worked closely to optimize the tooling.”
Holemaking gets special emphasis because Janicki drills thousands of holes in composites daily. Diameters range from about 0.125 " to 0.500 ", with tolerances of a few thousandths of an inch. Considering the high volume, Friesen said, “If we have to touch each hole twice, that’s huge. We have been reluctant to use piloting or drill/ream, even in the case of countersunk holes.”
To minimize tool changes, Amamco develops unique multifunction holemaking tools for Janicki. Friesen described a drill-countersink for an application where “we have to control the diameter of the hole, the angle and depth of the countersink and the concentricity of all of the above to tight tolerances.” The drill-countersink Amamco engineered for the application enables Janicki to “drill a countersunk hole in one shot, where every aspect of it is controlled to within less than 0.002 ". It’s what we’ve got to have. Drilling a thousand holes a day, one shot has been a pretty firm mandate from the beginning, and we have been able to hold to it.”
—B. Kennedy
Courtesy of OSG
Where delamination standards exist for only the exit of a hole in CFRP, OSG recommends a double-angle drill (bottom). When there are standards for both sides of the hole, it recommends a triple-angle drill (top).
Getting to the point
While aerospace manufacturing is always changing, the need for precise holemaking remains the same. “Everything in an airplane—the wings, fuselage, tail sections—has holes for fasteners, which, of course, must be drilled,” said Drew Strauchen, vice president of engineering and marketing for toolmaker OSG Tap & Die Inc., Glendale Heights, Ill. For holemaking in carbon fiber-reinforced plastics (CFRP), OSG typically provides tools in diameters ranging from about 0.050 " to 0.500 ", coated with OSG’s CVD diamond to maximize tool life in the abrasive materials. The coatings vary in thickness from about 8µm to 12µm, depending on the application and the tool size.
OSG fine-tunes geometries to the material being drilled. “Generally, we work with the end user to figure out their modes of failure and their criteria for a particular hole,” Strauchen said. “It really depends on what kind of CFRP it is, the directionality of the layered fibers and how the resin has been applied.” If the CFRP is backed with another material, such as titanium or aluminum, a compromise between geometries best suited for each material may be required.
According to Strauchen, the most common problems when drilling CFRP are oversizing or undersizing of the hole and delamination. Delamination can occur at the hole entry, exit or both, and manufacturers have different specifications for and ways of measuring its severity.
“Sometimes the material can flake away, making craters around the edge of the hole, and the manufacturer will measure the crater depth to determine if it is within standards,” Strauchen said. Other materials will roll outward at the hole exit or entrance. The combination of drill penetration force and heat separates the layers, causing the layer closest to drill entry or exit to protrude outward. “Based on the height of the protrusion, the hole will pass or fail inspection,” Strauchen said.
If the application specifies a chamfer for the entry side of the hole, there will typically be a delamination specification for only the exit side. “In those cases, we typically use a variation on a double-angle drill,” Strauchen said. “Basically, it cuts twice. The drill has a very sharp initial point angle to cut one direction of fibers; the second point angle is more gradual and is designed to shear opposing directional fibers, thereby creating a clean hole with no delamination.” When delamination specifications exist for both sides of the hole, Strauchen said, “we’ll use a triple-angle drill with specific angles designed to achieve zero delamination on both the entry and the exit of the hole.”
—B. Kennedy
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.
- chamfering
chamfering
Machining a bevel on a workpiece or tool; improves a tool’s entrance into the cut.
- chemical vapor deposition ( CVD)
chemical vapor deposition ( CVD)
High-temperature (1,000° C or higher), atmosphere-controlled process in which a chemical reaction is induced for the purpose of depositing a coating 2µm to 12µm thick on a tool’s surface. See coated tools; PVD, physical vapor deposition.
- clearance
clearance
Space provided behind a tool’s land or relief to prevent rubbing and subsequent premature deterioration of the tool. See land; relief.
- composites
composites
Materials composed of different elements, with one element normally embedded in another, held together by a compatible binder.
- computer-aided design ( CAD)
computer-aided design ( CAD)
Product-design functions performed with the help of computers and special software.
- counterboring
counterboring
Enlarging one end of a drilled hole. The enlarged hole, which is concentric with the original hole, is flat on the bottom. Counterboring is used primarily to set bolt heads and nuts below the workpiece surface.
- countersink
countersink
Tool that cuts a sloped depression at the top of a hole to permit a screw head or other object to rest flush with the surface of the 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.
- flutes
flutes
Grooves and spaces in the body of a tool that permit chip removal from, and cutting-fluid application to, the point of cut.
- gang cutting ( milling)
gang cutting ( milling)
Machining with several cutters mounted on a single arbor, generally for simultaneous cutting.
- grooving
grooving
Machining grooves and shallow channels. Example: grooving ball-bearing raceways. Typically performed by tools that are capable of light cuts at high feed rates. Imparts high-quality finish.
- 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.
- milling cutter
milling cutter
Loosely, any milling tool. Horizontal cutters take the form of plain milling cutters, plain spiral-tooth cutters, helical cutters, side-milling cutters, staggered-tooth side-milling cutters, facemilling cutters, angular cutters, double-angle cutters, convex and concave form-milling cutters, straddle-sprocket cutters, spur-gear cutters, corner-rounding cutters and slitting saws. Vertical cutters use shank-mounted cutting tools, including endmills, T-slot cutters, Woodruff keyseat cutters and dovetail cutters; these may also be used on horizontal mills. See milling.
- milling machine ( mill)
milling machine ( mill)
Runs endmills and arbor-mounted milling cutters. Features include a head with a spindle that drives the cutters; a column, knee and table that provide motion in the three Cartesian axes; and a base that supports the components and houses the cutting-fluid pump and reservoir. The work is mounted on the table and fed into the rotating cutter or endmill to accomplish the milling steps; vertical milling machines also feed endmills into the work by means of a spindle-mounted quill. Models range from small manual machines to big bed-type and duplex mills. All take one of three basic forms: vertical, horizontal or convertible horizontal/vertical. Vertical machines may be knee-type (the table is mounted on a knee that can be elevated) or bed-type (the table is securely supported and only moves horizontally). In general, horizontal machines are bigger and more powerful, while vertical machines are lighter but more versatile and easier to set up and operate.
- point angle
point angle
Included angle at the point of a twist drill or similar tool; for general-purpose tools, the point angle is typically 118°.
- tap
tap
Cylindrical tool that cuts internal threads and has flutes to remove chips and carry tapping fluid to the point of cut. Normally used on a drill press or tapping machine but also may be operated manually. See tapping.
- turning
turning
Workpiece is held in a chuck, mounted on a face plate or secured between centers and rotated while a cutting tool, normally a single-point tool, is fed into it along its periphery or across its end or face. Takes the form of straight turning (cutting along the periphery of the workpiece); taper turning (creating a taper); step turning (turning different-size diameters on the same work); chamfering (beveling an edge or shoulder); facing (cutting on an end); turning threads (usually external but can be internal); roughing (high-volume metal removal); and finishing (final light cuts). Performed on lathes, turning centers, chucking machines, automatic screw machines and similar machines.
- work envelope
work envelope
Cube, sphere, cylinder or other physical space within which the cutting tool is capable of reaching.