Lesson 1Workhardening, built-up edge (BUE), and effects on tool life and surface finishDis section examine workhardening an built-up edge in 6061, explain how dem arise an damage tool an finish. Yuh wi learn parameter, geometry, an coolant adjustment dat limit BUE, rubbing, an premature edge failure.
Mechanisms of workhardening in 6061How BUE initiate pon cutting edgeEffects pon tool wear an chippingSurface finish an dimensional errorParameter change fi reduce BUETool an coolant choice fi limit BUELesson 2Selecting tool materials and coatings for aluminum (carbide, uncoated vs DLC/AlTiN)Here yuh wi compare carbide grade an coating option fi aluminum 6061. Di section explain when fi use uncoated, DLC, or AlTiN tool, consider adhesion, heat, built-up edge, an cost in both dry an coolant-assisted milling.
Micrograin carbide grade fi aluminumUncoated tool an adhesion behaviorDLC coating fi abrasive or dry cuttingWhen AlTiN acceptable pon aluminumCoating impact pon heat an chip flowCost versus performance trade-offLesson 3Coolant and lubrication strategies for aluminum (flood coolant, mist, or dry with lubricant)Here yuh wi compare coolant an lubrication method fi 6061, including flood, mist, MQL, an near-dry cutting. Di section cover heat removal, chip flushing, safety, an how lubrication reduce built-up edge an improve surface finish.
Flood coolant flow an nozzle aimingMist an MQL setup considerationDry cutting wid external lubricantCoolant chemistry fi aluminum alloyManaging foaming an corrosion riskCoolant maintenance an filtrationLesson 4Choosing number of flutes and tool diameters trade-offs for chip evacuation and spindle powerHere yuh wi learn how flute count an tool diameter affect chip evacuation, spindle load, an stability in 6061. Di section guide selection of 2, 3, or 4 flute an diameter sizing fi slotting, roughing, an finishing operation.
Two-flute tool fi chip evacuationThree-flute cutter fi roughing 6061Four-flute tool fi finishing passDiameter choice versus spindle powerChip packing an slotting behaviorBalancing rigidity an reach needLesson 5Metallurgical properties of aluminum 6061 relevant to milling (strength, thermal conductivity, chip formation)Yuh wi study di metallurgical trait of 6061 dat affect milling, including strength, hardness, thermal conductivity, an chip formation. Di section link temper, heat generation, an chip shape to tool wear, chatter, an surface finish.
6061 composition an common temperYield strength an machinability linkThermal conductivity an heat flowChip formation an chip thicknessEffect of temper pon burr an finishResidual stress an part distortionLesson 6Tool life estimation and monitoring methods for batch productionDis section present method fi estimate an monitor tool life in batch production. Yuh wi use wear criteria, Taylor equation, counter, an in-process signal fi schedule tool change an avoid scrap or catastrophic failure.
Tool wear type an failure modeDefining end-of-life wear criteriaBasic Taylor tool life equation useUsing part an time based counterSpindle load an vibration monitoringTool life tracking in CNC controlLesson 7Recommended tool types and sizes for pocketing and holemaking: face mills, flat end mills, slotters, drill vs annular cutter vs helical interpolationDis section detail tool type an size fi pocketing an holemaking in 6061. Yuh wi compare face mill, end mill, slotter, drill, annular cutter, an helical interpolation, focusing pon rigidity, chip evacuation, an cycle time.
Face mill sizing fi surfacing 6061Flat end mill fi pocket an slotHigh-feed an slotting strategyTwist drill versus annular cutterHelical interpolation fi precise boreTool length an rigidity selectionLesson 8Tool geometry for aluminum: helix angle, rake, margin, polished flutes to prevent BUEDis section explain cutter geometry feature dat improve aluminum machining. Yuh wi learn how helix angle, rake, margin width, an polished flute influence cutting force, chip evacuation, an resistance to built-up edge in 6061.
High rake angle fi free cuttingHelix angle choice fi 6061Margin width an tool guidancePolished flute an chip evacuationCorner prep an edge hone sizeGeometry fi reduce built-up edgeLesson 9Climb vs conventional milling in aluminum: advantages, when to use eachYuh wi compare climb an conventional milling strategy in aluminum 6061. Di section explain chip thickness profile, tool deflection, backlash concern, an when each method preferred fi roughing, finishing, an thin-walled part.
Chip thickness in climb vs conventionalBacklash an machine condition limitRoughing strategy selection in 6061Finishing pass an wall stabilityTool deflection an dimensional errorEntry, exit, an workholding effectLesson 10Typical feed, speed, and depth-of-cut ranges for roughing and finishing aluminum 6061 (tabulated for common tool diameters)Dis section define practical starting feed, speed, an depth of cut fi roughing an finishing 6061. Yuh wi compare range by tool diameter, operation type, an machine rigidity, then learn how fi adjust safely from tabulated value.
Roughing vs finishing parameter objectiveTabulated range by tool diameterAdjusting fi spindle power an rigidityEffect of radial vs axial engagementChip load per tooth an feedrate mathScaling value fi small an large tool