• TOPICS
    • Design
    • Manufacturing
    • Inspection
    • Heat Treating
    • Lubrication
    • Materials
    • The Gear Industry
    • Gears by Type
  • MAGAZINE
    • Current Issue
    • Departments
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
  • NEWSLETTER
    • Subscribe
  • VIDEO
    • Gear Technology TV
      • Ask the Expert Live
      • Revolutions
    • Industry Videos
  • BLOGS
  • BUYER'S GUIDE
  • NEWS and EVENTS
    • Product News
    • Industry News
    • Events
  • ADVERTISING
    • Brand Awareness
      • Print: Display Advertising
      • Online: Web Banners & Keyword Banners
      • Online: Native Advertising (Sponsored Content)
      • E-mail: Custom, White Papers & Webinars
      • E-mail: Newsletter Sponsored Content (Native Advertising)
    • Response & Lead Generation
      • Online: Sponsored Content (Native Advertising)
      • E-mail: Newsletters
      • E-mail: Newsletter Sponsored Content (Native Advertising)
      • E-mail: Custom, White Papers & Webinars
      • Online: Buyers Guide
    • Print Advertising
      • Print: Display Advertising
      • Print: MPT Expo Showstoppers
      • Print: Buyers Guide
      • Print: Manufacturing sMart
      • Print: Specifications
      • MPT Expo Show Guide Advertising
    • Online Advertising
      • Online: Web Banners & Keyword Banners
      • Online: Native Advertising (Sponsored Content)
      • Online: Buyers Guide
      • Online: Specifications
    • E-mail Advertising
      • E-mail: E-Newsletters
      • E-mail: Newsletter Sponsored Content (Native Advertising)
      • E-mail: AGMA Industry News
      • E-mail: Custom, White Papers & Webinars
      • E-mail: Specifications
    • Special Promotions
      • Print: MPT Expo Showstoppers
      • Print: Buyers Guide
      • Print: Manufacturing sMart
      • MPT Expo Show Guide Advertising
    • GT India
  • CONTACT US
  • AGMA
    • Membership
    • Events
    • Education
    • Emerging Technology
    • AGMA Media
    • Standards
Subscribe
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
Home » Titanium Machining—Special Materials for Complete Machining

Titanium Machining—Special Materials for Complete Machining

Titanium%20Machining_EN.jpg
April 28, 2023

Heavy duty cutting places particular requirements on the machine and working processes. If this involves a material such as titanium, which is particularly hard to cut, specific know-how is necessary to deal with these requirements. Thanks to its expertise, WFL Millturn Technologies GmbH & Co. KG impresses in this field with a machining solution for aircraft landing gear.

The aviation industry represents an important market segment for WFL. This industrial sector increasingly requires ever more materials that are deemed to be difficult to machine. Titanium machining in particular is a field in which WFL shines with its wealth of expertise.

Material with Particular Properties

Titanium has always placed particular demands on tools and machines during the cutting process. In recent years titanium 3.7165 has become prevalent among lightweight materials as a material with outstanding properties, especially in the aviation and space industries and also in the medical sector. It is one of the most frequently used titanium alloys, containing 6% aluminium and 4% vanadium. This alloy, normally referred to as Ti6Al4V, exhibits a very good combination of strength, corrosion resistance and capacity to withstand stresses. Although this material does have good empirical values and cutting data, processing it still remains one of the supreme disciplines in machining.

The Titan of All Metals

New titanium alloys are constantly being developed for special applications and these are often on the basis of specific customer requirements. A number of WFL customers require Titanium 5553 (Ti5Al5V5Mo3Cr) for the production of landing gear in the aviation industry. This material stands out due to improved properties with regard to strength and toughness. It is also less sensitive to structural changes during heating. This material is indeed one of the real Titans in the field of machining and takes its name from Greek mythology.

Ti5553 is at present one of the hardest materials on the market to machine. A cutting speed of 45 m/min should not be exceeded when it is being processed as shear stresses of up to 2,780 N/mm² can develop at cutting speeds as low as 60 m/min.

Challenges in Titanium Machining

Problems like point heat due to poor heat conduction and associated chemical changes in the material (embrittlement at higher temperatures) and the formation of built up edges occur to a greater extent with this material than with other titanium alloys. Therefore it is particularly important that cutting speed, feed rate and penetration depth are matched to one another accurately when working with Ti 5553. The use of suitable cooling lubricants is just as important as the correct cooling strategy. A quick and continuous removal of swarf must be guaranteed; the heat dissipation occurs to a much greater extent via the tool. Removal of the forging skin, referred to as "elephant skin" by experts, is an additional challenge with this material. The upstream forging process and the resultant thermal and metallurgical influences give this skin a very high level of surface hardness.

The low modulus of elasticity means that titanium tends to evade the pressure of the tool and to fuse with the cutting edge. The machining should therefore, as already mentioned, occur at a low cutting speed but with a relatively high and even feed rate. Vibration free, clamped, sharp tools must be ensured in any case. High speed steels with a high cobalt content, carbide or Stellite are used as cutting materials.

Experience is the Decisive Factor

All this shows that titanium calls for a lot of experience in the selection and use of the tools as well as the machining strategies.

It is essential that the ability to cater for critical aspects of machining during manufacture is demonstrated as early as the design phase. For example it is necessary to take into consideration the fact that different material thicknesses in the blank workpiece require modified machining strategies. Heat affected zones must also be taken into consideration together with the cutting forces which occur.

Materials which are hard to cut like titanium have influenced the development of the WFL machines. WFL provides individual solutions for exactly these kind of demanding applications. These also cover aspects such as cooling and production strategy as well as the actual machine.

"In order to be able to offer WFL customers reliable solutions, WFL has developed components which make it possible for us to match the design of the machine precisely to the relevant application case." – Reinhard Koll, Head of Application Engineering WFL.

wfl.at


Milling Cutters Milling Product News
KEYWORDS WFL Millturn Technologies
  • Related Articles

    Cincinnati Machine’s New Five-Axis HMC Optimized for Titanium Machining

    WFL Offers Variety of Measuring Tasks for Complete Machining

    Marposs Announces Special Edition Laser Tool Setter for Ultrasonic Machining

  • Related Events

    Precision Machining Technology Show 2017

    Precision Machining Technology Show

    Makino's 5-Axis Machining Solutions Webinar

Free Gear Technology Subscriptions
Subscribe
Free Gear Technology Subscriptions
Subscribe
FEATURED VIDEO
  • Gear Milling with Seco Tools
June 23, 2022
RECOMMENDED
  • Take Control of Quenching

    April 14, 2023
    gt0323_Page_35_Image_0002.jpg
  • What’s Happening in Heat Treating?

    April 14, 2023
    gt0323_Page_24_Image_0002.jpg
  • Maximizing Wind Turbine Gearbox Performance with Advanced Engineering Simulation

    April 14, 2023
    gt0323_Page_30_Image_0001.jpg
  • Noise Analysis for e-Drive Gears and In-Process Gear Inspection

    May 22, 2023
    gt0523_Page_28_Image_0001.jpg
  • Technology Advances for Continuous Generating Gear Grinding in EV and More

    May 22, 2023
    gt0523_Page_25_Image_0004.jpg
  • Noise Analysis for e-Drive Gears and In-Process Gear Inspection

    May 22, 2023
    gt0523_Page_28_Image_0001.jpg
  • Technology Advances for Continuous Generating Gear Grinding in EV and More

    May 22, 2023
    gt0523_Page_25_Image_0004.jpg
  • Take Control of Quenching

    April 14, 2023
    gt0323_Page_35_Image_0002.jpg
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Contribute
  • AGMA
Powered byAGMA
Copyright © 2023 Gear Technology
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact