Just don’t Call it Vibration
The device for rapid peck cycles holds the drill like a toolholder.
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The device for rapid peck cycles holds the drill like a toolholder.
I found what seemed to be a genuinely new metalworking technology when I recently visited M4 Sciences in West Lafayette, Indiana. The company’s Modulation Assisted Machining gives the drill a rapid peck cycle. The drill doesn’t move out and in every few seconds like in a typical drilling peck cycle, but instead moves out and in as rapidly as hundreds of times per second. Broken chips flow smoothly out of the hole, and cycle time and hole quality can both improve, as this video shows. The technology applies to center drilling on Swiss-types and other small lathes.
In my conversation with the developers of the technology, I kept referring to the way the device “vibrates” the tool. They were quick to correct me. In a machining context, “vibration” is generally bad. Vibration is unintended cyclic motion—motion that impedes the cut. By contrast, the motion of this device facilitates the cut. Indeed, the motion is as controlled and intended as the motion of any programmed peck cycle. It’s just that in the case of the modulated machining, performing the peck motion very frequently and very fast takes peck drilling to an entirely different level.
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