DWilliamA
Materials
- Oct 11, 2010
- 14
Hi, first off - I am not a machinest. I am quality guy trying to chase down an answer. from what my machinest tells me, we are doing this right... here are the details.
Extruded 6061 T6 Aluminum 3/4"x2-1/2" stock basically machined to a block shape, lots of flat shiny surfaces. Approximately 1/8" to 1/4" of material from the sides and top taken off. 4 flute cutter, 3800 rmp nice chip load the surface looks really nice - but when you look real close, really really close when the light is just right you can see what looks like a moon crater surface or orange peel surface... actually it looks like a spackle paint maybe. At a glance you see the nice subtle rainbow sheen and the miniature fly cut lines - looks nice. but upon close examination there is this bumpy spackle characteristic
Any ideas on what causes this and how to eliminate it, if possible with machining technique?
I believe that when milling - the cutter creates a shear zone and just under this shear zone is a compression zone. Its almost as if the aluminum is inconsistent in hardness and certain areas compress more than others. This situation didn't just start btw.. - so I don't think it is just bad lot of material. Its just that I am the first person to come along and try to solve the problem.
that said... this condition is causing problems, or is possibly related to problems we have later when the part is Type III hard black anodized. The same type of mottling shows up in the hard black anodize. Unfortunatley, we could hit these parts hard with the ano and etch heavy and anodize thick, but this dulls the surface. We want a nice shiney surface which takes a light anodize so to speak, which leaves the spackling intact.
different cutter - thicker extrusion and cut through more exterior material, heat treat, lower Iron levels, plate stock (if possible) ... ?????
Thank you,
David A.
Extruded 6061 T6 Aluminum 3/4"x2-1/2" stock basically machined to a block shape, lots of flat shiny surfaces. Approximately 1/8" to 1/4" of material from the sides and top taken off. 4 flute cutter, 3800 rmp nice chip load the surface looks really nice - but when you look real close, really really close when the light is just right you can see what looks like a moon crater surface or orange peel surface... actually it looks like a spackle paint maybe. At a glance you see the nice subtle rainbow sheen and the miniature fly cut lines - looks nice. but upon close examination there is this bumpy spackle characteristic
Any ideas on what causes this and how to eliminate it, if possible with machining technique?
I believe that when milling - the cutter creates a shear zone and just under this shear zone is a compression zone. Its almost as if the aluminum is inconsistent in hardness and certain areas compress more than others. This situation didn't just start btw.. - so I don't think it is just bad lot of material. Its just that I am the first person to come along and try to solve the problem.
that said... this condition is causing problems, or is possibly related to problems we have later when the part is Type III hard black anodized. The same type of mottling shows up in the hard black anodize. Unfortunatley, we could hit these parts hard with the ano and etch heavy and anodize thick, but this dulls the surface. We want a nice shiney surface which takes a light anodize so to speak, which leaves the spackling intact.
different cutter - thicker extrusion and cut through more exterior material, heat treat, lower Iron levels, plate stock (if possible) ... ?????
Thank you,
David A.