Citizen of the Stars
Materials
- Apr 11, 2023
- 3
I am tasked with purchasing a shearing machine that will help my lab cut coupons for tensile and quality testing but I am scared to death that I'll buy a machine that will introduce significant bending, chamfering, or twisting.
I need the coupons that I cut to be flat or as close to flat without introducing work hardening or deflection. I will be working with mostly aluminum Series 3000, 5000, and 6000 with different heat treatments. I believe that the most aggressive aluminum I work with consistently would be 6061-T6 @ 3.5mm thickness, 38.1mm x 101.6mm.
I've just been cutting these up on a band saw and grinding away (slowly!) the burrs, which takes up a lot of my day.
The machines I'm looking at have an adjustable rake angle which I can move to better suit the materials ultimate shear strength but the higher the angle, the higher probability of bending.
So my questions today are:
1) Would a machine with a higher tonnage effectively shear a flat sheet at a lower rake angle? Is that line of thinking correct?
2) When calculating the force needed to shear, do I factor in the cross sectional area of the WHOLE sheet or just at the length of blade contact?
3) Are there any tricks of the trade that I can incorporate to reduce bending and work hardening?
Any help from fellow coupon makers would be amazing. Thanks in advance.
This is also my first post on this forum. Let me know anything I'm doing wrong and I will correct it.
I need the coupons that I cut to be flat or as close to flat without introducing work hardening or deflection. I will be working with mostly aluminum Series 3000, 5000, and 6000 with different heat treatments. I believe that the most aggressive aluminum I work with consistently would be 6061-T6 @ 3.5mm thickness, 38.1mm x 101.6mm.
I've just been cutting these up on a band saw and grinding away (slowly!) the burrs, which takes up a lot of my day.
The machines I'm looking at have an adjustable rake angle which I can move to better suit the materials ultimate shear strength but the higher the angle, the higher probability of bending.
So my questions today are:
1) Would a machine with a higher tonnage effectively shear a flat sheet at a lower rake angle? Is that line of thinking correct?
2) When calculating the force needed to shear, do I factor in the cross sectional area of the WHOLE sheet or just at the length of blade contact?
3) Are there any tricks of the trade that I can incorporate to reduce bending and work hardening?
Any help from fellow coupon makers would be amazing. Thanks in advance.
This is also my first post on this forum. Let me know anything I'm doing wrong and I will correct it.