DennisD
Mechanical
- Jan 3, 2000
- 42
I have recently seen several references to sheet metal flat patterns, in particular, flat pattern calculations. The common techniques for calculating "accurate" flat patterns involve using bend deduction tables or the K-factor. Very often what people use is some general data that may or may not be close enough.
Since we design parts for others to fabricate our procedure is to detail the finished part that we want, including the bend radius, and hold the fabricator responsible for achieving that part. We do, however, provide a dimensioned flat pattern "For Reference Only". We clearly mark this flat pattern sheet as such and we reiterate the material, thickness, bend radii, and the K-factor we used to calculate the flat. Often a fabricator will make their adjustments to our flat pattern. (We also make the flat pattern as a sanity check on our part design.)
Our preference for calculating flat patterns is to use the K-factor. It is dimensionless so metric/inch is not an issue (as it can be with the bend deduction tables). We have had several folks conduct some cursory research and (not surprisingly) come up with different results. The Machinery's Handbook has good information but it is too general for our satisfaction.
We have learned this much:
1. K-factors are a function of inside bend radius and material thickness.
2. K-factors are also a function of material type.
Since our press brakes (in-house and at our other vendors) have a set of standard bend tools and since the available materials come in standardized thickensses, we have set up a simple table in Excel. The rows list the standard bend radii, the columns list the standard thicknesses for the materials (aluminum, cold-rolled, stainless, etc.). The table is populated with the appropriate K-factor.
We are currently using a table populated with values that one of our production engineers came up with based on his interpretation of his research. His data is in some dispute but nobody else either has done the homework or has the 'nads to stand up to this guy.#-) I identified a procedure whereby a set of parts would be measuremed before and after a set of various bends were made to verify the K-factor data, but you can only lead a horse to water. (We are in different departments and I have no authority over him. That's my excuse and I'm stickin' to it!)
I am asking two things with this post:
1. For those of you using K-factors, especially those of you having to actually make the parts, what are you using for the K-factors? How have you developed/verified this data?
2. Which of you clever I API programmers can make a routine that will read the material from the part file property and the bend radius from the sheetmetal information and stuff the K-factor with the appropriate value from the table? 100 points to the first person to come up with this!!
- - -Dennis D.
Since we design parts for others to fabricate our procedure is to detail the finished part that we want, including the bend radius, and hold the fabricator responsible for achieving that part. We do, however, provide a dimensioned flat pattern "For Reference Only". We clearly mark this flat pattern sheet as such and we reiterate the material, thickness, bend radii, and the K-factor we used to calculate the flat. Often a fabricator will make their adjustments to our flat pattern. (We also make the flat pattern as a sanity check on our part design.)
Our preference for calculating flat patterns is to use the K-factor. It is dimensionless so metric/inch is not an issue (as it can be with the bend deduction tables). We have had several folks conduct some cursory research and (not surprisingly) come up with different results. The Machinery's Handbook has good information but it is too general for our satisfaction.
We have learned this much:
1. K-factors are a function of inside bend radius and material thickness.
2. K-factors are also a function of material type.
Since our press brakes (in-house and at our other vendors) have a set of standard bend tools and since the available materials come in standardized thickensses, we have set up a simple table in Excel. The rows list the standard bend radii, the columns list the standard thicknesses for the materials (aluminum, cold-rolled, stainless, etc.). The table is populated with the appropriate K-factor.
We are currently using a table populated with values that one of our production engineers came up with based on his interpretation of his research. His data is in some dispute but nobody else either has done the homework or has the 'nads to stand up to this guy.#-) I identified a procedure whereby a set of parts would be measuremed before and after a set of various bends were made to verify the K-factor data, but you can only lead a horse to water. (We are in different departments and I have no authority over him. That's my excuse and I'm stickin' to it!)
I am asking two things with this post:
1. For those of you using K-factors, especially those of you having to actually make the parts, what are you using for the K-factors? How have you developed/verified this data?
2. Which of you clever I API programmers can make a routine that will read the material from the part file property and the bend radius from the sheetmetal information and stuff the K-factor with the appropriate value from the table? 100 points to the first person to come up with this!!
- - -Dennis D.