shinjukus
Mechanical
- Jan 11, 2010
- 3
Hi Guys,
I have a product which is a honeycomb shape with lots of round blind holes. The quality issue that I am facing right now is that I am seeing void (some can be as big as 5mm long and 2mm wide) on the vertical side wall of a random blind hole.
I did a search and found that to reduce such defect, it is recommended to
1) Apply cutting fluids by drip, mist or through the tool to minimize the machine fluids present. Avoid flood application. Use air or vacuum to remove chips.
2) Use low viscosity, low surface tension fluids that will drain easily.
Questions:
1) Is this defect (void in blind hole) inherent in the blind hole process?
2) Should I drill a pilot hole first before the blind hole process in order to eliminate these void?
Thanks.
I have a product which is a honeycomb shape with lots of round blind holes. The quality issue that I am facing right now is that I am seeing void (some can be as big as 5mm long and 2mm wide) on the vertical side wall of a random blind hole.
I did a search and found that to reduce such defect, it is recommended to
1) Apply cutting fluids by drip, mist or through the tool to minimize the machine fluids present. Avoid flood application. Use air or vacuum to remove chips.
2) Use low viscosity, low surface tension fluids that will drain easily.
Questions:
1) Is this defect (void in blind hole) inherent in the blind hole process?
2) Should I drill a pilot hole first before the blind hole process in order to eliminate these void?
Thanks.