Proceedings of the 1996 IEEE IECON. 22nd International Conference on Industrial Electronics, Control, and Instrumentation
DOI: 10.1109/iecon.1996.570604
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CAD/CAM solutions for efficient machining of turbo machinery components by Sturz milling method

Abstract: Rapid developments in the fields of engineering and

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Cited by 8 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…In the Sturz milling method (Tigran and Schnider, 2001), a constant Sturz angle (an inclined tool axis angle in the direction of the milling path) to machine a surface, or a tilt angle (angle between tool axis in the milling direction and perpendicular to the milling direction) is used for machining of blade surfaces. In general, it gives a more feasible or cost‐effective solution for the production of turbomachinery components (Madhavulu et al , 1996). It is claimed that the resulting milling path widths are for general freeform surface cases, relatively far from the optimum.…”
Section: Machining Methods Of Bladesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the Sturz milling method (Tigran and Schnider, 2001), a constant Sturz angle (an inclined tool axis angle in the direction of the milling path) to machine a surface, or a tilt angle (angle between tool axis in the milling direction and perpendicular to the milling direction) is used for machining of blade surfaces. In general, it gives a more feasible or cost‐effective solution for the production of turbomachinery components (Madhavulu et al , 1996). It is claimed that the resulting milling path widths are for general freeform surface cases, relatively far from the optimum.…”
Section: Machining Methods Of Bladesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such a strategy to mill the two surfaces of a blade together was also proposed by Madhavulu et al [11] in 1996. In their work a Kaplan blade was machined with spiral tool paths generated by using a template of Unigraphics.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…In addition, high-efficiency machining of turbine blades requires the two opposite sides of one blade to be machined continuously in the same operational step of processing each individual blade [10]. Such a strategy to mill the two surfaces of a blade together was also proposed by Madhavulu et al [11] in 1996. In their work a Kaplan blade was machined with spiral tool paths generated by using a template of Unigraphics.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the previously mentioned methods are global optimization for the 5-axis toolpath and usually use iterative algorithm 2,3,12 or nonlinear programming method 11 to conduct the optimization solution. Due to the efficient topology, 13 the spiral contouring toolpath is the most commonly utilized path mode for the abrupt curvature parts machining, such as turbine blade and fixed guide vane. In this path mode, the surface of machined parts is enveloped by only one continuous spiral curves containing tens of thousands or more discrete tool positions in the surface finish machining stages.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%