2002
DOI: 10.1115/1.1431260
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Dynamic Behavior of a Thin-Walled Cylindrical Workpiece During the Turning Process, Part 1: Cutting Process Simulation

Abstract: From a practical point of view, in machining applications, chatter vibration constitutes a major problem during the cutting process. It is becoming increasingly difficult to suppress chatter during cutting at high speeds. Many investigators have regarded chatter vibrations as a “natural” phenomenon during the cutting process and a part of the process itself. In classical machining operations with thick-walled workpieces chatter vibrations occur when the cutting depth exceeds stability limits dependent on the m… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…As many workers [2,27,41], a cylindrical geometry of the workpiece is chosen. The BW represents the revolving part of the WTM system; it includes the holding fixture, the workpiece and the spindle (figures 3 a, b).…”
Section: Block Workpiece: Bwmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As many workers [2,27,41], a cylindrical geometry of the workpiece is chosen. The BW represents the revolving part of the WTM system; it includes the holding fixture, the workpiece and the spindle (figures 3 a, b).…”
Section: Block Workpiece: Bwmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a work of Arnold, 1961 [9] an experimental study of steel tubular parts (gun cradles) reveals multiple zones subject to vibrations during turning. In 2002, Mehdi et al [10,11] have investigated aluminum tubular parts turning via numerical or analytical part modeling and experimental tests for various cutting conditions. In 2011, Lorong et al [12] have presented an experiment accompanied with full time domain simulations featuring strong chatter and bringing forward the impact of the damping on the instability onset.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The dynamic behaviour of thin-walled cylindrical components under turning operation was studied by Mehdi et al (2002a,b), containing two parts: simulation (Mehdi et al, 2002a) and experiments (Mehdi et al, 2002b). The simulation part took into account the damping due to rubbing between the tool flank and the machined workpiece surface, and defined the parameters governing the stability of the cutting process in the case of thin-walled workpieces.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%