The effect of machine parameters on the surface quality in planing of rubberwood.

Some machining defects such as fuzzy grain, torn grain and chip marks often occur in Rubberwood lumbers in the planning process, and it decreases the machining yield. To understand and optimize machine-planning characteristics of this wood species, a series of experiments were carried out using a W...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Farrokhpayam, Saeid Reza, Ratnasingam, Jegatheswaran, Nazerian, Morteza, Bakar, Edi Suhaimi, Tang, Sai Hong
Format: Article
Language:English
English
Published: 2011
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/23945/1/The%20effect%20of%20machine%20parameters%20on%20the%20surface%20quality%20in%20planing%20of%20rubberwood.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/23945/
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Summary:Some machining defects such as fuzzy grain, torn grain and chip marks often occur in Rubberwood lumbers in the planning process, and it decreases the machining yield. To understand and optimize machine-planning characteristics of this wood species, a series of experiments were carried out using a Weinig Unimate 23E moulder (cutter-head rpm of 6000, cutter Ø 120 mm) to produce machined Rubberwood surface with differing depth of cut ranging from 0.8 mm to 2.4 mm, by altering the feed rate from 8 m/min to 16 m/min according to ASTMD 1666-87. The rake angle was constant at 20°. Test specimens prepared from the lumber cut tangentially from logs, were machined at 10% moisture content using HSS tools, and surface quality obtained is visually graded on a scale of 1-5 (defect free or excellent to very poor). Best surfaces resulted in the lowest machining factors among the samples, i.e with 0.8 mm depth of cut and 8 m/min feed rate. Fuzzy grain was the most frequent occurred defects, and torn grain was the deepest occurred defect. The surface quality was found not to be affected very much by the feed rate, while depth of cut significantly affected on machining defects. This research also revealed that the combination of feed rate and depth of cut on Rubberwood had no significant effect on the machined surface quality of samples.