Lathe Machine Assignment
Lathe Machine Assignment
SUBMITTED BY:
RAKESH KUMAR(1120259)
BHIMSAIN(1120258)
SECTION D-2
INTRODUCTION
A lathe is a machine tool which rotates the
workpiece on its axis to perform various operations
such as cutting,sanding, knurling, drilling,
or deformation with tools that are applied to the
workpiece to create an object which
has symmetryabout an axis of rotation.
LATHE ACCESORIES:
• Four-jaw chuck:
• Used mainly for holding irregular shapes.
• Collet chuck:
• Primarily used for small round work pieces
• Three-jaw chuck:
LATHE OPERATIONS:
• Turning:
This operation is one of the most basic machining
processes. That is, the part is rotated while a
single point cutting tool is moved parallel to the
axis of rotation. Turning can be done on the
external surface of the part as well as internally
(boring). The starting material is generally a
workpiece generated by other processes such as
casting, forging, extrusion, or drawing.
Tapered turning
a) from the compound slide b) from taper turning
attachment c) using a hydraulic copy attachment d)
using a C.N.C. lathe e) using a form tool f) by the
offsetting of the tailstock - this method more
suited for shallow tapers
Spherical generation
The proper expression for making or turning a
shape is to generate as in to generate a form
around a fixed axis of revolution. a) using hydraulic
copy attachment b) C.N.C. (computerised
numerically controlled) lathe c) using a form tool (a
rough and ready method) d) using bed jig (need
drawing to explain
Hard turning
Hard turning is a turning done on materials with a
Rockwell C hardness greater than 45. It is typically
performed after the workpiece is heat treated.
The process is intended to replace or limit
traditional grinding operations. Hard turning, when
applied for purely stock removal purposes,
competes favorably with rough grinding. However,
when it is applied for finishing where form and
dimension are critical, grinding is superior. Grinding
produces higher dimensional accuracy of roundness
and cylindricity. In addition, polished surface
finishes of Rz=0.3-0.8z cannot be achieved with
hard turning alone. Hard turning is appropriate for
parts requiring roundness accuracy of 0.5-12
micrometres, and/or surface roughness of Rz 0.8–
7.0 micrometres. It is used for gears, injection
pump components, hydraulic components, among
other applications.
(turning)
• Facing:
It is part of the turning process. It involves
moving the cutting tool at right angles to the
axis of rotation of the rotating workpiece. This
can be performed by the operation of the
cross-slide, if one is fitted, as distinct from the
longitudinal feed (turning). It is frequently the
first operation performed in the production of
the workpiece, and often the last- hence the
phrase “ending up”.
(facing)
• Parting:
This process is used to create deep grooves
which will remove a completed or part-complete
component from its parent stock.
(parting)
• Grooving:
It is like parting, except that grooves are cut
to a specific depth by a form tool instead of
severing a completed/part-complete component
from the stock
Grooving can be performed on internal and
external surfaces
(grooving)
• Screw cutting :
Both standard and non-standard screw threads
can be turned on a lathe using an appropriate
cutting tool. (Usually having a 60, or 55° nose
angle
• Chamfering:
(chamfered piece)