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High Speed Machining Unlocks Huge Productivity for Brass

A new study reveals how U.S. machine shops can ramp up production speeds on brass parts with no loss of workpiece quality or tool life.

Posted: October 25, 2018

U.S. machine shops with current or pending investments in machine tool upgrades can ramp up production speeds on brass parts with no loss of workpiece quality or tool life. These findings come from a recent study commissioned by the Copper Development Association Inc. (Birmingham, MI), which also found that current handbook values dramatically underestimate brass machining speeds and feeds.

Many manufacturers undershoot the machining capabilities of brass by up to 85 percent and have yet to benefit from the economic advantages they can realize through high speed machining. For example, single-point turning on modern CNC machine tools can remove the same amount of brass up to 20 times faster than conventional machining rates applied on cam-operated screw machines. Even on a vertical machining center at speeds exceeding 16,500 rpm, brass produced little wear on carbide tools, yielding good surface finish and excellent chip control throughout more than four hours of continuous turning. From an efficiency standpoint, production tests also showed that brass requires significantly less power per material removal rate than both free-machining steel and stainless steel. A drilling test completed 1,000 holes in brass eight times faster than in stainless steel after optimizing machining parameters and cutting tools for both materials.

Brass allows manufacturers to take full advantage of today’s advanced machine tool capabilities, enabling shops to produce more parts in less time and with potentially lower per-part costs. Along with these production advantages, brass also offers 100 percent recyclability with full reuse of chips and scrap, which shops often sell back to raw material producers for 75 to 90 percent of the original brass value. Brass thus offers a favorable net material cost and a lighter environmental footprint compared to other machinable metals. For machine shops with high speed equipment already on the floor, brass represents an opportunity to capture new profits they might otherwise miss with other materials.

www.copper.org

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