Need some help. Do all my threading on a G92, does anyone know an easy way to do a clip? Controls are Fanuc 21i-tb, on a l&l45-80 lathe. Thanks.
Need some help. Do all my threading on a G92, does anyone know an easy way to do a clip? Controls are Fanuc 21i-tb, on a l&l45-80 lathe. Thanks.
What is "Clipping a thread"?
What is "Clipping a thread"?
Super X3. 3600rpm. Sheridan 6"x24" Lathe + more. Three ways to fix things: The right way, the other way, and maybe your way, which is possibly a faster wrong way.
Thanks Geof.
Never too old to learn a new name.
Try the link below I ran across it the other day talks about using a G32 to do the higbee cut
http://www.practicalmachinist.com/vb.../t-121785.html
Blackbird, I thank you for the question, and thanks to the others for their replies. I learned something new today...always a pleasure. Now I will have to give it a try myself. :wee: We do lots of threading, but never had a call for this type of thread.
Can use same thread cycle. Just move your start point over 1/2 lead and shorten thread length. You can actually use a regular turning tool or I like to use grooving insert for the thread cycle on the higbee.
Thanks for the replies. We ended up using a groving tool to do it. Worked not to bad. I will look into a G32 to see if it will work. Moving the thread over 1/2 a pitch was what I wanted to do, but we weren't sure that was what the blueprint called for.
Mind telliing me what RPM you used? I tried it on a thread running at S1500 and it took 3/4 of a turn to pull out. Not acceptable! It seems to me that this would work only at very low RPMs. Rapid on our Daewoo is pretty fast. Fast enough that I always flip the switch to 50% for manually moving the turret.
Thanks.
I think the rpm we used was 200, same speed as threading.
All turning centers are going to rapid at different ipm's depending on year, make, model. I find that 50 rpm is good because You can offset your grooving tool on the X axis and it is turning slow enough that you can watch where it is on the Z axis and make your adjustments there.
Or if you aare just backing the start position off half the pitch, keep in mind that regardless of what the Z offset may be on the grooving tool it must be exactly the same as the threading tool, doing this makes a more repreatable program, just inform your operators.