Micro
Mechanical Deburring and Polishing
by
A F Kenton
Downsizing,
I suspect that everyone knows what this word means. Presently it
is a trend for company and/or employee reductions. In the mechanical
mass finishing industry this is the trend in part size and processing
of high tech small parts. In both applications, the work and / or
situation invokes apprehension.
Normally, small parts are associated with the jewelry industry.
But the demands of high tech electronic and medical industries have
much more intricate and delicate parts than the jewelry industry.
Besides size, there is the added demand to deburr and polish these
parts while maintaining tight dimensional tolerances. Parts must
fit, form and function. Also, more surface refinement is necessary
as people learn more about the hazards of micro-organisms. It is
not just a matter of deburring sharp edges, but of eliminating the
surface variations that allow foreign matter to reside on the surface.
Small
is a relative term. For clarification, small is anything less than
a half-inch square or in diameter. One exception to this rule is
flat parts. These creatures behave similarly to small parts, even
if they exceed two or more inches and 1/16 inch in thickness.
Mass
finishing has been regarded as rough and dirty technology because
there are no inherent measuring devices or computers built into
this type of equipment. Rather, the systems rely on the variable
elements of media, compound, equipment and time cycles. Therefore,
the operator’s knowledge of these factors is critical to the
outcome of the overall process or finished part. These variables
are why most companies would rather not become involved in mass
finishing. However, they are extremely efficient systems when operated
correctly.
Most
mass-finishing systems use water with either a plastic or ceramic
preformed media having uniform size, which is formulated for deburring
or polishing machined parts. The larger the size of the media and
/or grain size within the media matrix, the faster the media will
work to remove the burr and modify the part’s surface. What
prevents you from using the largest size media are the part size
and configuration. Unless the media can contact all the surface
features that have to be worked, size is incidental and detrimental.
Any media with a grain size of 120 grit or smaller is usually too
small to deburr and be effective in a reasonable time period of
four or five days.
There
are now three generations or mass-finishing equipment in use. They
are the barrel, vibratory and centrifugal systems, listed in order
of oldest to newest and slowest to fastest. Each system has advantages
and disadvantages. Because time is money, the trend is toward the
newer centrifugal systems with automatic unloading systems. They
are expensive, but they are efficient. The barrel system still produces
good looking parts, and the vibratory systems have good unloading
systems.
As for negatives, some of the centrifugal disc-type finishing systems
may have problems with media or parts less and 0.02 inch. The centrifugal
barrel systems do not have this problem. Vibratory systems, or any
system with drain plugs, also have problems with small hole openings
and need to be sealed, if the parts or media are smaller that the
drain holes. Normal barrel type systems are simply slow.
To
deburr or polish a small part requires much longer time cycles than
larger parts using media smaller than the part. You cannot us most
water and chemically enhanced processes. In nearly all cases, water
acts like an adhesive. Flat parts “glue” themselves
together and ride up the machine’s interior wall. This causes
non-uniformity of finishes in a batch-type process.
To
process small parts in mass finishing equipment, it is recommended
that you use only dry organic media systems. Surprisingly, dry organic
materials of wood, shell or cob, when combined with roughs and/
or grits, work well on small parts. The finer the media, the longer
the time cycle. In order to speed up processing, these media systems
are formulated like and epoxy with a Part A and B. This is the same
principle used by buffing wheels. The wheel (part A) provides the
energy to the rough (part B) which does the actual work.
Dry
organic materials are usually mixed in a ratio of five parts of
an organic or inorganic shape to one part of an organic sawdust
compound blend. However, with very small parts, the use of all of
part B is not uncommon. With usage, the part B breaks down and/
or needs to be replaced; therefore it is recommended you add a handful
of part B to every new batch of parts to be processed. In some cases,
a liquid additive can be used to recharge this mix. Also, because
of this breakdown, keep a cover on the machine. This keeps down
the dust and retains heat that speeds up the polishing process.
There
are occasions where dry inorganic grits can be used effectively
as well as abrasive preforms down to two mm in size. Some preform
spheres even go down to a 30-60 mesh and do a nice job of material
removal. Aluminum oxides are popular for deburring and polishing;
however, this does not seem to work as well as garnet or zirconium
for deburring. Soft metal parts of aluminum, pewter or lead requires
soft abrasive and polishing mixes with corn cob as the primary ingredient.
Stainless steel and/or steels with Rockwell hardness or more than
50 on the B scale usually require much harder, coarser media that
may contain walnut shell.
If
you use a two-part dry organic mix, you can save yourself problems
if you take care in your media selection. You do not want a mix
in which your compound is smaller than the part and the part A pusher
is larger than the part. In the latter situation, you will have
to do a double screen separation operation. The most efficient media
separation system is to have parts larger than the media, because
there are no effective reverse parts separation problems. A reverse
system would still have the problems of achieving 100 pct
surface contact.
Part
separation is one of the most important and time consuming aspects
of small-parts processing. Accountability and material handling
can be a major headache. If parts are less and 0.06 inch, forget
picking them out by hand. You need a screen separation system and
that usually means a secondary material handling operation.
Some
mass-finishing machines have built-in separation systems or are
automated to dump into a screen system. With very small parts these
screens become specialized and awkward. There is a patented separation
system, the Inseparator, that can separate out parts down to 0.03
inch and in less than one min with 100 pct separation, provided
the media is smaller than the part.
Because
we are dealing with dry processes, it is suggested that you clean
your parts after processing. Ultrasonic systems seem to work best
for small particle removal. However, water-based systems may not
be wet enough to clean effectively. Deionized water may be more
effective than water. Be careful of chemical additives. Any product
with a pH of 10.5 or higher or 4.5 or lower may etch the parts.
Small
parts require different approaches, even though the results are
the same.
• Nova Finishing Systems Inc., manufactures small, heavy-duty
bowl finishers that stack up to most of the big equipment on the
market, but cost much less. Nova series vibratory equipment also
comes with the same warranties of the larger machines. Form more
information on this equipment line, contact:
Nova
Finishing
PO
Box 185, Hatboro, PA 19040 * 1610 Republic Rd. Huntingdon Valley,
PA. 19006
215-942-4474
* 800-444-4159 * Fax 215-953-1342
sales@novafinishing.com
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