Experiment-1: Study of Grinding Machine and It's Operations
Experiment-1: Study of Grinding Machine and It's Operations
Experiment-1: Study of Grinding Machine and It's Operations
The grinding process consists of removing material from the workpiece by the use of a rotating wheel that
has a surface composed of abrasive grains. Grinding is considered to be the most accurate of the existing
machining processes, Grinding processes are used when high accuracies, close dimensional tolerances, and
a fine surface finishes are required. Grinding processes also allow for high production rates. This allows
for a lowered cost of production. Hard materials can also be machined.
Internal grinding is used to grind the inside diameter of the workpiece. Tapered holes can be ground
with the use of internal grinders that can swivel ion the horizontal.
Cylindrical grinding is also called center-type grinding and is used in the removing the cylindrical surfaces
and shoulders of the workpiece. Both the tool and the workpiece are rotated by separate motors and at
different speeds. The axes of rotation tool can be adjusted to produce a variety if shapes.
Common Grinding Wheels: A grinding wheel is made of abrasive grains held together by a bond. These
grains cut like teeth when the wheel is revolved at high speed and is brought to bear against a work piece.
The properties of a wheel that determine how it acts are the kind and size of abrasive how closely the grains
are packed together and amount if the bonding material.
Experiment-2:
Study of Electric Arc welding and It’s Operaion
Arc welding is a type of welding that uses a welding power supply to create an electric arc between
an electrode and the base material to melt the metals at the welding point. They can use either
direct (DC) or alternating (AC) current, and consumable or non-consumable electrodes. The
welding region is usually protected by some type of shielding gas, vapor, or slag. Arc welding
processes may be manual, semi-automatic, or fully automated. First developed in the late part of
the 19th century, arc welding became commercially important in shipbuilding during the Second
World War. Today it remains an important process for the fabrication of steel structures and
vehicles.
In arc welding, the intense heat needed to melt metal is produced by an electric arc. The arc is
formed between the actual work and an electrode (stick or wire) that is manually or mechanically
guided along the joint. The electrode can either be a rod with the purpose of simply carrying the
current between the tip and the work. Or, it may be a specially prepared rod or wire that not only
conducts the current but also melts and supplies filler metal to the joint.
The basic arc-welding circuit is illustrated in Fig. 1. An AC or DC power source, fitted with
whatever controls may be needed, is connected by a work cable to the workpiece and by a "hot"
cable to an electrode holder of some type, which makes an electrical contact with the welding
electrode.An arc is created across the gap when the energized circuit and the electrode tip touches
the workpiece and is withdrawn, yet still with in close contact.
The arc produces a temperature of about 6500ºF at the tip. This heat melts both the base metal and
the electrode, producing a pool of molten metal sometimes called a "crater." The crater solidifies
behind the electrode as it is moved along the joint. The result is a fusion bond.
Arc Shielding
However, joining metals requires more than moving an electrode along a joint. Metals at high
temperatures tend to react chemically with elements in the air - oxygen and nitrogen. When metal
in the molten pool comes into contact with air, oxides and nitrides form which destroy the strength
and toughness of the weld joint. Therefore, many arc-welding processes provide some means of
covering the arc and the molten pool with a protective shield of gas, vapor, or slag. This is called
arc shielding. This shielding prevents or minimizes contact of the molten metal with air. Shielding
also may improve the weld. An example is a granular flux, which actually adds deoxidizers to the
weld.
Fig. 2 This shows how the coating on a coated (stick) electrode provides a gaseous
shield around the arc and a slag covering on the hot weld deposit.
Figure 2 illustrates the shielding of the welding arc and molten pool with a Stick electrode. The
extruded covering on the filler metal rod, provides a shielding gas at the point of contact while the
slag protects the fresh weld from the air.
Welding Joints:
Because many common welding procedures involve an open electric arc or flame, the risk of burns
from heat and sparks is significant. To prevent them, welders wear protective clothing in the form
of heavy leathergloves and protective long sleeve jackets to avoid exposure to extreme heat,
flames, and sparks.
Eye damage
Auto darkening welding hood with 90×110 mm cartridge and 3.78×1.85 in viewing area
Exposure to the brightness of the weld area leads to a condition called arc eye in which ultraviolet
light causes inflammation of the cornea and can burn the retinas of the eyes. Welding goggles and
helmets with dark face plates—much darker than those in sunglasses or oxy-fuel goggles—are
worn to prevent this exposure.
Safety issues
Welding safety checklist
Welding can be a dangerous and unhealthy practice without the proper precautions; however, with
the use of new technology and proper protection the risks of injury or death associated with
welding can be greatly reduced.
Experiment-3:
Study of TIG & MIG welding and It’s Operation
OBJECTIVE
▪
Become familiar with Tungsten Inert Gas (TIG) & Metal Inert Gas(MIG) welding processes
▪
The TIG, MIG welding equipment, related tools and the essential process safety considerations
▪
Types of work materials, filler rods, shielding gases etc.
BACKGROUND
Solid materials need to be joined together in order that they may be fabricated into useful shapes
for various applications such as industrial, commercial, domestic, art ware and other uses.
Depending on the material and the application, different joining processes are adopted such as,
mechanical (bolts, rivets etc.), chemical (adhesive) or thermal (welding, brazing or soldering).
Thermal processes are extensively used for joining of most common engineering materials,
namely, metals.
WELDING PROCESSES
Tungsten Inert Gas (TIG): Tungsten Inert Gas (TIG) or Gas tungsten arc welding (GTAW) is an
arc welding process that uses a non-consumable tungsten electrode and an inert gas for arc
shielding. Under the correct conditions, the electrode does not melt, although the work does at the
point where the arc contacts and produces a weld pool. The TIG process can be implemented with
or without a filler metal. Figure 1 illustrates the latter case.When a filler metal is used, it is added
to the weld pool from a separate rod or wire, being melted by the heat of the arc rather than
transferred across the arc as in the consumable electrode arc welding processes. Tungsten is a good
electrode material due to its high melting point of 34100C (61700F).
Since tungsten is sensitive to oxygen in the air, good shielding with oxygen-free gas is required.
Typical shielding gases include argon, helium, or a mixture of these gas elements. TIG welding is
easily performed on a variety of materials, from steel and its alloys to aluminum, magnesium,
copper, brass, nickel, titanium, etc. Virtually any metal that is conductive lends itself to being
welded using GTAW. Its clean, high-quality welds often require little or no post-weld finishing.
This method produces the finest, strongest welds out of all the welding processes. However, it’s
also one of the slower methods of arc welding.
Consumable electrode methods
Main articles: Shielded metal arc welding, Gas metal arc welding, Flux-cored arc welding and Submerged
arc welding
One of the most common types of arc welding is shielded metal arc welding (SMAW), which is
also known as manual metal arc welding (MMAW) or stick welding. An electric current is used to
strike an arc between the base material and a consumable electrode rod or stick. The electrode rod
is made of a material that is compatible with the base material being welded and is covered with a
flux that gives off vapors that serve as a shielding gas and provide a layer of slag, both of which
protect the weld area from atmospheric contamination. The electrode core itself acts as filler
material, making a separate filler unnecessary. The process is very versatile, requiring little
operator training and inexpensive equipment.
It is a variation of the GMAW technique. FCAW wire is actually a fine metal tube filled with
powdered flux materials. An externally supplied shielding gas is sometimes used, but often the
flux itself is relied upon to generate the necessary protection from the atmosphere. The process is
widely used in construction because of its high welding speed and portability.
It is a high-productivity welding process in which the arc is struck beneath a covering layer of
granular flux. This increases arc quality, since contaminants in the atmosphere are blocked by the
flux. The slag that forms on the weld generally comes off by itself and, combined with the use of
a continuous wire feed, the weld deposition rate is high. As the arc is not visible, it is typically
automated. SAW is only possible in the 1F (flat fillet), 2F (horizontal fillet), and 1G (flat groove)
positions.
Gas tungsten arc welding (GTAW), or tungsten/inert-gas (TIG) welding, is a manual welding
process that uses a non-consumable electrode made of tungsten, an inert or semi-inert gas mixture,
and a separate filler material. Especially useful for welding thin materials, this method is
characterized by a stable arc and high quality welds, but it requires significant operator skill and
can only be accomplished at relatively low speeds. Because of its stable current, the method can
be used on a wider range of material thicknesses than can the GTAW process and is much faster.
It can be applied to all of the same materials as GTAW except magnesium; automated welding of
stainless steel is one important application of the process. Other arc welding processes include
atomic hydrogen welding, carbon arc welding, electroslag welding, electrogas welding, and stud
arc welding.
Metal Inert Gas (MIG): Metal Inert Gas (MIG) is an arc welding process that uses a consumable
electrode consisting of a filler metal rod coated with chemicals that provide shielding.The process
is illustrated in Figure 2. Under the correct conditions, the wire is fed at a constant rate to the arc,
matching the rate at which the arc melts it. The filler metal is the thin wire that’s fed automatically
into the pool where it melts. The filler metal used in the rod must be compatible with the metal to
be welded, the composition usually being very close to that of the base metal.
The coating on the rod consists of powdered cellulose mixed with oxides, carbonates, and other
ingredients, held together by a silicate binder. Metal powders are also sometimes included in the
coating to increase the amount of filler metal and to add alloying elements. The heat of the welding
process melts the coating to provide a protective atmosphere and slag for the welding operation. It
also helps to stabilize the arc and regulate the rate at which the electrode melts.
Since fluxes are not used, the welds produced are sound, free of contaminants, and as corrosion-
resistant as the parent metal.Argon, helium, and carbon dioxide can be used alone or in various
combinations for MIG welding of ferrous metals.
Welding Joints:
THEORY
Gas Welding:
Gas Welding or Oxy-fuel gas welding is a general term used to describe any welding process that
uses a fuel gas combined with oxygen to produce a flame. The most commonly used fuel is
acetylene (C2H2) gas. The heat source is the flame obtained by combustion of oxygen and
acetylene. When mixed together in correct proportions within a hand-held torch or blowpipe, a
relatively hot flame is produced with a temperature of about 3300ºC (6000ºF). The chemical action
of the oxyacetylene flame can be adjusted by changing the ratio of the volume of oxygen to
acetylene.
The combustion of oxygen and acetylene (C2 H2) is a two-stage reaction. Chemical reactions are
as follows: -
Stage 1: In the first stage, the supplied oxygen and acetylene react to produce Carbon Monoxide
and Hydrogen. Approximately one-third of the total welding heat is generated in this stage. C2H2
+ O2 = 2CO + H2 + heat
Stage 2: The second stage of the reaction involves the combustion of the CO and H2. The remaining
two-third of the heat is generated in Stage 2. The specific reactions of the second stage are:
2CO + O2 = 2CO2 + heat
H2 + ½ O2 = H2O + heat
The apparatus used in gas welding consists basically of an oxygen source and a fuel gas source,
regulators, hoses, non-return valve, check valve and torches.
Regulator: The regulator is used to control pressure from the tanks by regulating pressure and
flow rate of gas. It releases the gas at a constant rate from the
cylinder despite the pressure in the cylinder becoming less as
the gas in the cylinder is used.
Hoses: The hose is usually a double-hose design i.e. there are
two hose joined together. The oxygen hose is green and the fuel
hose is red.
Non-return valve: Between the regulator and hose and ideally
between hose and torch on both oxygen and fuel lines, a non-
return valve and/or flashback arrestor should be installed to
prevent flame/oxygen-fuel mixture being pushed back into
either cylinder and damaging the equipment.
Check valve: A check valve lets gas flow in one direction
only. Not to be confused with flashback arrestor, a check valve
is not designed to block a shockwave. A check valve is usually
a chamber containing ball that is pressed against on end by a
spring. Gas flow in a particular direction pushes the ball out of
the way while no flow or flow on the other way lets the spring
push the ball into the inlet thus blocking it.
Torches: The torch is the part that the welder holds and manipulates to make the weld. It has a
connection and valve for Oxygen and also a connection and valve for Fuel, a handle for grasp, a
mixing chamber for mixing of the fuel and oxygen, a tip where the flame forms. A welding torch
head is used to weld metals and can be identified by having only two pipes running to the nozzle
and no oxygen blast trigger. A cutting torch head is used to cut metals and can be identified by
having three pipes that go to an around 900 nozzle and also by oxygen-blast trigger that provides
oxygen to blast away material while cutting.
Soldering & Brazing: In soldering & brazing, the surfaces to be joined are first cleaned, the
components assembled or fixture, and a low-melting-point nonferrous metal (filler metal) is then
melted, drawn into the space between the two solids by capillary action, and allowed to solidify.
Brazing is the permanent joining of similar or dissimilar metals or ceramics (or composites based
on those two materials) through the use of heat and a filler metal whose melting temperature
(actually, liquidus temperature) is above 450°C (840°F) but below the melting point (or solidus
temperature) of the materials being joined.
Soldering is a brazing-type operation where
the filler metal has a melting temperature (or
liquidus temperature if the alloy has a
freezing range) below 450°C (840°F). It is
typically used for joining thin metals,
connecting electronic components, joining
metals while avoiding exposure to high
elevated temperatures, and filling surface
flaws and defects.
Flux is the substance added to the metal
surface to stop the formation of any oxides
or similar contaminants that are formed
during the soldering and brazing processes.
The flux increases both the flow of the filler
metal and its ability to stick to the base
metal.