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Published byWyatt Beal Modified over 9 years ago
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MFET 4210
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1. Basic Principles 2. Hardware 3. Abrasives 4. Parameters 5. Capabilities 6. Advantages 7. Disadvantages
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How does it work? High pressure water with abrasive eroding material Small diameter orifice or “jewel” to focus energy Erosion of material Jet of abrasive and water 20,000 – 90,000 psi Up to 600 mph
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Intensifier Pump Nozzle Abrasive Delivery System Catcher CNC Control
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Intensifier Pump Components Hydraulic Pump Pistons Cylinders Check valves Attenuator
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Nozzle Jewel Abrasive inlet Guard Mixing Tube
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Nozzle Jewel Diameter ranges from.005 -.020” Usually sapphire, sometimes ruby or diamond
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Nozzle Abrasive Inlet Feeds from abrasive feed system Venturi pulls in abrasive
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Nozzle Mixing Tube Abrasive and water mix evenly Must be exactly in line Composite carbide
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Abrasive Delivery System Provide fixed delivery rate Gravity or air fed
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Catcher Slows jet of water down Reduces noise and dust Catches dust
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CNC Controllers Traditional control PCs Cheaper Easier to update to newer and faster software
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Usage ½ to 2 pounds per minute $0.15 to $0.40 per pound Types Garnet Olivine
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Garnet Most common at 80 mesh Naturally occurring mineral Less dusting Typical to reuse 2 or 3 times
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Olivine Cheaper than garnet Softer than garnet
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Pressure Nozzle or jewel diameter Feed or traverse rate Nozzle standoff distance
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Pressure Ranges from 20-90,000 psi Less than 60,000 psi most common Higher pressure for harder materials and thicker cuts Harder on equipment
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Nozzle Diameter Large range depending on application Jet usually.020-.050” Horsepower = 0.58*P*Q P = pressure in ksi Q = flow rate in gpm
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Feed Rate Varies greatly depending on Type of material Thickness Hardness Quality of cut needed
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Standoff Usually.010 to 0.200”, up to 1” Higher distance causes frosting Eliminated by cutting underwater
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Tolerances Materials Geometries Examples of use
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Tolerances +-.004 to +-.008” Vast majority of industry cuts at +-.010” or more
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Materials Cuts basically anything Diamond, some ceramics 6.5” Ti
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Geometry Stacking parts 5-axis milling
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Geometry Very thin to very thick cuts Flat sheets of material 10.25” Tool Steel
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No HAZ Temp may rise to 120 degrees F Catch tank and water absorb heat Very small kerf .020-.050”
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Minimal cutting forces 5 pounds max down force Very low side forces Clamping forces are very low Brittle or fragile work pieces
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Fast and accurate Minimal fixturing Omni-directional Cuts any type of materials Nonhomogeneous
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No tools to sharpen, only “tool” is the nozzle Environmentally friendly Garnet can be dumped in landfill Water can be filtered and reused
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Lag Only a factor if finish is important Very similar to cutting torch lag lines
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Taper Parts cut with taper Can be compensated for by software Increases with nozzle wear
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Less accurate than traditional machining Very hard materials not very practical application Traverse rate is so slow, costs add up
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Can delaminate some materials Fiberglass, some composites Preventable with pilot hole from drill Cost Setup ranges from $20,000-$300,000 Average machine runs $150,000 Thickness of cut Price increases dramatically for >2” metal cuts
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Nozzle wear Consumable nozzle wears Causes stray cutting Increases kerf Decreases finish quality Very loud Reduced if cut underwater
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Machine shops Artists Stone, glass, marble Aerospace Titanium, Inconel, composites Rapid prototyping Universities Automotive industry Custom flooring work Tiles
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Very versatile, powerful technology Growing use and applications Constantly getting better and more capable
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Nontraditional Machining Processes, E. J. Weller Nontraditional Machining Processes, E. J. Weller http://www.jetedge.com http://www.jetedge.com http://waterjets.org/ http://waterjets.org/ http://www.h2ocut.com/ http://www.h2ocut.com/ http://www.universalminerals.com/ http://www.universalminerals.com/ http://www.flowcorp.com/ http://www.flowcorp.com/
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