Dictionary Definition
turning
Noun
1 the act of changing or reversing the direction
of the course; "he took a turn to the right" [syn: turn]
2 act of changing in practice or custom; "the law
took many turnings over the years"
3 a movement in a new direction; "the turning of
the wind" [syn: turn]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
Derived terms
Translations
A turn or deviation from a straight course
- Finnish: mutka
The shaping of wood or metal on a lathe
- Finnish: sorvaus, sorvaaminen
The shavings produced by turning something on a
lathe
Verb
turning- present participle of turn
- The Earth is turning about its axis as we speak.
- He made wooden soldiers by turning them on a hand lathe.
Extensive Definition
Turning is the process whereby a centre lathe
is used to produce "solids of revolution". It can be done manually,
in a traditional form of lathe, which frequently requires
continuous supervision by the operator, or by using a computer
controlled and automated lathe which does not. This type of machine
tool is referred to as having computer
numerical control, better known as C.N.C. and is commonly used
with many other types of machine tool
besides the lathe.
When turning, a piece of material (wood, metal, plastic even stone) is
rotated and a cutting tool is
traversed along 2 axes of motion to produce precise diameters and
depths. Turning can be either on the outside of the cylinder or on
the inside (also known as boring) to produce tubular
components to various geometries. Although now quite rare, early
lathes could even be used to produce complex geometric figures,
even the platonic
solids; although until the advent of C.N.C it had become
unusual to use one for this purpose for the last three quarters of
the twentieth century. It is said that the lathe is the only
machine tool that can reproduce itself.
Facing is part of the turning process. It
involves moving the cutting tool across the face (or end) of the
workpiece and is performed by the operation of the cross-slide, if
one is fitted, as distinct from the longitudinal feed (turning). It
is frequently the first operation performed in the production of
the workpiece, and often the last- hence the phrase "ending
up".
The bits of waste metal from turning operations
are known as chips (North America), or swarf in Britain. In some locales
they may be known as turnings.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Turning is one of the most basic machining
processes. That is, the part is rotated while it is being machined.
The starting material is generally a workpiece generated by other
processes such as casting, forging, extrusion, or drawing.
TURNING OPERATIONS The turning processes are
typically carried out on a lathe, considered to be the oldest
machine tools, and can be of four different types such as straight
turning, taper turning, profiling or external grooving. Those types
of turning processes can produce various shapes of materials such
as straight, conical, curved, or grooved workpiece. In general,
turning uses simple single-point cutting tools. Each group of
workpiece materials has an optimum set of tools angles which have
been developed through the years.
LATHES A lathe is a machine tool used
principally for shaping pieces of metal, sometimes wood, or other
materials by causing the workpiece to be held and rotated by the
lathe while a tool bit is advanced into the work causing the
cutting action. Lathes can be divided into three types for easy
identification: engine
lathe, turret
lathe, and special purpose lathes. Some smaller ones are bench
mounted and semi-portable. The larger lathes are floor mounted and
may require special transportation if they must be moved. Field and
maintenance shops generally use a lathe that can be adapted to many
operations and that is not too large to be moved from one work site
to another. The engine lathe
is ideally suited for this purpose. A trained operator can
accomplish more machining jobs with the engine lathe than with any
other machine tool. Turret
lathes and special purpose lathes are usually used in
production or job shops for mass
production or specialized parts, while basic engine lathes are
usually used for any type of lathe work.
TOOL GEOMETRY The various angles in a
single-point cutting tool have importance functions in machining
operations. Different types of angle such as rake angle, side rake
angle, cutting-edge angle, relief angle, nose radius exist and may
be different with respect to the workpiece.
MATERIAL Aluminium, copper alloys, steels,
stainless steels, high-temperature alloys, refractory alloys,
titanium alloys, cast irons, thermoplastics, thermosets, etc… are
examples of different type of materials used.
MATERIAL REMOVAL RATE The material removal rate
(MRR) in turning is the volume of material removed per unit time in
mm3/min. For each revolution of the workpiece,
a ring-shaped layer of material is removed.
MRR = pi×Davg×d×f×N where
Davg: Average diameter N: Rotational speed of the
workpiece f: Feed d: Depth of cut
TURNING FORCES The forces acting on a cutting in
turning are important in the design of machine tools. The
machine tool and its
components must be able to withstand these forces without causing
significant deflections, vibrations, or chatter during the
operation. There are three principal forces during a turning
process: cutting force, thrust force and radial force.
•The cutting force acts downward on the tool tip
allowing deflection of the workpiece upward. It supplies the energy
required for the cutting operation. •The thrust force acts in the
longitudinal direction. It is also called the feed force because it
is in the feed direction of the tool. This force tends to push the
tool away from the chuck. •The radial force acts in the radial
direction and tends to push the tool away from the workpiece.
Although it requires less-skilled labor, the
engine
lathes do need skilled labor and the production is somewhat slow.
Moreover, it can be accelerated by using a turret lathe
(In a turret lathe, a longitudinally feedable, hexagon turret
replaces the tailstock. The turret, on which six tools can be
mounted, can be rotated about a vertical axis to bring each tool
into operating position, and the entire unit can be moved
longitudinally, either mannually or by power, to provide feed for
the tools) and automated machines.
REFERENCES http://www.mfg.mtu.edu/marc/primers/turning.html
http://electron.mit.edu/~gsteele/mirrors/www.nmis.org/EducationTraining/machineshop/lathe/intro.html
http://www.fortune-cnc.com/prod/lathe.htm
http://www.idc-shanghai.com/Popular%20Technology/machining/Turning.htm
http://www.fao.org/docrep/009/ag335e/AG335E09.htm
See also
turning in Azerbaijani: Torna
turning in Bavarian: Drahn
turning in German: Drehen (Verfahren)
turning in Spanish: Cilindrado
turning in French: Chariotage
turning in Italian: Tornitura
turning in Dutch: Draaien
(verspaningstechniek)
turning in Slovenian: Struženje
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
S-curve, aberrancy, aberrant, aberration, aberrative, about-face,
ambages, ambagious, anfractuosity, anfractuous, angle, angular momentum, angular
motion, angular velocity, axial motion, bend, bending, bias, bow, bowing, bowling, branching off, centrifugation, circling, circuition, circuitous, circuitousness, circuitry, circularity, circulation, circumambages, circumambience, circumambiency, circumambulation,
circumbendibus,
circumflexion,
circumgyration,
circumlocution,
circumlocutory,
circummigration,
circumnavigation,
circumrotation,
circumvolution,
conflexure, convolution, convolutional, corner, crinkle, crinkling, crook, curve, declination, deflection, departing, departure, desultory, detour, deviance, deviancy, deviant, deviating, deviation, deviative, deviatory, devious, deviousness, digression, digressive, discursion, discursive, divagation, divarication, divergence, diversion, dogleg, double, drift, drifting, errant, errantry, erratic, excursion, excursive, excursus, exorbitation, flection, flex, flexuose, flexuosity, flexuous, flexuousness, flexure, full circle, geanticline, geosyncline, gyrating, gyration, gyre, gyring, hairpin, hairpin turn, indirect, indirection, inflection, intorsion, involute, involuted, involution, involutional, labyrinthine, mazy, meander, meandering, meandrous, obliquity, orbit, orbiting, out-of-the-way,
oxbow, pererration, pivoting, planetary, rambling, reeling, reflection, reverse, reversion, revolution, revolving, right-about,
rivose, rivulation, rivulose, roll, rolling, rotating, rotation, rotational motion,
roundabout, roundaboutness, rounding, roving, ruffled, serpentine, sheer, shift, shifting, shifting course,
shifting path, sinuate,
sinuation, sinuose, sinuosity, sinuous, sinuousness, skew, slant, slinkiness, snakiness, snaky, spin, spinning, spiral, spiraling, stray, straying, sweep, swerve, swerving, swinging, swirling, swiveling, tack, torsion, torsional, tortile, tortility, tortuosity, tortuous, tortuousness, trolling, trundling, turbination, turn, turnabout, twirling, twist, twisting, twisty, undirected, undulation, vagrant, variation, veer, veering, volte-face, volutation, volution, wandering, warp, wave, waving, wheeling, whir, whirling, whorled, winding, wreathlike, wreathy, yaw, zigzag