Forging - Ivy Tech -
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Transcript Forging - Ivy Tech -
13-2 Forgings
• Forging consists of plastically deforming,
either by a squeezing pressure or sharp blows,
a cast or sintered ingot, a wrought bar or
billet, or a powder-metal shape, to produce a
desired shape with good mechanical
properties. Practically all ductile materials can
be forged
Closed-Die Forging
• Made by hammering or pressing metal until it conforms closely to
the shape of the enclosing dies
• “closed-die forging” is the term applied to all forging operations
involving 3-D control
• Impression die
– Workpiece placed on bottom half die
– Top-half die closed and workpiece undergoes elastic compression until its
enlarged sides touch the side walls of the die impression
– Excess material-flash
• 3 main classes
– Single-impression
– Double-impression
– interlocking
MANUFACTURING MATERIAL
FORGING DIES
General design rules
• Corner & fillet radii- should be sufficient to facilitate the flow
of metal
– Cold shuts: a lap where 2 surfaces have folded against eachother
forming a weak spot that may open into a crack
– Cold shuts occur where there are sharp fillets or deep sections
• Draft angle- the slope given to the side walls of the die in
order to facilitate removal of the forging (usually 7°exterior
contours and 10° interior contours)
• Parting Line- line of meeting of the dies
Drafting Practices particular to forging
Draft angles and parting lines
Corner and fillet radii
Forging tolerances
Heat treatment
Locations of trademark, part number, and vendor specs
Dimensioning
• Depth of the die impression
• Only one dimension from the parting line.
This surface is then used to establish other
dimensions (figure 13-30)
• Allowances for machining
• Composite drawings- generally the forged part
is shown on one drawing with the forging
outline shown in phantom lines
MANUFACTURING MATERIAL
FORGING DRAWING
MANUFACTURING MATERIAL
MACHINING DRAWING