February 25, 2013, 1:20 am by Eldar Gerfanov (Admin)
HSMAdvisor 0.018 is avilable for download.
First of all we have a new feature. It is Machine Profiles now users can maintain their own machine types.
Inside machine profiles users can specify machine power curve that allows to warn user if power required to make the cut is outside machine power curve.
Because of added new features version 0.018 now requires .NET 4.0 or later
Also several bugs have been fixed:
Serial Key bug that caused some keys to malfunction and not recornise by the program.
Comma/Dot decimal point in some locales have been fixed
February 14, 2013, 9:44 pm by Eldar Gerfanov (Admin)
Sometimes people ask me: "I tried your calculator, and i liked it, but it seems to me a little too aggressive...do you actually do any testing?"
Well, to those I say that not only i do testing, but i run production jobs 100% calculated with my own HSMAdvisor.
Many machinists say that nothing beats an experienced operator holding his hand on feed hold button and playing with speed and feed override trying to find the "sweet spot" where cutting speed and feed rate are maximized and chatter is eliminated or reduced.
And it is correct, but not any machinist is experienced or actually knows what he is doing. Many machinists also finish their apprenticeship program and never learn a single thing about new tooling types and materials since. They bag years of experience, but their knowledge is stuck on a level it was when they first got their license.
Also not a single person can possibly know cutting conditions for hundreds of materials and remember all of the jobs he had ever ran.
This is where tool database comes in.
Not only can you save tools to cut down and in many cases eliminate entering parameters for every calculation. But you can (and should) save cutting data for each particular case.
A single tool entry can contain an unlimited number of cuts attached to it, so machinist never has to remember everything.
Here is a i made video of slotting D2 with variable helix hi-performace endmill.
January 27, 2013, 11:06 pm by Eldar Gerfanov (Admin)
As you know the long-awaited standalone version of FSWizard is being prepared for the release right now.
I am changing the name it is going to be marketed under.
Down the line The product is going to consist of many modules. And in order to give it a name that would encompass a wide variety of tools under one umbrella it has been decided to change the name of the solution to HSMAdvisor
A new website is being constructed right now around new product
It is going to be located at HSMAdvisor.com
But we are not forgetting where we came from.
FSWizard is becomming one module inside HSMAdvisor solution. So you will still see FSWiz name popping up here and there.
Also as i said earlyer and robably against better judgement i will keep HSMAdvisor(FSWizard):Online Calulator you have come to love and depend on free for everyone to use.
Using Peck Cycle is often needed when drilling deep holes. When using proper feed and speed no peck is required at depths of up to 3xDia for regular or 5xDia for High-Performance Parabolic drills. At depths up to 10x, up to 5 pecks are required for regular drills and up to 3 for Parabolic. Anything over 10x Dia requires constant pecking of 0.5-1x Dia for regular drills and 1.5-2 Dia for Parabolic.
Since for programming you need a peck amount. Here are the numbers:
Code:REGULAR JOBBER DRILLS
3x: No Peck 3x-10x: 1xDia Peck over 10x:.75xDia Peck over 15x:.5xDia Peck
Code:HI-HELIX HP DRILLS
5x: No Peck 5x-10x: 2xDia Peck over 10x: 1.5xDia Peck
Of course our HSMAdvisor Speed and Feed Calculator suggests not only the Speeds and Feeds but also the proper peck depth for various drill types and depths of the hole. It in fact was the first machinist calculator to do so. This feature was much later borrowed by our competition.
And here is a pretty image showing Peck VS Hole Depth for regular twist drill:
This not only means that peck amount should be different for different styles of drills and depths of holes. But also that peck distance should be different for different stages of drilling the same hole. Ideally we should start the hole with large pecks, that continually reduce as the hole gets deeper and deeper.
Let's find out how we can apply this knowledge when programming our toolpaths. This is format for normal Pecking:
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