When all the design, NC code generation and fixturing are complete, it's a machine tool that gets down to the business of contoured surfaces: cutting. Here are some things to consider about the machine you choose for the job.
A trip through any supermarket provides more than enough evidence to explain why machining of contoured surfaces is a growing segment of manufacturing. For example, each of the thousands of uniquely shaped plastic containers, found along the miles of aisles, gets its shape from a mold. And the mold gets its shape from a machine tool. It's estimated that 60 percent of all parts made today--a percentage that's growing--are made from plastic.
But there are more contoured surfaces to machine than just molds, although as our supermarket tour illustrates, they do make up a large chunk of the surface machining universe. Manufacturing is applying contoured surface machining technology across many industries such as automotive, power generation, aerospace, die and mold making, and health care.
Design considerations that take into account form as well as function increase the demands that are placed on manufacturers for contoured surfaces. Ergonomics--the physical interface between people and equipment--is also a force behind smoothing the square edges of many products. These design directives are showing up in virtually all manufactured products, whether they are made from composites, aluminum or titanium.
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