beautypg.com

Sar 331 sa gds, Troubleshooting – Dake Model SAR 331 User Manual

Page 25

background image

25

SAR 331 SA GDS

TROUBLESHOOTING

This chapter lists the probable faults and malfunctions that could occur while the machine is being used and suggests possible remedies for
solving them.
The first paragraph provides diagnosis for TOOLS and CUTS, the second for ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS.

12.1 - Blade and cut diagnosis

12

FAULT

PROBABLE CAUSE

REMEDY

TOOTH BREAKAGE

Decrease advance, exerting less cutting
pressure. Adjust the braking device if
mounted on the machine.

Change speed and/or type of blade.
See chapter on “Material classification and
blade selection”
, in the section

Blade selec-

tion table according to cutting and feed
speed.

Choose a suitable blade. See Chapter “Ma-
terial classification and blade selection”.

Check for clogging of cooling liquid drain
holes on the blade-guide pads and that flow
is plentiful in order to facilitate the removal
of chips from the blade.

Material surfaces can be oxidised or covered
with impurities making them, at the begin-
ning of the cut, harder that the blade itself,
or have hardened areas or inclusions inside
the section due to productive agents used
such as casting sand, welding wastes, etc.
Avoid cutting these materials or in any case
perform cutting with extreme care, clean-
ing and removing such impurities as quickly
as possible.

Check the gripping of the part.

Reduce feed and exert less cutting pressure.

Pay more attention when you start cutting.

Use a superior quality blade.

Accurately remove all the parts left in.

Make the cut elsewhere, turning the part.

Check gripping of the part.

Replace blade with a more suitable one.
See “Material classification and blade
selection”
in the

Blade Types section.

Adjust blade guide pads.

Check level of liquid in the tank. Increase the
flow of lubricating refrigerant, checking that
the hole and the liquid outlet pipe are not
blocked.
Check the emulsion percentage.

Turn teeth in correct direction.

Too fast advance

Wrong cutting speed

Wrong tooth pitch

Chips sticking onto teeth and in the gul-
lets or material that gums

Defects on the material or material too
hard

Ineffective gripping of the part in the vice

The blade gets stuck in the material
Starting cut on sharp or irregular sec-
tion bars

Poor quality blade

Previously broken tooth left in the cut

Cutting resumed on a groove made pre-
viously

Vibrations

Wrong tooth pitch or shape

Insufficient lubricating refrigerant or
wrong emulsion

Teeth positioned in the direction oppo-
site the cutting direction