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Rough-out (g57) -19 – HEIDENHAIN TNC 407 (280 580) ISO Programming User Manual

Page 239

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8-19

8

Cycles

TNC 426/TNC 425/TNC 415 B/TNC 407

Fig. 8.16:

Cutter path for roughing-out

Fig. 8.15:

Infeeds and distances of the
ROUGH-OUT cycle

8.3

SL Cycles (Group I)

A

B

C

D

D

α

ROUGH-OUT (G57)

The ROUGH-OUT cycle specifies cutting path and partitioning.

Sequence

• The control positions the tool in the tool axis over the first infeed point,

taking the finishing allowance into account.

• The tool then penetrates the workpiece at the programmed feed rate

for pecking.

Milling the contour:

• The tool mills the first subcontour at the specified feed rate, taking the

finishing allowance into account.

• As soon as the tool returns to the infeed point, it is advanced to the

next pecking depth.

This process is repeated until the programmed milling depth is reached.

• Further subcontours are milled in the same manner.

Roughing-out pockets:

• After milling the contour the pocket is roughed-out. The stepover is

defined by the tool radius.
Islands are jumped over.

• If required, pockets can be cleared with several downfeeds.
• At the end of the cycle, the tool is retracted to the setup clearance.

Required tool

The cycle requires a center-cut end mill (ISO 1641) if the pocket is not
separately pilot drilled or if the tool must repeatedly jump over contours.

Input data

• SETUP CLEARANCE

A

• MILLING DEPTH

B

The algebraic sign determines the working direction (a negative value
means negative working direction).

• PECKING DEPTH

C

• FEED RATE FOR PECKING:

Traversing speed of the tool during penetration

• FINISHING ALLOWANCE

D

:

Allowance in the machining plane (positive value)

• ROUGH-OUT ANGLE

α

:

Feed direction for roughing-out.
The rough-out angle is relative to the angle reference axis and can be
set, so that the resulting cuts are as long as possible with few cutting
movements.

• FEED RATE:

Traversing speed of the tool in the machining plane

The machine parameters determine whether

• the contour is milled first and then surface machined, or vice versa
• the contour is milled conventionally or by climb cutting
• all pockets are roughed-out first and then contour-milled over all

infeeds, or whether

• contour milling and roughing-out are performed mutually for each

infeed