Search for dissertations about: "cutting tool body"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 8 swedish dissertations containing the words cutting tool body.
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1. Performance of advanced tool steels for cutting tool bodies
Abstract : Performance of indexable insert cutting tools is not only about the performance of cutting inserts. It is also about the cutting tool body, which has to provide a secure and accurate insert positioning as well as its quick and easy handling under severe working conditions. READ MORE
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2. Tool steel for tool holder applications : microstructure and mechanical properties
Abstract : Large improvements in cutting tool design and technology, including the application of advanced surface engineering treatments on the cemented carbide insert, have been achieved in the last decades to enhance tool performance. However, the problem of improving the tool body material is not adequately studied. READ MORE
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3. Tolerance Analysis Framework for Cutting Tool Interface Design
Abstract : Tolerance analysis of cutting tool interface designs is a field with many opportunities for further development of existing methodologies. Cutting tool interface designs require multiple contacting surfaces, allocating the stress generated from the cutting forces, to avoid excessive deformation of the interface. READ MORE
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4. Sheet metal trimming dies – characterisation methods of geometry and surface topography and the influence on wear
Abstract : In recent years, the life cycle of car models has decreased from 7 to 5 years and the volume sizes are becoming shorter in the automotive industry. The increasing number of car models introduced to the market means that a fewer number of parts must pay the costs for the tool/die design and manufacturing. READ MORE
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5. Rule by Association : Japan in the Global Trans-Imperial Culture, 1868-1912
Abstract : Criticizing one-empire approaches, calls to apply much-needed transnational perspectives and methodologies to colonial history have recently emerged. This groundbreaking scholarship has already revealed that the competition between different European empires after 1850 has typically been overemphasized; in fact, a transnational perspective reveals extensive cooperation between the “great powers” of the age, along with myriad examples of exchanges and transfers of colonial knowledge. READ MORE