Torque on shaft due to impact loading during rotation

AI Thread Summary
To determine the torque load on a shaft with a cutter during impact loading, calculating the force on the cutter flutes and converting it to torque is suggested. One method involves using a lever arm and spring balance to measure the torque needed to start a cut, although this does not account for the inertia of the cutter head. Monitoring the average motor power during idle and cutting can help identify total energy flow to the cutters, which can be used to calculate the required force and resulting torque. An alternative solution is to switch to a helical cutter head, like a Shelix Spiral Cutter, which provides constant torque and improved cutting efficiency. These helical cutters, while initially costly, can be cost-effective in production settings.
Spoolx
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Hi All,
I am trying to determine the correct equations to apply with a problem I have run into at work.

Basically I have a shaft with a cutter with straight flutes, I am trying to find out the torque load on the shaft when the cutter flutes make contact with the material they are cutting.

Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks
 
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Also, Maybe it would be easier to just calculate the force on the flute and turn it into a torque that way?

I am not having a lot of luck calculating the force though.

Thanks
 
Maybe put a lever arm and spring balance on the cutter shaft and start a cut by hand in the material. That will give you the torque needed to commence a cut. It does not include the inertia of the cutter head that is driven by the shaft.

Alternatively, if you can monitor the average motor power while idle and while cutting, subtraction will identify the total energy flow to the cutters. You can measure the angle over which the cutter is in contact with the material, and given the number of cutters and RPM, you can work out the force needed to push a cutter through the material. From that you can get the change in shaft torque.

You could just avoid the calculation by changing to a helical cutter head which will have a constant torque, better finish and chip removal. As an example, a Shelix Spiral Cutter with carbide indexable inserts. http://www.byrdtool.com
Yes, they are expensive, but in production they pay for themselves quickly. http://www.byrdtool.com/planers.html
 
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