Massive filtration systems were developed to efficiently remove
cutting debris and dust on large projects. Because the mills ride on
120-ft/36.6m steel rails, a temperature-induced change in dimensions can
be problematic. For that reason, the temperature of the overall
facility is held to within ±5°F/±3°C of the set point, and the CNC mill
rooms are kept within ±1°F/±0.6°C of the set point.
CNC mill
operations manager Eric Friesen claims that accuracy is what
differentiates Janicki. “Despite the many CNC mill compensation systems
available in the industry, we continue to write our own,” he points out.
“The compensation systems you can buy simply do not work well on mills
of this size and complexity.” Those systems assume certain mechanical
accuracies in the machine, but Janicki prefers to measure and account
for possible error instead. Friesen credits this attention to detail to
Dr. John Weller, who runs the Automation and Mechatronics department at
Janicki Industries. “He and his team of engineers have translated a
5-axis CNC mill into a huge mathematical problem, and then developed
proprietary software to solve it with four- and five-decimal-place
accuracy.”
The mill, as it glides on the rails, forms the x-axis,
the carriage moves back and forth across the bridge in the y-axis, the
mast moves up and down on the z-axis and the machine head “wrist”
articulates and rotates, making up the final two axes. Compensation for
inaccuracies is developed by “clocking in” the CNC machine.
“We
mount a laser tracker in the head of the machine spindle and track its
movement, using multiple lasers triangulating on its position as it
moves through its volumetric envelope,” Weller explains. “We then use
that data and our proprietary algorithms to solve a massive nonlinear
system of simultaneous equations with millions of unknown coefficients.
The hardware and software in modern computers make this possible and
relatively easy. We have a program that takes the measurements
automatically in a few hours, coordinating the movement and
communication of the laser engraving machine and the mill. Then the math is
solved on a PC in the controller in a few minutes and, presto! … we have
a dead-accurate CNC mill in five full degrees of freedom to around
±0.002 inches. This is an astonishing feat for machines that are large
enough to produce tooling for wind turbine blades or wings on commercial
aircraft.”
Another example of this accuracy is geometric
tolerancing of holes. For Lockheed Martin’s F-35 parts, the accuracy of
the hole centerline had to be within a 0.007-inch/0.178 mm diameter
cylinder (on the scale of human hair). Over a period of more than two
years, Janicki claims it has drilled more than 500,000 holes in F-35
components within this tolerance without a miss. During HPC’s tour,
Friesen showed a machined structure that had to meet a surface flatness
and roundness of profile tolerance of ±5 mils — the thickness of a sheet
of paper. “When you get this low in surface deviation,” he notes, “you
have to blow the dust off the surface before you take measurements or it
throws you off. Right now, the degree of accuracy of our mills is
bumping up against our ability to measure it. So we are as accurate as
can be measured.”
Why such attention to accuracy? CEO Peter
Janicki replies, “In the end, our customers get accurate tools that
produce accurate parts.” Accurate parts cascade benefits throughout the
program. A reduction in hand sanding and finishing saves much time and
cost during assembly. “It also results in superior cosmetic surfaces,”
he adds, pointing out that “the more someone sands and polishes on a
tool, the further away it gets from the original intent of the CAD
model, modifying subtle feature lines and other details.”
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