35 Basic Interview Questions
35 Basic Interview Questions
35 Basic Interview Questions
Metal cutting is “the process of removing unwanted material in the form of chips, from a
block of metal, using cutting tool”
3. Define Machining.
Machining is the manufacturing process by which parts can be produced to the desired
dimensions and surface finish from a blank by gradual removal of the excess material in the
form of chips with the help of a sharp cutting tool.
5. What are the important characteristics of materials used for cutting tools?
High toughness
10. What are all conditions for using positive rake angle?
Cutting ductile materials with low speed and small rake angle of the tool.
13. What are the favorable factors for continuous chip formation?
Coarse feed
Continuous chip.
Discontinuous chip.
17. Write the factors affecting the tool life or Write the Taylor’s tool life equation.
Taylor’s equation VT n = C
Cutting speed Type of Cutting Fluid
Tool material
Side relief angle: It is the angle between the portion of the side flank immediately below
the side cutting edge and a line perpendicular to the base of the tool, and measured at right
angle to the side flank.
End relief angle: It is the angle between the portion of the end flank immediately below
the end cutting edge and a line perpendicular to the base of the tool, and measured at right
angle to the angle.
19. What are the differences between orthogonal cutting and oblique cutting?
Conventional Machining
Abrasive Processes
Nontraditional processes
Material is removed from the work part so that the remaining material is the desired part
geometry
22. Identify some of the reasons why machining is commercially and technologically
important
dimensional accuracy
turning
drilling
milling
24. What are the two basic categories of cutting tools in machining? Give two examples of
machining operations that use each of the tooling types.
Single-Point Tool
o Turning
o Boring
o Milling
o Drilling
cutting speed
feed
depth of cut
29. Name and briefly describe the four types of chips that occur in metal cutting.
Discontinous Chip
o relatively brittle materials machined at low cutting speed
o Separate segments, some loosely atached at times
Continous Chip
o ductile work material cut at high speed and small feeds/depth
o Long continous chips are formed, with good surface finish resulting
Continous Chip with Built-up Edge
o ductile materials at low-medium cutting speeds
o portions of work material adhere to rake faces of tool near cutting edge
Serrated Chip
o semicontinous in the sense that they possess a sawtooth appearance that is
produced by a cyclical chip formaton alternating from high shear strain to low
shear strain
o Associated with difficult to machine metals
30. Identify the four forces that act upon the chip in the orthogonal metal-cutting model but
cannot be measured directly in an operation.
friction force
31.Identify the two forces that can be measured in the orthogonal metal-cutting model.
cutting force
thrust force
Defines general relationship between rake angle, tool-chip friction, and shear plane angle
The amount of energy required to remove a unit volume of the work material
Comprised of the tool and chip as the two dissimilar metals forming the thermocouple
junctions; as the tool-chip interface heats up during cutting, a small voltage is emitted from
the junction that can be measured to indicate cutting temperature.