Northwest Aerospace News April | May Issue No.14 | Page 68

S o how does this benefit you? Time savings, for one. Have you ever been machining a part and you have to do it very, very slowly because it’s such a multi-step process? Machine a little in short shallow passes. Then adjust your hold, re- clamp and make more passes — then adjust again … and again … and again. With Vacu-Grip there’s little to no need for continued adjustment. The hold force is so strong, you can make passes at higher speeds and with more depth than other vacuum workholding solutions can provide. But what about that 8000 Series? But what we really want to get to is the LM side of the house and this 8000 series material. Why? Because its applications in the tooling world are unreal: Tool material 30 to 50 percent harder than the work piece material? Check. High hot hardness temperature? Check. High toughness? Check. High wear resistance? Check. High thermal conductivity? Check. Lower coefficient of friction? Check. Easiness in fabrication and cheap? Double check. The 8000 series has CTE’s comparable to Invar. For those that don’t know, Invar is a nickel steel alloy with a negligible coefficient of thermal expansion. Its name actually comes from the term “invariable” because its properties don’t really change with temperature fluctuation — an important property in a tooling material. The 8000 series has almost the same invariability at a much lower cost. 68 NORTHWEST AEROSPACE NEWS In addition to having a low coefficient of thermal expan- sion (CTE), the 8000 series offers cost savings. Not only is the material itself cheaper than other materials, but it is also technically additive manufacturing. Technical Tooling has the ability to cast to “near net shape” with a minimally subtractive finishing process that translates to less wasted material and a much quicker tool making process. In one in- stance they were able to replicate a tool for a customer that was taking three to six months for the customer to machine … these guys did it in 10 days. Imagine the cost savings in time alone! Why isn’t everyone using it? All of this sounds great right? Well then why isn’t everyone using it? The answer is, as with many new and expanding technologies on the market, there’s always the “this is how we’ve always done it” mentality to overcome. I actually spoke with the owner of a carbon composites company at a networking event last quarter and we discussed Technical Tooling. What I found out is that many carbon composite companies are proponents of tooling solutions like what Technical Tooling offers in the 8000 Series material. The hang up is actually in the spec writing process for OEM’s and Tier 1 suppliers. Because this technology is so new it has not yet been adopted by some of the bigger players in the industry, but things are progressing on that front.