Page 24 - MetalForming Magazine June/July 2022 80th Anniversary Issue
P. 24

 head; washer thickness can be adjusted to suit the desired travel distance of the form and to facilitate springback compensation. A spring-loaded pin activates the plunger pin. Notice that this pin’s function is to provide a small amount of over-travel to accommodate small changes in shut-height variations that occur due to press setup, press speed and press temperatures.
Keep in mind that the amount of spring pressure required to form even simple, thin parts can be considerable. The best option: large springs with ample free length and preload. The die layout will be longer due to the need to make room for the larger springs and rocker motions, but smooth strip feeding and consistency of the forms will make the longer die assembly an asset, not a liability.
Die Maintenance
When sharpening the cutting punch, always document the exact amount of material removed during grinding. To
maintain die timing, place a shim, equivalent to the amount of material removed during grinding, under the punch holder. When doing so requires more than three shims, combine them into a single shim of the exact same size. Never use more than three shims under the punch holder.
When regrinding form sections, keep a precise record of the amount of material removed and the thickness of the shim—should this shim be lost, a properly sized replacement quickly can be made.
Often, shimming of die sections to solve one problem results in another problem. This can happen when not shimming punch holders as required. When this occurs, the press operator may adjust the press shut height down- ward to ensure a complete cut. How- ever, the part-number stencil will again hit too hard and the setup person must remove another shim from under the stencil so that it appropriately marks the stamping.
The hidden danger here: shut height, set too low, causes the form steels to hit too hard. The hard hit on the forms produces an acceptable feature in the part—so no adjustments are made— but the condition generates unnecessary tonnage that can damage the die or press. Lastly, the stencil block now is out of time with the form stations, even though it marks the part as desired.
A thicker next coil compounds the above-mentioned problem. The thicker material requires removal of another shim from behind the stencil. The forms are hitting so hard now that the tonnage monitors keep tripping, shutting down the press. Because the formed features still “look good,” an operator adjusts the high limits on the tonnage monitor upward as tonnage being generated resides within the press’ capacity—but potentially damages the die.
All of this occurs because, after sharpening a punch, someone didn’t shim the punch holder to maintain die timing. MF
www.metalformingmagazine.com
MetalForming/June/July 2022 21
Tooling by Design






















































































   22   23   24   25   26