L. Cser et al., TOOL LIFE AND TOOL QUALITY IN BULK METAL-FORMING, Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Part B, Journal of engineering manufacture, 207(4), 1993, pp. 223-239
Due to their intermediate position between the machine and workpiece,
tools represent the interface of the manufacturing system to the proce
ss. Near net shape production, new materials and techniques are the ne
w challenges in metal forming and especially in tooling. A significant
economical effect can be achieved through an increase in the life of
tool elements, as well as through proper tool management strategies. T
he greatest problem connected with the preliminary estimation of tool
life is the large scatter of service life for a series of identically
designed tools. The uncertainty in estimating the expected service lif
e of tools and thus the tooling costs per piece is caused by the enorm
ous variety and confluence of damaging factors, the factory-specific c
haracter of tool life and the stochastic phenomenon of tool failures.
From the confluence of aspects influencing tool life it is clear that
there is no general recipe for increasing tool life and tool quality.
Each of the influencing aspects contains some possibilities for increa
sing the service time of tools. This paper shows some examples of tool
design and tool manufacturing and points out that a knowledge-based a
pproach imitating the activity and knowledge acquisition of human expe
rts can be the bridge between computer aided (CA) techniques and human
experience in predicting expected tool life.