This paper is the second of three parts which describe the analysis and simulation of the grinding process. Generation of the workpiece surface depends on the interactions between the grains of the wheel and the workpiece. The grinding wheel surface generated by dressing was simulated by the method
Analysis and simulation of the grinding process. Part III: Comparison with experiment
β Scribed by Xun Chen; W.Brian Rowe; B. Mills; D.R. Allanson
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 508 KB
- Volume
- 36
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0890-6955
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β¦ Synopsis
AMtraet--A method of simulating dressing and grinding was described in Parts I and II of this three-part series. In Part III, the effects on grinding performance of varying the dressing conditions are simulated and compared with experimental results. The results show that a coarse dressing condition leads to low grinding force and grinding power but a high workpiece surface roughness. The grinding performance of the wheel in the dwell period for "spark-out" is simulated. Simulated and experimental results both show that grinding power in the dwell period decreases following an exponential decay function, however the reduction of surface roughness does not follow an exponential decay.
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