This research presents a methodology for modeling the rolling contact fatigue life of finish hard machined surfaces. Part 1 of two companion papers presents the development of a life model; Part 2 presents an experimental verification of the life model. A crack initiation life model and a crack prop
Rolling contact fatigue life of finish hard machined surfaces: Part 2. Experimental verification
โ Scribed by Youngsik Choi; C. Richard Liu
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 486 KB
- Volume
- 261
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0043-1648
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โฆ Synopsis
A rolling contact fatigue life model encompassing crack initiation life and crack propagation life was developed in Part 1 of two companion papers. This paper concerns the experimental verification of the developed life model. The specimens were machined by using various machining conditions and at two different cutting tool conditions: new and worn tools. The experimental results indicate that tool wear, as well as the machining conditions, greatly influences the micro-hardness and residual stress distribution below the machined surface and thus the rolling contact fatigue life. Tool wear induces a highly variable change in fatigue life depending on the machining conditions. The predicted lives by the developed life model show good agreement with the experimental lives, although the experimental lives of the specimens show significant variation.
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This study investigates the influence of tool flank wear on the performance of finish hard machined surfaces in rolling contact. The residual stress and micro-hardness distribution below the machined surface and the surface roughness of the machined surface were measured to investigate the rolling c