Integrated design and manufacturing system for blades mould.
Udroiu, Razvan
1. INTRODUCTION
Most discrete parts are manufacturing by using a near net shape
process NNS (Machover, 1996) such as forging, die casting, stamping,
injection moulding or autoclave moulding. These processes use die and
moulds to impart the NNS geometry on an incoming shapeless material or a
preformed work piece. The material that the parts are from can be metal,
polymeric or composite. The production of complex parts from composites
materials corresponds to a long manufacturing process compared to a
mechanical part obtained by chip removing machining. The manufacturing
process of complex parts from composites materials is characterized by
three design functions: the design of external shape of finished part,
the design of internal structure of composite part and the definition of
bond tool or mould, and two manufacturing functions: the mould machining
and the production composite parts. A helicopter blade is a complex part
made of composite materials. In this work the focus is on the design of
external shape of the helicopter blade, definition of the mould and
mould machining.
2. FEATURES AS INOVATIVE ELEMENTS LINKING DESIGN AND MANUFACTURING
Actual production of mechanical parts is diversified the slogan
being higher quality product obtains cheaper and without pollution the
nature. In the same time the concurrence at the market place is better.
These things claim with acuteness to enhancing the companies'
competitiveness by cutting the product-development time, reducing the
time-to-market and improving the quality of design using
CAD/CAM/CAPP/CAE systems integrated in concurrent engineering
philosophy. Concurrent engineering helps bring higher-quality products
to market faster and a less cost by involving all the players, including
customers and suppliers, at the earliest stage possible.
During the design process, different engineers take information
about the design, and manipulate it in order to generate the new
information required for the development of the new product. Various
engineering representations of the designed product are created and used
for different engineering tasks. These represent, for example, a
manufacturing engineering viewpoint, a structural analysis viewpoint, a
process engineering viewpoint, and so on (Lee et al., 2003).
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Feature technology, is expected to be able to provide for an
adequate basis for the integration of design and the subsequent
applications such as engineering analysis, process planning, machining
and inspection. Features may be generated in three distinct ways
(Udroiu, 2003), (Ibrahim & McCormack, 2005), known as "feature
recognition", "design with features" and
"interactive feature definition/ identification".
Currently, three main views are discerned on how to obtain
application features, such as manufacturing features, analysis and
inspection features, from a product model. Today, the focus is on the
integration of feature based design with feature based manufacturing. In
(Chen et al., 2007) the machining feature model of a design part, needs
to be built from the design feature model of the part during its design
process and automatically adjustable to maintain the consistency of
these two models.
In this work I proposed two features models to design a helicopter
blade mould: the model of the helicopter blade based on design features
and the model of helicopter blade mould based on
"constructive-technological features" (CTF), fig.1. CTF wants
to help the CAD/ CAPP/ CAM integration in an innovative way. It is
proposed the following definition for CTF: "a
constructive-technological feature is a geometric shape that has
attached several minimal geometrical configurations for milling (MGCM)
for each manufacturing operation (roughing, semi-finishing, finishing,
rest-material) and a set of information regarding the cutting process,
like as cutting strategy, NC files, etc". The concept of minimal
machining configuration (Mawussi et al., 2000) for prismatic machining
(MMC) and later MGCM (Udroiu, 2003) for complexes parts allow in the
context of integrated design, to inform the designer about the machining
ability of the part from a cutting tool point of view or allow to inform
automatically the NC engineer about the optimal cutting tools use for
machining a feature of a part. In the same way the fact that a feature
can be machined only with one MGCM whose cutting tool is relatively
expensive makes it possible draw the attention of the designer to the
portions of the part which increase the total machining cost.
3. INTEGRATED CAD/CAM SYSTEM THE CORE OF CONCURRENT ENGINEERING
The work presented in this paper falls under the step of integrated
engineering. The purpose is principally the development of an integrated
design and manufacturing system for helicopter blade.
The software resources of system proposed is composed from the
software packages realized by the author, some CAD/CAM commercial
software and software resource of NovaMill CNC machine.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
The innovative software packages proposes in this paper are the
following: PACPE (Computer Aided Design of Helicopter Blade), PACAPE
(Computer Aided Design of Helicopter Blade Mould), DACRAF (Computer
aided establish of cutting parameters concerning complex surface
milling) and ECU-Virtual (Complex Milling Features--Virtual). PACPE and
PACAPE are written in Visual Lisp and Dialog Control Language programming language and are implemented in Autodesk Mechanical Desktop.
DACRAF and ECU-Virtual are written in Visual Basic programming language
and can be added like add-in application to commercial CAD/ CAM system
PowerShape/ PowerMill of Delcam. The software resource of milling system
NovaMill is called Virtual Reality CNC Milling of Denford.
PACPE allows the automatic and parametric design of a helicopter
blade, using features modelling technique. Thus, it was defined a
hierarchic system of aerodynamics complex macro-features (ACMF),
features and an aerodynamic airfoils database. The PACPE interface
between computer and user is constituted from a pull down menu, an
ensemble of dialogue boxes and an own captor of errors in view to avoid
the wrong data introduction.
Starting with the 3D virtual model of the blade, obtained by PACPE,
the software system PACAPE (Udroiu, 2007) generates the 3D model of the
blade mould. This mould is realised using design by features and a
hybrid modelling (solid modelling combining with surface modelling). The
mould is composed from two parts (fig. 2): the upper mould part and the
bottom mould part. The system of features is composed from
constructive-technological macro-features (CTMF) and features. It is
defined four categories of CTMF: CTMF of root, CTMF with constant
airfoil, CTMF with variable airfoil and CTMF of tip. In the process of
blade mould modelling it was defined three 3D digital models such as:
billet mould model, raw upper-lower mould model and mould model.
An example of experimental blade and its mould obtained by PACPE
and PACAPE is presented in figure 1. The upper and the lower part of the
mould are composed from six CTMF.
ECU-Virtual and DACRAF solve the main issues of the manufacturing
process of helicopter blade mould. ECU-Virtual is articulated around
three following modules: VTOOL (Virtual specification of cutting tools),
AsistGPM (Assistance to the development of machining process) and
StrategEnt (Machining features strategies and generation of CN file).
The input data for ECU-Virtual is a CAD neutral file, such as IGES or
STEP. All CTMF of the mould can be exported from DWG parametric file
format in a neutral file format.
The purpose of VTOOL module is the virtual and automatically
identification of optimal cutting tools for each CTMF of the mould and
determination of their main parameters. After that, VTOOL allows the
automatic generation of these cutting tools in PowerMill commercial CAM
system. VTOOL use features recognition technique.
The next module of ECU-Virtual, named AsistGPM provide assistance
to the development of machining process. This module automatically
determines the size of raw material for each CTMF, generate the block of
raw material and check in if the CTMF can be manufactured with the
selected CNC machine. It can be specify, that AsistGPM has incorporate
the main specifications (spindle speed, travels, table size etc) about a
lot of CNC machine. The establishing of cutting parameters concerning
complex surface milling (CTMF of the mould) it is obtained using the
software system DACRAF. These modules, VTOOL, AsistGPM, DACRAF provide
information necessary to the forth module named StrategEnt.
StrategEnt establish in automatic way the machining strategies for
each CTMF of helicopter blade mould and generate automatically the tool
paths and NC files. The optimum strategies proposed within StrategEnt
software are focused on 2 1/2 and 3 axis milling machine.
4. CONCLUSION
This research is focused on the integration of design, process
planning and manufacturing process of moulds for composite blades, using
like tool the concept of constructive-technological feature. Thus, it
was development an integrated system for helicopter blades. Briefly,
this system allows the automatic design of a helicopter blade and its
mould, virtual specification of the optimal cutting tools, the
establishing of cutting parameters concerning complex surface of the
mould, choosing in automatic way the machining strategies for each CTMF
of helicopter blade mould and generate automatically the tool paths and
NC files. The mains benefits of the proposed system are the automation
of the process and the reduction of product development cycle time. The
validation of this system was done using the 2 1/2 axis NovaMill CNC
milling machine from Denford. The further researches will be focus on
the development of a knowledge based system for assembling and
manufacturing of internal structure of the composite blade.
5. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study was supported by a National Research and Development
Program of Romania, CEEX Grant 41/ 07.10.2005. The author expresses his
gratitude to all partners for the fruitful collaboration.
6. REFERENCES
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