Dictionary Definition
metalworking n : the activity of making things
out of metal in a skillful manner [syn: metalwork]
User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
Metalworking is the craft and practice of working
with metals to create
individual parts, assemblies, or large scale structures. The term
covers a wide range of work from large ships, bridges and oil
refineries to delicate jewellery. It therefore includes a
correspondingly wide range of skills and the use of many different
types of metalworking processes and their related tools.
Metalworking is an art, hobby, industry, and
trade. It relates to metallurgy, a science,
jewellery making, an
art-and-craft, and as a trade and industry with ancient roots
spanning all cultures and civilizations. Metalworking had its
beginnings millennia in the past. At some imprecise point in the
distant past humankind discovered that certain rocks now called
ores could be smelted, producing metal.
Further, they discovered that the metal product was malleable and
ductile and thus able to be formed into various tools, adornments
and put to other practical uses. Humans over the millennia learned
to work raw metals into objects of art, adornment, practicality,
trade, and engineering.
Prehistory
Metalworking predates history.No one knows with any certainty where or when
metalworking began. The earliest technologies were impermanent to
say the least and were unlikely to leave any evidence for long. The
advance that brought metal into focus was the connection of fire
and metals. Who accomplished this is as unknown as the when and
where.
Not all metal required fire to obtain it or work
it. Isaac Asimov speculated that gold was the "first metal." His
reasoning is that gold by its chemistry is found in nature as
nuggets of pure gold. In other words, only gold, as rare as it is,
is found in nature as the metal that it is. There are a few
exceptions as a result of meteors. All other metals are found in
ores, a mineral bearing rock, that require heat or some other
process to liberate the metal. Another feature of gold is that it
is workable as it is found, meaning that no technology beyond eyes
to find a nugget and a hammer and an anvil to work the metal is
needed. Stone hammer and stone anvil will suffice for technology.
This is the result of gold's properties of malleability and ductility. The earliest tools
were stone, bone, wood, and sinew. They sufficed to work
gold.
At some unknown point the connection between heat
and the liberation of metals from rock became clear, rocks rich in
copper, tin, and lead came into demand. These ores were mined where
ever they were recognized. Remnants of such ancient mines have been
found all over what is today the Middle East. The end of the
beginning of metalworking occurs sometime around 6000 BCE when
copper smelting became common in the Middle East.
The ancients knew of seven metals. Here they are
arranged in order of their oxidation potential:
- Iron +0.44,
- Tin +0.14
- Lead +0.13
- Copper -0.34
- Mercury -0.79
- Silver -0.80
- Gold -1.50
The oxidation potential is important because it
is one indicator of how tightly bound to the ore the metal is
likely to be. As can be seen, iron is significantly higher than the
other six metals while gold is dramatically lower than the six
above it. Gold's low oxidation is one of the main reasons that gold
is found in nuggets. These nuggets are relatively pure gold and are
workable as they are found.
Copper ore, being relatively abundant, and tin
ore became the next important players in the story of metalworking.
Using heat to smelt copper from ore, a great deal of copper was
produced. It was used for both jewelry and simple tools. However,
copper by itself was too soft for tools requiring edges and
stiffness. At some point tin was added into the molten copper and
bronze was born. Bronze is an alloy of copper and tin. Bronze
was an important advance because it had the edge-durability and
stiffness that pure copper lacked. Until the advent of iron, bronze
was the most advanced metal for tools and weapons in common
use.
Looking beyond the Middle East, these same
advances and materials were being discovered and used the world
around. China and Britain jumped into the use of bronze with little
time being devoted to copper. Japan began the use of bronze and
iron almost simultaneously. In the new world things were different.
Although the peoples of the New World knew of metals, it wasn't
until the arrival of Europeans that metal for tools and weapons
took off. Jewelry and art were the principal uses of metals in the
New World prior to European influence.
Around the date 2700 BCE, production of bronze
was common in locales where the necessary materials could be
assembled for smelting, heating, and working the metal. Iron was
beginning to be smelted. Iron began its emergence as an important
metal for tools and weapons. The Iron Age was dawning.
History
By the historical periods of the Pharaohs in
Egypt, the Vedic Kings in India, the Tribes of Israel, and the
Mayan Civilization in North America, among other ancient
populations, precious metals began to have value attached to them.
In some cases rules for ownership, distribution, and trade were
created, enforced, and agreed upon by the respective peoples. By
the above periods metalworkers were very skilled at creating
objects of adornment, religious artifacts, and trade instruments of
precious metals (non-ferrous), as well as weaponry usually of
ferrous metals and/or alloys. These skills were finely honed and
well executed. The techniques were practiced by artisans, blacksmiths, atharvavedic practitioners,
alchemists, and other
categories of metalworkers around the globe. For example, the
ancient technique of granulation is found around
the world in numerous ancient cultures before the historic record
shows people traveled seas or overland to far regions of the earth
to share this process that still being used by metalsmiths
today.
As time progressed metal objects became more
common, and ever more complex. The need to further acquire and work
metals grew in importance. Skills related to extracting metal ores
from the earth began to evolve, and metalsmiths became more
knowledgeable. Metalsmiths became important members of society.
Fates and economies of entire civilizations were greatly affected
by the availability of metals and metalsmiths. Today modern mining
practices are more efficient, but more damaging to the earth and to
the workers that are engaged in the industry. Those that finance
the operations are driven by profits per ounce of extracted
precious metals. The metalworker depends on the extraction of
precious metals to make jewellery, build more efficient
electronics, and for industrial and technological applications from
construction to shipping containers to rail, and air transport.
Without metals, goods and services would cease to move around the
globe on the scale we know today.
More individuals than ever before are learning
metalworking as a creative outlet in the forms of jewellery making,
hobby restoration of aircraft and cars, blacksmithing, tinsmithing,
tinkering, and in other art and craft pursuits. Trade schools
continue to teach welding in all of its forms, and there is a
proliferation of schools of Lapidary and Jewelers arts and sciences
at this- the beginning of the 21st Century AD.
See the article:
Timeline of materials technology
General metalworking processes
Metalworking generally is divided into the following categories, forming, cutting, and, joining. Each of these categories contain various processes.Forming processes
These processes modify the shape of the object
being formed by deforming the object, that is, without removing any
material. Forming is a collection of processes wherein the metal is
rearranged into a specified geometry (shape) by:
- heating until molten, poured into a mold, and cooled,
- heating until the metal becomes plastically deformable by application of mechanical force,
- by the simple application of mechanical force.
Casting is an
example of achieving a specific form by pouring molten metal into a
mold and allowing it to cool. Hot forging is an example of moving
heated metal into a specific form by deforming it with tools such
as hammers or hydraulic presses while the material is at forging
temperature. Drawing copper wire
to a specific size is an example of forming by the use of
mechanical tooling and mechanical force.
Casting
- Sand casting
- Shell casting
- Investment casting (called Lost wax casting in art)
- Die casting
- Spin casting
Powder forming
Sheet metal forming
- Bending :A calculated deformation of the metal from its original shape.
- Drawing
- Pressing
- Spinning
- Flow turning
- Roll forming
- Wheeling using an English wheel (Wheeling machine)
Cutting processes
Cutting
Cutting is a collection of processes wherein
material is brought to a specified geometry by removing excess
material using various kinds of tooling leaving a finished part
matching a set of specifications. The net result of cutting is two
products, the waste or excess material, and the finished part. If
this was a discussion of woodworking, the waste would be sawdust
and excess wood. In cutting metals the waste is chips or swarf and
excess metal. These processes can be divided into chip producing
cutting, generally known as machining. Burning or cutting with an
oxyfuel torch is a welding process not machining. There are also
miscellaneous specialty processes such as chemical milling.
Cutting is nearly fully represented by:
- Chip producing processes most commonly known as machining
- Burning, a set of processes which cut by oxidizing a kerf to separate pieces of metal
- Specialty processes
Drilling a hole in
a metal part is the most common example of a chip producing
process. Using an
oxy-fuel cutting torch to separate a plate of steel into
smaller pieces is an example of burning. Chemical milling is an
example of a specialty process that removes excess material by the
use of etching chemicals and masking chemicals.
There are many technologies available to cut
metal.
- Manual technologies: saw, chisel, shear or snips
- Machine technologies: turning, milling, drilling, grinding, sawing
- Welding/burning technologies: burning by laser, oxy-fuel burning, and plasma
- Erosion technologies:by water jet or electric discharge.
Cutting
fluid or coolant is
used where there is significant friction and heat at the cutting
interface between a cutter such as a drill or an end mill and the
workpiece. Coolant is generally introduced by a spray across the
face of the tool and workpiece to decrease friction and temperature
at the cutting tool/workpiece interface to prevent excessive tool
wear. In practice there are many methods of delivering
coolant.
Milling
Milling is the complex shaping of metal (or possibly other materials) parts, by removing unneeded material to form the final shape. It is generally done on a milling machine, a power-driven machine that in its basic form is comprised of a milling cutter that rotates about the spindle axis (like a drill), and a worktable that can move in multiple directions (usually three dimensions [x,y,z axis] relative to the workpiece, whereas a drill can only move in one dimension [z axis] while cutting). The motion across the surface of the workpiece is usually accomplished by moving the table on which the workpiece is mounted, in the x and y directions. Milling machines may be operated manually or under computer numerical control (CNC), and can perform a vast number of complex operations, such as slot cutting, planing, drilling and threading, rabbeting, routing, etc. Two common types of millers are the horizontal miller and vertical miller.Turning and threading
A lathe is a machine tool which spins a block of material so that when abrasive, cutting, or deformation tools are applied to the workpiece, it can be shaped to produce an object which has rotational symmetry about an axis of rotation, called Solids of Revolution. Examples of objects that can be produced on a lathe include candlestick holders, table legs, bowls, baseball bats, crankshafts or camshafts.The material may be held in place by a chuck
or worked between one or two centers of which at least one can be
moved horizontally to accommodate varying material lengths. In a
metalworking
lathe, metal is removed from the workpiece using a hardened
cutting
tool which is usually fixed to a solid moveable mounting called
the "toolpost", this arrangement is then moved around the workpiece
using handwheels and/or computer controlled motors. The main
difference between the Milling Machine and the Lathe is that in the
Milling Machine the tool is moving but in the Lathe, the work is
moving. Modern CNC lathes can do secondary operations like milling
in X,Y,Z direction by using driven tools also called live tools.
When driven tools are used the work piece stops rotating and the
driven tool executes the machining operation with a rotating
cutting tool. Driven tools increase machining performance as all
operations can be made in one set up in the CNC lathe.
Drilling and tapping
Drilling is the process of using a drill bit in a drill to produce holes. Under normal usage, swarf is carried up and away from the tip of the drill bit by the fluting. The continued production of chips from the cutting edges pushes the older chips outwards from the hole. This continues until the chips pack too tightly, either because of deeper than normal holes or insufficient backing off (removing the drill slightly [breaking the chip] or totally from the hole [clearing the bit] while drilling). Lubricants (or coolants) (i.e. cutting fluid) are sometimes used to ease this problem and to prolong the tool's life by cooling, lubricating the tip and improving chip flow.Taps and
dies are tools commonly used for the cutting of screw
threads in metal
parts. A tap is used to cut a female thread on the inside surface
of a predrilled hole, while a die cuts a male thread on a preformed
cylindrical rod.
Grinding
Grinding uses an abrasive process to remove
material from the workpiece. A grinding machine is a machine tool
used for producing very fine finishes, making very light cuts, or
high precision forms using a abrasive
wheel as the cutting device. This wheel can be made up of
various sizes and types of stones, diamonds or inorganic materials.
The simplest grinder is a bench grinder or a
hand-held angle grinder, for deburring parts or cutting metal with
a zip-disc.
Grinders have increased in size and complexity
with advances in time and technology. From the old days of a manual
toolroom grinder sharpening endmills for a production shop, to
today's 30000rpm CNC auto-loading manufacturing cell producing jet
turbines, grinding processes vary greatly.
Grinders need to be very rigid machines to
produce the required finish. Some grinders are even used to produce
glass scales for positioning CNC machine axis. the common rule is
the machines used to produce scales be 10 times more accurate than
the machines the parts are produced for.
In the past grinders were used for finishing
operations only because of limitations of tooling. Modern grinding
wheel materials and the use of industrial diamonds or other
made-made coatings (cubic boron nitride) on wheel forms have
allowed grinders to achieve excellent results in production
environments instead of being relegated to the back of the
shop.
Modern technology has advanced grinding
operations to include CNC controls, high material removal rates
with high precision, lending itself well to aerospace applications
and high volume production runs of precision components.
Joining processes
Welding
Welding is a fabrication process that joins materials, usually metals or thermoplastics, by causing coalescence. This is often done by melting the workpieces and adding a filler material to form a pool of molten material that cools to become a strong joint, but sometimes pressure is used in conjunction with heat, or by itself, to produce the weld.Many different energy sources can be used for
welding, including a gas flame, an electric
arc, a laser, an
electron beam, friction, and ultrasound. While often an
industrial process, welding can be done in many different
environments, including open air, underwater
and in space.
Regardless of location, however, welding remains dangerous, and
precautions must be taken to avoid burns, electric
shock, poisonous fumes, and overexposure to ultraviolet
light.
Brazing
Brazing is a joining process in which a filler metal is melted and drawn into a capillary formed by the assembly of two or more work pieces. The filler metal reacts metallurgically with the workpiece(s) and solidifies in the capillary, forming a strong joint. Unlike welding, the work piece is not melted. Brazing is similar to soldering, but occurs at temperatures in excess of 450 degrees Celsius. Brazing has the advantage of producing less thermal stresses than welding, and brazed assemblies tend to be more ductile than weldments because alloying elements can not segregate and precipitate.Brazing techniques include, flame brazing,
resistance brazing, furnace brazing, diffusion brazing, and
inductive brazing.
Soldering
Soldering is a joining process that occurs at temperatures below 449 Celsius. It is similar to brazing in the fact that a filler is melted and drawn into a capillary to form a join, although at a lower temperature. Because of this lower temperature and different alloys used as fillers, the metallurgical reaction between filler and work piece is minimal, resulting in a weaker joint.Hand fabrication
A wide variety of hand and small power tools are often used for metalworking, and an experienced machinist can fabricate almost any part using only hand tools, although it may require more time than with advanced machinery. Many types of hand tools are used, including cutting and scraping tools to remove metal, impact tools to reshape metal, and a wide variety of tools for marking, positioning, or otherwise assisting the fabrication process.Preparation and validation
Marking out
Marking out (also known as layout) is the process of transferring a design or pattern to a workpiece and is the first step in the handcraft of metalworking. It is performed in many industries or hobbies, although in the repetition industries the need to mark out every individual piece is eliminated.In the metal trades area, marking out consists of
transferring the engineer's plan to
the workpiece in preparation for the next step, machining or
manufacture.
References
External links
- Metal Matters online exhibit from the Smithsonian Institution.
- Society of American Silversmiths
- Machinist journal News, Case studies for machinists
- Modern Machine tools Machine tool Blog
- Elementary Knowledge of Metalworking
metalworking in German: Metallverarbeitung
metalworking in Spanish: Metalurgia
metalworking in Croatian: Metalurgija
metalworking in Italian: Metalmeccanica
metalworking in Dutch: Metaalbewerking
metalworking in Japanese: 金属加工