� Notes
Slide Show
Outline
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Camera Lab 5
Manufacturing the Camera
  • Blaine Lilly
  • Jerry Brevick
  • ���� WI01
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Some things to think about, and who might think about them:
  • Materials (MSE, Chem E)


  • Processes (ISE, WE, Chem E, ME)


  • Tooling: molds and dies (ME, ISE)


  • Production setup and plant layout (ISE)
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Some questions a designer might ask:
  • What�s the best material for this part?
  • Given the best material, how do I form it?
  • How will my design affect how the part is manufactured?
  • How does the manufacturing process affect my design?
  • Can I make this using fewer parts?
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Some things a manufacturing engineer might think about:
  • How can I make this component most efficiently?


  • How can I make it with the least amount of material, energy, and labor?


  • What manufacturing process is best suited to this component?
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Today we�ll look at three important manufacturing processes:
  • Thermoplastic injection molding
    • is used for almost every part of the camera, except the circuit board, shutter, and springs.
  • Sheet metal forming
    • is used to make the shutter, springs, contacts
  • Machining
    • is used to make the molds for injection molding, and the dies for metal forming.


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Injection molding
  • Injection molding is a widely used process used for forming the groups of polymers known as thermoplastics.


  • Thermoplastics undergo a physical change during molding, and can be remelted and reused.


  • The other group of polymers, thermosets, change chemically when processed, and can�t be reused.
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To form polymer resin into components, we need to:
  • � Bring it to a liquid state
  • � Inject it under high pressure into a mold
  • � Let the resin cool and solidify
  • � Open the mold and eject the part
  • � Close the mold and start again
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The injection molding machine:
  • Heats the polymer until it�s liquid
  • Clamps the mold shut
  • Injects polymer into the mold cavity
  • Holds it under pressure until it�s cool enough to retain its shape, and
  • Ejects the part and starts the process again...
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If we look at injection pressure vs. time:
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Some problems:
  • Filling the mold before the plastic freezes
  • Designing the mold so that the part can be ejected easily
  • Designing the part and mold so that we can produce the parts and make a profit.
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What about the metal parts?
  • There are several different ways of forming metal:
    • forging
    • extruding
    • drawing (the aluminum can!)
    • bending
    • rolling
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Today, we�ll look at blanking:
  • Blanking occurs when we punch a hole in a sheet of metal, and keep the piece (blank) that we punch out.
  • When we punch a hole and �keep the hole�, then the process is called piercing.
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The blanking process:
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The piercing process:
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The punch press:
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How do we make the tools that form the metal and plastic?
  • By machining:
  • Milling
  • Turning
  • Grinding
  • Sawing
  • Electric discharge machining
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Probably the most important machining process is milling.
  • Milling machines:
  • Can make a variety of complex shapes
  • Can machine essentially any material
  • Can be computer controlled
  • Are widely used to make molds and dies
  • Use a rotating cutter to machine a fixed work piece.
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A CNC vertical milling machine:
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Machining parameters:
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What we�ll do today:
  • Form into supergroups of 12
  • Go to Baker Systems 090 (basement)
  • Your supergroup will move through four different stations:� injection molding, sheet metal forming, machining, and fixed-assembly.
  • Each small group turns in one report next week.