When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: milling cross slide table

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. X-Y table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-Y_Table

    X-Y tables, also known as cross working tables or coordinate tables, help provide horizontal motion for automated machinery such as assembly robots in manufacturing facilities. Robotic arms and other automated machinery have only a limited range of motion while their bases remain stationary; X-Y tables allow this basis to move horizontally ...

  3. Milling (machining) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milling_(machining)

    Vertical milling machine. 1: milling cutter 2: spindle 3: top slide or overarm 4: column 5: table 6: Y-axis slide 7: knee 8: base. In the vertical milling machine the spindle axis is vertically oriented. Milling cutters are held in the spindle and rotate on its axis. The spindle can generally be lowered (or the table can be raised, giving the ...

  4. Magnetic drilling machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_drilling_machine

    Cross-table base magnetic drilling machines can also be used for light milling operations to make oval holes or key-slots. The cross-table enables the machines to move in X and Y Axis. The cross-table enables the machines to move in X and Y Axis.

  5. Machine tool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machine_tool

    Eli Whitney milling machine, c. 1818. Important early machine tools included the slide rest lathe, screw-cutting lathe, turret lathe, milling machine, pattern tracing lathe, shaper, and metal planer, which were all in use before 1840. [12] With these machine tools the decades-old objective of producing interchangeable parts was finally realized ...

  6. Speeds and feeds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speeds_and_feeds

    Cutting speed may be defined as the rate at the workpiece surface, irrespective of the machining operation used. A cutting speed for mild steel of 100 ft/min is the same whether it is the speed of the cutter passing over the workpiece, such as in a turning operation, or the speed of the cutter moving past a workpiece, such as in a milling operation.

  7. Metal lathe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal_lathe

    A gang-tool lathe is one that has a row of tools set up on its cross-slide, which is long and flat and is similar to a milling machine table. The idea is essentially the same as with turret lathes: to set up multiple tools and then easily index between them for each part-cutting cycle.