Abstract

Delamination is a dramatic problem associated with drilling fibre-reinforced composite materials (FRCMs), which, in addition to reducing the structural integrity of the material, also results in poor assembly tolerance and has the potential for long-term performance deterioration. The key to solving the problem lies in reducing the thrust force of drilling. In this paper, a theoretical analysis for predicting mean values of thrust and torque in vibration drilling FRCMs is presented. The model is based on mechanics of vibration cutting analysis and the continuous distributions of thrust and torque along the lip and the chisel edge of a twist drill. The result of a simulation study has shown a very good agreement between the theoretical predictions and the experimental evidence. On the same cutting conditions, the thrust and the torque by the vibration drilling method are reduced by 20–30 percent, compared with conventional drilling.

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