Abstract

The hardened steel materials have great demand for the manufacturing of automotive, aircraft and machine tool components due to their better strength, wear resistance and high thermal stability. The hard machining offers many potential benefits compared to grinding, which remains the standard finishing process for critical hardened surfaces. To enhance the implementation of this technology, questions about the ability of this process to produce surfaces that meet the surface finish and integrity requirements must be answered and it must be justified economically. With the development of harder work materials, the tool material technology is advancing at a faster rate so as to enable machining of these materials by higher material removal rate with reliability of performance. This review article presents an overview of the previous research on machining of hard steel materials. It mainly focuses on the influence of extrinsic factors on machinability of hardened steels, such as variation of cutting forces, chip morphology, tool wear and resulting surface integrity in the machined surface.

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