The first machine tools offered for sale (i.e. commercially available) were constructed around 1800 by a Matthew Murray in England around 1800.
Overview
Machine tools can be powered from a variety of sources. Human and animal power are options, as is energy captured through the use of waterwheels. However, machine tools really began to develop after the development of the steam engine, leading to the Industrial Revolution. Today, most are powered by electricity.
Machine tools can be operated manually, or under automatic control. Early machines used flywheels to stabilize their motion and had complex systems of gears and levers to control the machine and the piece being worked on. Soon after World War II, the NC, or numerical control, machine was developed. NC machines used a series of numbers punched on paper tape or punch cards to control their motion. In the 1960s, computers were added to give even more flexibility to the process. Such machines became known as CNC, or computerized numerical control, machines. NC and CNC machines could precisely repeat sequences over and over, and could produce much more complex pieces than even the most skilled tool operators.
Before long, the machines could automatically change the specific cutting and shaping tools that were being used. For example, a drill machine might contain a magazine with a variety of drill bits for producing holes of various sizes. Previously, either machine operators would usually have to manually change the bit or move the work piece to another station to perform these different operations. The next logical step was to combine several different machine tools together, all under computer control. These are known as machining centers, and have dramatically changed the way parts are made.
From the simplest to the most complex, most machine tools are capable of at least partial self-replication since they are machines, and produce machine parts as their primary function.
Examples
Examples of machine tools are:
- Broaching machine
- Drill press
- Gear shaper
- Hobbing machine
- Hone
- Lathe
- Milling machine
- Shaper
- Planer
- Stewart platform mills
- Grinders
When fabricating or shaping parts, several techniques are used to remove unwanted metal. Among these are:
- EDM (electrical discharge machining)
- Grinding
- Multiple edge cutting tools
- Single edge cutting tools
Other techniques are used to add desired material. Devices that fabricate components by selective addition of material are called rapid prototyping machines.
Several regions of the United States became centers for machine tool development, including Cincinnati, Ohio, Rockford, Illinois, Providence, Rhode Island, and Springfield, Vermont.
A collection of machinery showing photographs of the main types of metal working machinery is online at the Canadian Museum of Making
References
See also
- Tool bit
- Tool wear
- Clanking Replicator
- Multimachine - an open source machine tool
- James Fox (engineer)
- Machinist calculator
External links
- National Institute for Metalworking Skills Standards download page
- U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook
- American Precision Museum—A museum that preserves historically important machine tools and helps to educate on the history of machine tools
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Sunday July 06, 2008 at 21:33:43 PDT (GMT -0700)
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