CREATIVE TOOL DESIGN
The first step in designing any jig or fixture is a thorough evaluation
of its functional requirements. The goal is to find a balanced combination
of design characteristics at a reasonable cost. The part itself,
processing, tooling, and machine-tool availability may all affect the
extent of planning needed. Preliminary analysis may take from a few
hours up to several days for more-complicated designs.
To design a workholder, begin with a logical and systematic plan.
With a complete analysis, very few design problems occur. Workholder
problems occur when design requirements are forgotten or underestimated.
No specific formula or method works for every design, but the
designer can employ a deliberate and logical system in the initial planning
and design.
Tool design is essentially an exercise in problem solving. Creative
problem solving can be described as a five-step process: 1) Identifying
and defining the problem; 2) Gathering and analyzing information;
3) Brainstorming for alternative solutions; 4) Choosing the best solution;
5) Implementing the solution. This five-step process adapted to jig-and-fixture
designs is shown in Figure 2-1.
Figure 2-1. Five steps that make up a good, systematic tool-design process.
DEFINING REQUIREMENTS
The first step in the tool-design process should be to clearly state
the problem to be solved, or needs to be met. These requirements
should be stated as broadly as possible, but specifically enough to
define the scope of the design project.
The new tooling might be required either for first-time production
of a new product, or to improve production of an existing part. When
improving an existing job, the goal might be greater accuracy, faster
cycle times, or both. Tooling might be designed for one part, or an
entire family.
Tool design is an integral part of the product-planning process,
interacting with product design, manufacturing, and marketing. To
reach an optimum solution, all four of these groups need to work
together concurrently.
GATHERING AND ANALYZING INFORMATION
In the second design phase, all data is collected and assembled
for evaluation. The main sources of information are the part print,
process sheets, and machine specifications. When collecting this information,
make sure that part documents and records are current. For
example, verify that the shop print is the current revision, and the processing
information is up to date. Check with the product-design
department for pending part revisions.
An important part of the evaluation process is notetaking.
Complete, accurate notes allow the designer to record important information.
All ideas, thoughts, observations, and any other data about the
part or tool are then available for later reference. It is always better to
have too many ideas about a particular design than not enough. Good
notes also minimize the chance that good ideas will be lost.
Four categories of design considerations need to be taken into
account at this time: the workpiece, manufacturing operations, equipment,
and personnel. A checklist is shown in Figure 2-2.
CHECKLIST FOR DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS
Figure 2-2. Considerations when gathering and analyzing information for a tool design
These categories, while separately covered here, are actually interdependent.
Each is an integral part of the evaluation phase and must be
thoroughly thought out before beginning the workholder design.
Workpiece Considerations
Workpiece specifications are usually the most-important factors
and have the largest influence on the workholder's final design.
Typically these considerations include the size and shape of the part,
the accuracy required, the properties of the part material, locating and
clamping surfaces, and the number of pieces.
Operation Considerations
These considerations include the type of operations required for
the part, the number of operations performed, the sequence of operations,
inspection requirements, and time restrictions.
Equipment Considerations
Equipment considerations control the type of equipment needed
to machine, assemble, and inspect a part. Often the available equipment
determines whether the workholder is designed for single or multiple
parts. A process engineer sometimes selects the equipment for required
functions before the tool designer begins the design. Still, the tool
designer should verify equipment choices for each operation.
A vertical milling machine, for example, is well suited for some
drilling operations. But for operations that require a drill jig, a drill press
is the most-cost-effective machine tool. Typically, equipment criteria
include the following factors: types and sizes of machine tools, inspection
equipment, scheduling, cutting tools, and general plant facilities.
Personnel Considerations
Personnel considerations deal with the end user, or operator, of
the equipment. Most special tools are designed to be used by shop personnel,
so the design of any workholder must be made with the operator
in mind. The first and most-important consideration in this phase
is safety. No tool should ever be designed without complete safety in
mind.
Additional factors typically considered in this category are operator
fatigue, efficiency, economy of motion, and the speed of the operation.
The designer must also know and understand the general aspects
of design safety and all appropriate government and company safety
rules and codes.
DEVELOPING SEVERAL OPTIONS
The third phase of the tool-design process requires the most creativity.
A typical workpiece can be located and clamped many different
ways. An important strategy for successful tool design is brainstorming
for several good tooling alternatives, not just choosing one path right
away.
During this phase, the designer's goal should be adding options,
not discarding them. In the interest of economy, alternative designs
should only be developed far enough to make sure they are feasible,
and to do a cost estimate.
Brainstorming for Ideas
The designer usually starts with at least three options: permanent,
modular, and general-purpose workholding, as seen in Figure 2-3. Each
of these options has many clamping and locating options of its own.
The more standard locating and clamping devices that a designer is
familiar with, the more creative he can be.
Figure 2-3. Most tool-design projects begin with three general options: permanent, modular, and general-purpose workholding. Different methods of locating and clamping further increase the number of options.
There is seldom only one way to locate a part. Options include
flat exterior surfaces (machined and unmachined), cylindrical and
curved exterior surfaces, and internal features (such as holes and slots).
The choice of standard locating devices is quite extensive.
Similarly, there are countless ways to clamp a part. For example,
a workpiece can be clamped from the top, by gripping its outside edge,
or gripping an internal surface. The choice of standard clamping
devices is also very broad.
Design Sketches
For preliminary sketches of the tool, one good idea is to use several
colored pencils. Often, black is used to sketch the tool, red for the
part, and blue for the machine tool. The different colors allow you to
see, at a glance, which areas of the sketch show what part of the assembled
unit. Another idea: use graph paper to keep the sketch proportional.
Either plain or isometric graph paper works well for most design sketches.
The exact procedure used to construct the preliminary design
sketches is not as important as the items sketched. For the most part,
the preliminary sketch should start with the part to be fixtured. The
required locating and supporting elements should be the next items
added, including a base. The next step is to sketch the clamping
devices. Once these elements are added to the sketch, the final items to
add are the machine tool and cutters. Sketching these items together on
the preliminary design sketch helps identify any problem areas in the
design of the complete workholder.
CHOOSING THE BEST OPTION
The fourth phase of the tool-design process is a cost/benefit
analysis of different tooling options. Some benefits, such as greater
operator comfort and safety, are difficult to express in dollars but are
still important. Other factors, such as tooling durability, are difficult to
estimate. Cost analysis is sometimes more of an art than a science.
Workholder-cost analysis compares one method to another, rather
than finding exact costs. So, even though the values used must be accurate,
estimates are acceptable. Sometimes these methods compare both
proposed tools and existing tools, so, where possible, actual production
data can be used instead of estimates.
Initial Tooling Cost
The first step of evaluating the cost of any alternative is estimating
the initial cost of the workholder. Add the cost of each element to
the labor expense needed to design and build the jig or fixture.
To make this estimate, an accurate sketch of the tool is made
first. Each part and component of the tool is numbered and listed
individually. Here it is important to have an orderly method to outline
this information. Figure 2-4 shows one way to make this listing.
The exact appearance of the form is unimportant; only the information
is important.
Figure 2-4. Itemized listing of components for a workholder.
The next step is calculating the cost of material and labor for each
tool element. Once again, it is important to have an orderly system of
listing the data. First list the cost of each component, then itemize the
operations needed to mount, machine, or assemble that component.
Once these steps are listed, estimate the time required for each operation
for each component, then multiply by the labor rate. This amount
should then be added to the cost of the components and the cost of
design to find the estimated cost of the workholder.
For modular fixtures, total component cost should be amortized
over the system's typical lifetime. Although somewhat arbitrary, dividing
total component cost by 100 (10 uses per year, for ten years) gives
a fair estimate.
Cost Comparison
The total cost to manufacture a part is the sum of per-piece run
cost, setup cost, and tooling cost. Expressed as a formula:
The following example shows three tooling options for the part in
Figure 2-3: 1) a modular fixture; 2) a permanent fixture; 3) a permanent
fixture using hydraulic power workholding. Each variable in the cost
equation is explained separately below.
Run Cost. This is the variable cost per piece to produce a part, at
shop labor rate (material cost does not need to be included as long as
it is the same for all fixturing options). In our example, run costs for the
permanent and modular fixtures are the same, while power workholding
lowers costs by improving cycle time and reducing scrap.
Setup Cost. This is the cost to retrieve a fixture, set it up on the
machine, and return it to storage after use. The permanent fixture is
fastest to set up, the power-workholding fixture is slightly slower due
to hydraulic connections, and the modular fixture is slowest due to the
assembly required.
Lot Size. This is the average quantity manufactured each time the
fixture is set up. In our example, lot size is the same for all three options.
Initial Tooling Cost. This is the total cost of labor plus material to
design and build a fixture (as explained in the previous section). The
modular fixture is least expensive because components can be reused,
the permanent fixture next, and the hydraulic fixture most expensive.
Total Quantity Over Tooling Lifetime. This quantity, the last
remaining variable, is the lesser of 1) total anticipated production quantity
and 2) the quantity that can be produced before the tooling wears
out. The following results are obtained by evaluating the cost-per-part
formula at different lifetime quantities:
For a one-time run of 100 pieces, the modular fixture is clearly
the most economical. If ten runs (1,000 pieces) are expected, the
permanent fixture is best. For 2,500 pieces and above, the power workholding
fixture would be the best choice. This analysis assumes
that all noneconomic factors are equal.
IMPLEMENTING THE DESIGN
The final phase of the tool-design process consists of turning the
chosen design approach into reality. Final details are decided, final
drawings are made, and the tooling is built and tested.
Guidelines for Economical Design
The following guidelines should be considered during the final-design
process. These rules are a mix of practical considerations, sound
design practices, and common sense. Application of these rules makes
the workholder less costly, and improves its efficiency and operation.
Use Standard Tooling Components. The economies of standardized
parts apply to tooling components as well as to manufactured
products. Standard tooling components, readily available from your
industrial supplier, include clamps, locators, supports, studs, nuts, pins,
and a host of other elements. Most designers would never think of having
the shop make cap screws, bolts, or nuts for a workholder. For the
same reason, virtually no standard tooling components should be made
in-house. The first rule of economic design is: Never build any component
you can buy. Commercially available tooling components are manufactured
in large quantities for much greater economy.
Labor is usually the largest cost element in the building of any
workholder. Standard tooling components are one way to cut labor
costs. Always look for new workholding products to make designs simpler
and less expensive. Browse through catalogs and magazines to find
new products and application ideas. In most cases, the cost of buying
a component is less than 20% of the cost of making it.
Use Prefinished Materials. Prefinished and preformed materials
should be used where possible to lower costs and simplify construction.
These materials include precision-ground flat stock, drill rod, structural
sections, cast tooling sections, precast tool bodies, tooling plates, and
other standard preformed materials. Including these materials in a
design both reduces the design time and lowers the labor cost.
Eliminate Unneeded Finishing Operations. Finishing operations
should never be performed for cosmetic purposes. Making a tool look
better can often double the cost of the fixture. Here are a few suggestions
to keep in mind with regard to finishing operations:
- Machine only the areas important to the function and operation of the tool. For example, do not machine the edges of a baseplate. Just remove the burrs.
- Harden only those areas of the tool subject to wear.
- Grind only the areas of the fixture where necessary for the operation of the tool.
Keep Tolerances As Liberal As Possible. The most-cost-effective
tooling tolerance for a locator is approximately 30 to 50% of the workpiece's
tolerance. Tighter tolerances normally add extra cost to the tool
with little benefit to the process. Where necessary, tighter tolerances can
be used, but a tighter tolerance does not necessarily mean a better tool,
only a more expensive tool.
Simplify Tooling Operation. Elaborate designs often add little or
nothing to the function of the jig or fixture. Complex mechanical clamping
systems, for example, are often elaborate and unneeded designs.
More often, a power clamp could do the same job at a fraction of the
cost. Cosmetic details are another example of little gained for the money
spent. These details may make the tool look good, but seldom justify
the added cost.
Keep the function and operation of a workholder as simple as
possible. The likelihood of breakdowns and other problems increases
with complex designs. These problems multiply when moving parts are
added to the design. Misalignment, inaccuracy, wear, and malfunctions
caused by chips and debris can cause many problems in the best tool
designs.
Reducing design complexity also reduces misunderstandings
between the designer and the machine operator. Whenever possible, a
workholder's function and operation should be obvious to the operator
without instructions.
Manual Drawings
Once sketches and the basic workholder design have been completed,
final engineering drawings can be prepared. Copies of the engineering
drawings, also called shop prints, are used by the toolroom to
build the workholder.
Manual drawing is the process of constructing engineering drawings
by hand on a drawing board. The easiest way to reduce drawing
time is by simplifying the drawing. Words or symbols should be used in
place of drawn details where practical. All extra or unnecessary views,
projections, and details should be eliminated from the drawing. This
cuts the time spent drawing details that add little to the meaning of the
drawing.
Drawing a complete clamp assembly, for example, adds very little
to the complete design. Simply showing the nose of the clamp in its
proper relation to the workpiece, along with specifying its part number,
conveys the same information in a fraction of the time.
Computer-Aided Design
Computers are rapidly replacing drawing boards as the preferred
tool for preparing engineering drawings. Almost every area of design is
affected by the computer. Computers, from large mainframes to microcomputers,
are becoming standard equipment in many design departments.
A standard tooling library, shown in Figure 2-5, is often used to
add the fixturing components and elements to the tool drawing. Using
a standard library in designing the workholder dramatically reduces
drawing time. All components are drawn to full scale in a variety of
views. Each component can be called up from the library and placed
on the drawing where it is required.
Figure 2-5. Using a standard CAD tooling library can dramatically reduce design time.
A CAD system is also sometimes useful during the initial phase of
developing numerous tooling options. Computer-aided design is sometimes
faster than sketching by hand, especially when detailed cost estimates
are required.
Building and Testing the Workholder
Once drawings have been thoroughly checked, the next step is
building the actual workholder. During the building stage, the designer
should ensure the toolroom knows exactly what must be done when
making the tool. By periodically checking with the toolmakers, the
designer can help eliminate any possible misunderstandings and speed
the building process. If there are any difficulties with the design, the
designer and toolmaker, working together, can solve the problems with
a minimum of lost time.
After the tool is completed and inspected, the last step is tool tryout.
The workholder is set up on the machine tool and several parts are
run. The designer should be on hand to help solve any problems. When
the tool proves itself in this phase, it is ready for production.
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