old cutting steel machine

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Old Cutting Steel Machine Royalty Free Stock Photo
Close up of worker man cutting steel by metal grinding machine or old circular saw Royalty Free Stock Photo
Work with steel pipe on the old cutting machine Royalty Free Stock Photo
Old steel cutting machine in the industry since Royalty Free Stock Photo
Work with steel pipe on the old cutting machine Royalty Free Stock Photo
An old rusty machine used in a farm. Straw chopper in the museum Royalty Free Stock Photo
Steel rod cutting machine. Royalty Free Stock Photo
Old Cutting Steel Machine
Welder hand is cutting black steel plate with acetylene gas welding torch machine for renovate the old ship at shipyard Royalty Free Stock Photo
Silhouette of old vintage hand operated cutting machine Royalty Free Stock Photo
Old metal cutting machine used in factory Royalty Free Stock Photo
Old stone cutting machine with water cooling. Royalty Free Stock Photo
Manual Plasma Cutting Machine on Steel. Royalty Free Stock Photo
Old wood cutting machine Royalty Free Stock Photo
Old rusty cutting stone machine isolated over white background Royalty Free Stock Photo
In the context of machining, a cutting tool (or cutter) is any tool that is used to remove material from the workpiece by means of shear deformation. Cutting may be accomplished by single-point or multipoint tools. Single-point tools are used in turning, shaping, plaining and similar operations, and remove material by means of one cutting edge. Milling and drilling tools are often multipoint tools. Grinding tools are also multipoint tools. Each grain of abrasive functions as a microscopic single-point cutting edge (although of high negative rake angle), and shears a tiny chip. Cutting tools must be made of a material harder than the material which is to be cut, and the tool must be able to withstand the heat generated in the metal-cutting process. Also, the tool must have a specific geometry, with clearance angles designed so that the cutting edge can contact the workpiece without the rest of the tool dragging on the workpiece surface. The angle of the cutting face is also important, as is the flute width, number of flutes or teeth, and margin size. In order to have a long working life, all of the above must be optimized, plus the speeds and feeds at which the tool is run.


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