Rolling-forging

General Bulk Deformation

Q: What are bulk deformation processes?

A: Metal forming operations causing significant shape change by plastic flow of bulk forms like bars, billets, or slabs.

Q: Name the four basic bulk deformation processes.

A: Rolling, forging, extrusion, wire and bar drawing.

Q: What is a key benefit of hot working in bulk deformation?

A: Allows significant shape change due to reduced strength and increased ductility.

Q: How does cold working enhance bulk deformation parts?

A: Increases strength through strain hardening.

Q: What does "near net shape" mean in bulk deformation?

A: Parts require little or no subsequent machining.

Q: What are typical starting forms for bulk deformation?

A: Cylindrical bars, billets, rectangular billets, and slabs.

Rolling

Q: What is rolling in metalworking?

A: A process where slab or plate thickness is reduced by compressive forces between opposing rolls.

Q: What percentage of deformed materials undergo rolling?

A: Over 90%.

Q: What is flat rolling used for?

A: Reducing thickness of a rectangular cross section.

Q: What is shape rolling?

A: Forming a square cross section into shapes like I-beams or rails.

Q: What is the purpose of backing rolls in a four-high rolling mill?

A: To support smaller work rolls and reduce deflection.

Q: How does a tandem rolling mill operate?

A: Uses a sequence of two-high mills for continuous reduction.

Q: What is a common defect in flat rolling due to high friction?

A: Wavy edges.

Q: What causes alligatoring in rolling?

A: Excessive deformation or sticking leading to surface splitting.

Q: What is the role of camber in rolling mills?

A: Compensates for roll bending to ensure uniform strip thickness.

Q: Why is hot rolling more common than cold rolling?

A: It allows large deformations due to lower material strength.

Q: What improves in cold-rolled sheet compared to hot-rolled?

A: Surface finish and dimensional tolerances.

Q: What is thread rolling?

A: A cold working process to form threads on cylindrical parts using dies.

Q: What is an advantage of thread rolling over machining?

A: Stronger threads due to work hardening.

Q: What does ring rolling produce?

A: Thin-walled rings of larger diameter from thick-walled rings.

Rolling-Related Processes

Q: What is roll piercing used for?

A: Creating seamless tubes by exploiting internal cracks in a compressed bar.

Q: What controls the hole size in roll piercing?

A: A mandrel.

Q: What is roll forging also known as?

A: Cross-rolling.

Q: What are examples of roll-forged products?

A: Tapered leaf springs and knives.

Q: What happens in ball rolling?

A: Steel balls are formed by skew-rolling or upsetting for bearings.

Forging

Q: What is forging?

A: Controlled plastic deformation of metal into a predefined shape by pressure or impact.

Q: How old is the forging process?

A: Dates back to about 5000 BC.

Q: What is an advantage of forging over casting?

A: Work hardening increases strength.

Q: What are the three main types of forging dies?

A: Open-die, impression-die, flashless.

Q: What is open-die forging also called?

A: Upsetting or upset forging.

Q: What causes barreling in open-die forging?

A: Friction between work and die surfaces.

Q: What is the role of flash in impression-die forging?

A: Constrains metal flow to fill the die cavity.

Q: Why is impression-die forging often manual?

A: Requires skilled operators under adverse conditions.

Q: What is a limitation of impression-die forging?

A: Not capable of close tolerances; machining is often needed.

Q: How does flashless forging differ from impression-die forging?

A: No excess flash is created; the work is fully constrained.

Q: What is coining in forging?

A: A flashless process to mint coins with sharp details.

Q: What is upsetting used for?

A: Forming heads on nails, bolts, and similar hardware.

Q: What is swaging?

A: A process using rotating dies to taper a workpiece radially.

Q: What is a typical swaged product?

A: Tapered rods or tubes.

Q: What equipment applies an impact load in forging?

A: Drop hammers (gravity or power).

Forging Equipment and Economics

Q: What is the speed range of a hydraulic forging press?

A: 0.06-0.30 m/s.

Q: Which forging equipment has the highest speed range?

A: Counterblow hammer (4.5-9.0 m/s).

Q: Why are hydraulic presses expensive in forging?

A: High initial cost, though easier to maintain.

Q: When is forging more economical than casting for a connecting rod?

A: For large quantities.

Q: What reduces setup and tooling costs in forging?

A: Increasing the number of pieces forged with the same die.

Extrusion

Q: What is extrusion?

A: A process forcing metal through a die opening to form a uniform cross-sectional shape.

Q: What are the two basic types of extrusion?

A: Direct (forward) and indirect (backward/reverse).

Q: What is the "butt" in direct extrusion?

A: The small portion of billet that cannot be forced through the die.

Q: Why is indirect extrusion limited?

A: Lower rigidity of the hollow ram and difficulty supporting the extruded product.

Q: What enhances grain structure in cold extrusion?

A: Work hardening.

Q: What is a disadvantage of cold extrusion?

A: High stresses on machinery and die wear without lubrication.

Q: What defect can occur in extrusion with high friction?

A: Pipe (extrusion) defect.

Q: What is impact extrusion?

A: High-speed cold extrusion, often for collapsible tubes.

Q: What should be avoided in extruded cross-section design?

A: Sharp corners and non-uniform thicknesses.

Wire and Bar Drawing

Q: How does wire drawing differ from extrusion?

A: Work is pulled through the die instead of pushed.

Q: What is the typical cross-sectional shape in wire drawing?

A: Circular.

Q: What distinguishes wire drawing from bar drawing?

A: Wire drawing uses smaller diameter stock (down to 0.03 mm).

Q: What limits the maximum reduction per pass in drawing?

A: Draw stress exceeding the yield strength causes elongation instead of reduction.

Q: What is the purpose of annealing in wire drawing?

A: Relieves work hardening between dies.

Q: What is a common product of bar drawing?

A: Metal bars for machining or forging.