Die Theory

             The industrial art of manufacturing consist of many catergories like
             stamping dies, plastics molds, and jigs and fixtures to be used in the mass
             production of solid objects. I have experienced working on a press with sheet
             metal. My job was to slide the sheet metal onto a pressworking die and place the
             palms of my hands on a sensor so that the press would then stamp the sheet metal
             into a predetermined shape. Next, I had to slide it onto the next die for the
             next shape to be made. The pressworking dies in the factory would range from
             extremely small to gigantic;but the press that stamps out the roof of a car is
             about three stories highand capable of exerting tons of force. The
             manufacturing of plastic molding is quite similar to that of stamping dies. The
             principal difference is that stamping requires force, while molding does not.
             I recently graduated from a machinist training program in Detroit:
             (Focus Hope Machinist Training Institute), and we worked on several different
             machines such as the Lathe, Grinder, CNC mills, and a software system
             called Auto Cad. After that program I began to understand the importance of
             machine tools in the industry; having the skill to operate machines and design
             parts on the computer (Auto Cad). I really enjoyed working on these machines
             such as the grinder machine which removes small chips from metal parts that are
             brought into contact with a rotating abrasive wheel called a grinding wheel or
             an abrasive belt. The sparks that the grinder generates from the part could be
             considered cool to look at if your not the person grinding. One machine that I
             did not enjoy working on was the Press. This large class of machines includes
             equipment used for forming metal parts byapplying the following processes:
             shearing, blanking, forming, drawing, bending, forging, flanging, squeezing, and
             ...

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Die Theory. (1969, December 31). In MegaEssays.com. Retrieved 16:27, April 26, 2024, from https://www.megaessays.com/viewpaper/43976.html