Workshop Practice II
Workshop Practice II
Workshop Practice II
ByTolina T.
March, 2020
TOPICS
What is Manufacturing?
Materials for Manufacturing
Manufacturing Processes
Selection of Manufacturing Processes
Projects(e.g. lock, parallel or toolmaker’s
clamp or wheel puller, gear-shaft assembly,
etc.)
What is Manufacturing?
• Process of converting raw materials into products
• It includes:
Design of The product
Selection of the raw materials
The sequence of processes through which the product will
be manufactured
Materials in Manufacturing
• Most engineering materials can be classified into one of three
basic categories:
1.Metals
2.Ceramics
3.Polymers
• Their chemistries are different
• Their mechanical and physical properties are dissimilar
• These differences affect the manufacturing processes that can be
used to produce products from them
Manufacturing Processes
Manufacturing processes are the steps through which raw
materials are transformed into a finished product.
Manufacturing Processes
Solidification processes
Particulate processing
Shaping processes
Deformation processes
Welding
Mechanical Permanent
fastening fastening methods
Projects: (e.g. lock, parallel clamp or wheel puller,
gear-shaft assembly, etc.)
College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
ByTolina T.
April, 2020
• Gears are widely used in various mechanisms and devices to
transmit power and motion positively (without slip) between
parallel, intersecting ( axis) or non-intersecting non parallel
shafts
• Gears of various type, size and material are widely used in
several machines and systems requiring positive and stepped
drive.
• The major applications are:
Speed gear box, feed gear box and some other kinematic units of
machine tools
Speed drives in textile, jute and similar machineries
Gear boxes of automobiles
Speed and / or feed drives of several metal forming machines
Machineries for mining, tea processing etc.
Large and heavy duty gear boxes used in cement industries, sugar
industries, cranes, conveyors etc.
Precision equipments, clocks and watches
Industrial robots and toys.
• The dimensional features that are used to express or specify
the gears are;
• For spur gears and worm wheels
⎯ number of teeth, Z
⎯ module, m
⎯ helix angle, if any (θ)
⎯ width (b)
ByTolina T.
May, 2020
Measurement
• Measurement is the process of determining or
finding the size, quantity or degree of something .
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Rule: A rule is a tool consisting of a straight-edged strip of
metal, wood, or some other material, graduated in some units
of measurement
• Lengths can be measured by using the following
• metre/half-metre rule
• accuracy = 1 mm 0r 0.1 cm or 0.001 m
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• Caliper: Calipers are simple measuring instrument used
to transfer measurement from steel rule to objects and
vice versa. They are made from tools steel or high carbon
steel.
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• Telescopic guage: used for measuring inside holes that are too small
for an inside micrometer or when an inside micrometer is not
available.
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Half Ball Small Hole Gages Full Ball Small Hole Gages
Vernier caliper
• Function
– To measure smaller distances (inside & outside parts)
– Can measure up to .001 inch or .01mm.
– To measure depth of the hole
• Features
– Larger, lower jaws are designed to measure outer
points e.g. diameter of a rod.
– Top jaws are designed to measure inside points e.g.
size of a hole.
– A rod extends from the rear of the caliper and can be
used to measure the depth.
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Parts of the Vernier caliper
Main Scale
• Main scale is graduated in
cm and mm.
Vernier Scale
• It slides on the main scale.
• On Vernier scale 0.9cm is
divided into 10 equal parts.
Jaws
• Two inside jaws (Upper)
• Two outside jaws (Lower)
• Reading of the instrument = Main Scale divisions + (coinciding Vernier Scale
division x L.C)
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Digital Calipers
• Latest advancement.
• Measurement converted to digital readout.
• Similar to conventional calipers.
• Scale can be calibrated in both inches and centimeters.
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Micrometer
• The distance moved by the spindle during one rotation of the
thimble is 0.5mm.
• List count
• Movement of one division the thimble = 0.5 x 1/50= 0.01 is the list
count
Ranges of outside micrometer
• Outside micrometers are available in the ranges of o to 25mm, 25
to 50mm,50 to 75mm,75 to 100mm,100 to 125mm and 125 to
150mm.
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Work shop practiceII 36
Depth Micrometer
• A depth micrometer is similar to a
conventional micrometer except that
it is designed to measure the depth
from a flat surface.
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Work shop practiceII 38
Dial Test Indicator (DTI)
• Dial indicators are instruments used to accurately measure a small
distance.
• They may also be known as a Dial gauge, Dial Test Indicator (DTI), or
as a "clock".
• They are named so because the measurement results are displayed in
a magnified way by means of a dial.
• Dial indicators may be used to check the variation in tolerance during
the inspection process of a machined part, measure the deflection of a
beam or ring under laboratory conditions, as well as many other
situations where a small measurement needs to be registered or
indicated.
• The definition of small depends on the observer however a range
between 1 mm and 50 mm may be thought of as typical with a travel
of 10 mm being perhaps the most common.
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Straight Edge
• A straightedge is a precision
ground metal measuring gauge
that is used to check the flatness
of engine components when used
with a feeler gauge.
• A straightedge is used to check
the flatness of the following:
– Cylinder heads
– Cylinder block deck
– Straightness of the main
bearing bores (saddles)
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Work shop practiceII 42
Angular Measuring Tools
The most common tools
Simple Protractor
Multi-Use Gage
Angle gauge blocks
Combination Set
Universal bevel
protractor
Sine bar
Sine centre
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College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
ByTolina T.
June, 2020
Assembly of Units
• Creating a finished product requires more than just metal
fabrication – it also needs to determine its finishes, choose
packaging and put them together.
• Almost all products are assemblies of a large number of
components.
• Some of the components or subassemblies can move with
respect to each other, others are physically fixed together, with
no relative motion possible.
• The process and methods used for joining depend on the type of
joint, the required strength, the materials of the components
being joint, the geometry of the components, and cost issues.
Need of Assembly
a.To restrict some degrees of freedom of motion for
components.
b.A complex shaped component may be
impossible/expensive to manufacture, but it may be
possible/cheaper to make it in several parts and then
join them.
c. Some products are better made as assemblies, since
they can be disassembled for maintenance.
d.Transporting a disassembled product is sometimes
easier/feasible compared to transporting the entire
product.
Types of Assembly Methods