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Wednesday, May 17, 2006 - 9:00 AM
APP3.1

Scientific, Technological and Economic Aspects of Rapid Tooling by Electric Arc Spray Forming

P. S. Grant, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom; S. R. Duncan, Oxford University, Oxford, United Kingdom; C. F. Johnson, A. Roche, Ford Motor Co, Dearborn, MI

For the last seven years, Oxford University and the Ford Motor Co have been researching jointly the development of the large-scale spray forming of steel tooling capable of mass production. These investigations have involved: comprehensive microstructure and property studies, modelling of shape evolution and heat flow, real-time feedback control of tool temperature to eliminate tool distortion, high speed imaging and particle image velocimetry of droplet deposition on 3D shapes, the testing of full-scale tools for different applications in the production environment, and detailed studies of the cost and time savings realised for different tooling applications. This paper will provide an overview of the scientific and technical progress to date, present latest results, and describe the current state-of-the-art. Many of the insights described have relevance and applicability across the family of thermal spray processes and applications.


Summary: This paper presents an overview of the scientific and technical progress to date of a major collaboration between Oxford University and the Ford Motor Co, together with latest results and the current state-of-the-art. Many of the insights have relevance and applicability across the family of thermal spray processes and applications.