The vibrations produced in a boring tool in internal turning deteriorate the machined surface quality and reduce the tool life, which results in a massive noise during the machining. Therefore, unwanted vibrations are necessary to be eliminated by improving the boring bar's dynamic stiffness and damping capacity. This paper investigates a passive constrained layer damping (CLD) boring bar with a hybrid damping layer to study the internal turning system's stability. Initially, the dynamic models of the conventional and CLD tools are thoroughly studied using Euler-Bernoulli beam theory (EBT) and validated them with finite element modelling (FEM). The frequency response functions (FRFs) obtained from the impact hammer tests are used to estimate the modal parameters. With modal parameters, the semi-analytical stability lobe diagrams (SLDs) are plotted for the boring system with the conventional and CLD boring bar. Tool-tip responses for various cutting conditions are simulated numerically to validate and to study stability. The cutting experiments with traditional and CLD boring bar are conducted for stability analysis and compared tool-tip responses with numerical results. It is observed that both the numerical and experimental results agree with the selected cutting conditions from SLDs. It is also observed that the CLD boring bar with a hybrid damping layer reduced the vibration displacements by five times compared to the conventional one.
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