1997
DOI: 10.1016/s0263-8223(97)00068-8
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Influence of tool wear on internal damage in small diameter drilling in GFRP

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Cited by 41 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…According to Ionue et al [21], when a small number of holes must be produced with high quality, low feed rates should be employed, whereas higher feed rates should be used for largescale production with fair quality. When drilling GFRP the authors noticed that as tool-wear progresses, the width of the damage is less dependent on the position of the cutting edge in relation to the fibre orientation.…”
Section: Quality Of the Machined Holesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to Ionue et al [21], when a small number of holes must be produced with high quality, low feed rates should be employed, whereas higher feed rates should be used for largescale production with fair quality. When drilling GFRP the authors noticed that as tool-wear progresses, the width of the damage is less dependent on the position of the cutting edge in relation to the fibre orientation.…”
Section: Quality Of the Machined Holesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inoue et al [9] investigated the relationship between the internal damage around the drilled hole and the number of holes produced. Glass fibre reinforced epoxy resin used in printed circuit board was tested as work material.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aoyama et al (2001) investigated the damage after drilling holes of small diameter in printed wiring boards and concluded that the delamination (which leads to ion migration) is generated along the fiber in the hole wall surface as the surface roughness increases. Inoue et al (1997) investigated the relationship between the internal damage around the drilled hole and the number of holes produced. Kao (2005) investigated the tribological properties of coated drills against glass fiber-reinforced epoxy resin.…”
Section: Literature On Delamination Factormentioning
confidence: 99%