Optimizing Punch-To-Die Clearance
This 6-page, full-color brochure available from Dayton Progress discusses how the 5 percent per side clearance is insufficient for today’s high-strength steels, and walks readers through how to select the proper clearance based on material, thickness, tensile strength, and the requirements of the specific job.
Posted: March 26, 2014
Optimizing the punch-to-die clearance, which can significantly affect the quality of the resulting hole characteristics, is detailed in a new 6-page, full-color brochure available from Dayton Progress Corporation (Dayton, OH).
Available in print or online here, Engineered Clearance discusses how the 5 percent per side clearance is insufficient for today’s high-strength steels, and walks readers through how to select the proper clearance based on material, thickness, tensile strength, and the requirements of the specific job. In addition to smaller burr, clean burnish and break patterns on the perforation, matching the clearance to the material can also extend the service life of the punch.
Dayton Progress is a recognized leader for manufacturing and supplying catalog and special punches, punch blanks and other precision tooling and accessories in both standard-inch and metric sizes to the Metal Stamping and Metal Forming industries, with more than 800 employees shipping millions of tools each year from its ten factories in North America, Europe and Asia to 20,000 customers in 70 countries.
Dayton Progress, 500 Progress Road, PO Box 39, Dayton, OH 45449-0039, 937-859-5111, [email protected], www.daytonprogress.com.