View Full Version : The term workholding!!
joseph gerard
Sat 20 March 2010, 12:01
Hi there,
I'm stuck in between to understand a term work-holding, it is used in mechanical terms but I just don't know the exact meaning and for what process or work this term stands for. Can anybody help me in this topic.
Joseph
jehayes
Sat 20 March 2010, 14:06
Holding down the work while the machine cuts?
max.elliott
Sat 20 March 2010, 20:45
http://www.google.com/search?q=workholding&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t
More like the tools holding the wood to be worked upon perfectly still. "I used my workholding clamps to keep the 4x8 MDF sheet from sliding about." or "I use a vacuum table as my workholding device."
KenC
Sat 20 March 2010, 23:58
In workshop term, work is the workpiece or the piece of object which you are working on. it can be wood, steel or even ice.
Now you can interprete "workholding" to your fancy.
*PS, Sometimes, job is used instead of work.
PrecisionSpindle
Sun 21 March 2010, 09:01
As a noun, Workholding is the tool that is fastened to the machine and clamps and holds the workpiece. Workholding may position the workpiece to a desireable location during the clamping process, so it could, for example, center the workpiece or it push it to to one side. So, it could be the manual chuck, the power chuck, the collet chuck, the magnetic chuck, the vacuum chuck, the clamp ... to name a few.
As a verb, Workholding would be the action of clamping and holding the workpiece to the machine so that work, or measurement, can be done to it.
You can look at it this way, ... workholding is the tool that marries the workpiece to the machine for the period of time to perform work or measurement.
vBulletin® v3.8.3, Copyright ©2000-2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.