
High-Performance Mold Steels
By Thomas
Schade, Vice President,
International Mold Steel, Inc.
In the past 30 years there have been tremendous
improvements in machine and cutting tool technologies. High-speed machining can accomplish
cutting speeds and accuracies that toolmakers in the past could only dream of.
Advances in cutting tool metallurgy and coatings technology
have dramatically improved tool life. However, toolmakers still limit their ability to
take full advantage of these marvelous technological advances by using a mold steel that
was developed in the 1950s: P-20.
Given a cheap and familiar steel, why switch? Because there
is a better way to make molds. In the past few years mold steels have been developed that
are easier to machine and weld. One of these new materials is a precipitation hardening
steel of uniform microstructure and hardness that was developed by Professor Asada and Dr.
Watanabe of Daido Industrial College in Nagoya, Japan. This material was introduced to the
plastics industry as NAK 80.
Although NAK 80 is considerably harder than P-20 (40
Rockwell C compared with 32 Rockwell C for P-20), it machines 15-20 percent faster than
P-20 and can be polished to a Class 1 optic-quality finish. To further improve
machinability, a small amount of sulfur was added to NAK 80 to produce a new grade of
steel called NAK 55. Some NAK 55 users report as much as 50
percent reduction in machining time compared to P-20. There are several reasons for the
increased metal removal rates for NAK 55 over P-20. NAK 55 is a vacuum arc remelted,
age-hardened steel. As such, it is exceptionally clean with very uniform grain structure
and hardness from surface to core.
What this means to the mold builder is:
- You will never hit a hard spot and break an expensive
finishing cutter.
- You never need to do an intermediate stress relief. The
dimensional stability of NAK 55 is such that if there is any movement during machining it
will be measured by .0001 of an inch.
- Increased cutting tool life.
PROCESSING GUIDELINES
The optimum cutting conditions for NAK 55 vary by machine
tools. Cutting tools incorporating the recommended geometries will produce superb finish
machined surfaces, often completely eliminating grinding. NAK 55 does not work harden.
Milling: High-speed steel cutters give excellent
results and very smooth machined surfaces. The best result will be obtained with cutter
geometry incorporating a positive rake angle of 15 degrees20 degrees and a relief
angle of less than 10 degrees.
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NAK 55 Grain Structure

NAK 55 Hardness Curve |
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Carbide cutting tools (P-40 grade) yield excellent results
if the positive rake angle of the inserts is approximately 8 degrees and the relief angle
is less than 10 degrees. When a negative rake carbide is used, insert grades with greater
toughness than P-40 will give better results. In general, a positive rake configuration is
superior to negative rake for milling NAK 55. Small, single flute carbide cutters will
give excellent results.
Grinding: NAK 55 grinds easily. It is recommended
that it be ground wet.
Drilling: NAK 55 drills easily. The cutting speed
should be lowered as drill diameter increases. A smaller than standard twist angle and
shorter length will reduce the danger of broken tools.
Tapping: NAK 55 is a 40 HRc steel; therefore the
following is recommended to facilitate tapping:
- Use a sharp, premium grade tap, tin coated and spiral
pointed.
- Use a tapping oil or highly chlorinated sulfurized oil. If
neither is available, a mixture of 50 percent kerosene and 50 percent cutting oil also
works well.
EDM: Copper or graphite electrodes are suitable, or
the steel may be used as an electrode when burning mating halves together to achieve a
matched fit. The recast layer from EDM for NAK 55 is soft (approximately 32
HRc). Other
low alloy grades, such as P-20, or more highly alloyed steels such as S7 and H13, have
extremely hard recast layers equivalent to 5560 Rockwell C. Because the EDM white
layer must be removed, the subsequent stoning or grinding of NAK 55 is much easier than
with other steels.
The success of NAK 80 and NAK 55 is only partially attributable to excellent machinability.
Usually a mistake in the mold or part design must be corrected by welding. It is very
difficult to weld, polish and retexture the surface of P-20 without the welded area being
visible in the steel of the molded part. If the mistake occurs in a highly polished
textured area, the entire cavity may need to be scrapped. The mold made from NAK, when the
proper procedures and NAK-W weld rods are used, will have uniform hardness across the
weld. This allows the toolmaker to purposefully match the polish or etch.
A tooling engineer from Apple
Computer (Cupertino, CA), explains: In todays business environment, to
shorten time-to-market, we are usually forced to build molds while the parts are being
designed. This means we make a lot of changes to our molds, both during the construction
and after the first tryout. Our ability to make these changes with
NAK, sometimes in an
already textured area, has saved us countless times. We have also found that NAK etches
much better than other mold steels. Design changes can be made during the life of a
part as well.
MISTAKE-PROOF STEEL: PX5
In 1989, the Daido team of engineers surveyed the mold
building industry to identify what mold builders considered their worst reoccurring
problem. The resounding response was welding. Perfect welds are obtainable
with the NAK series of mold steels. But, proper pre- and post-heating is required.
According to the mold builders surveyed, a pre-hardening steel that doesnt crack
when welded at room temperature, and could be repolished or retextured without post, would
be ideal.
| In 1993, Daido introduced a
new pre-hardened mold steel called PX5 that combines the weldability and machinability of
NAK with added toughness. PX5 has the same hardness as P-20 (32 Rockwell C) but is more
consistent through the entire workpiece. The steels tensile and yield strengths are
similar to NAK and P-20 (see chart). A quench and
temper heat-treating process is used to manufacture PX5, but the steel is quite stable. It
can be machined to size without the need to relieve stress on the block before the finish
cut. The sacrifice in hardness for NAK (40 Rockwell C) is compensated for by extreme
toughness. PX5 is 60 percent tougher than P-20. This improved toughness allows increased
design creativity and flexibility. But its the weldability that really makes PX5
unique.
Welding this steel requires neither pre-heating nor
post-heating, which greatly reduces welding time and cost. According to Ernie
Beutel, vice
president of Technical Services for International Mold Steel, the increase in
hardness in the area heated during welding is very low and distortion is minimal,
resulting in low overall repair time and cost. As with NAK steels, the weld can |

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Improvements in machining efficiency of 20 to
30
percent can be anticipated. PX5's
consistent hardness and microstructure will
allow
dependable, unattended machining.
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| be textured or polished with no observable
difference in the surface. As with NAK 55, the use of positive rake cutters will always
give superior results when cutting PX5. Consistent hardness and the elimination of hard
spots will improve tool life. |
Ron Field, process development engineer for the Makino
Die/Mold Division, decided to put PX5 to the test. Field compared the machinability of PX5
to P-20 by machining Makino waves on a Makino V55 vertical machining center. Roughing the
P-20 took 102 minutes. Roughing the PX5 took 56 minutes. The superior machined finish
obtainable with PX5 practically looked polished. A major mold base manufacturer obtained
similar results.
When Roland Krevitt, program manager for Apple Computer
specified the mold steel for the 20th anniversary Macintosh, he chose PX5. I used
PX5 and was amazed by its performance. Machining time was reduced by 30 percent, stress
relieving was never required and welds in critical areas textured perfectly, said
Krevitt.
The 20th anniversary Mac
was a high-profile launchit had to be perfect. I knew we would have to weld
extensively. The design was in a constant state of flux. PX5 was the only choice. I still
laugh when I think of a comment made by one of the CNC operators involved in the project:
After machining PX5, I realized that putting P-20 on my Makino is like putting
kerosene in my Corvette.
Source: Competitive
Mold Maker, Volume 4, Number 2
Copyright © 1999 Makino Inc. All rights
reserved.
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