A machining test to evaluate thermal influence on the kinematics of a five-axis machine tool
Soichi Ibaraki, Rin Okumura
 
 
 
Abstract
 
The thermal deformation of a machine tool, typically caused by environmental temperature variations or the
heat generated by a rotating spindle, often changes the position and orientation errors of the rotary axis average
lines. By applying kinematic modeling of a five-axis machine tool, this paper shows that they can be estimated
from the finished geometry of any test piece, provided that the test piece contains the features that are sufficiently
sensitive to them. Based on the kinematic analysis of their influence, a new machining test is proposed to
evaluate the thermal influence on the position and orientation errors of the rotary axis average lines. By inversely
solving the five-axis kinematic model, this paper shows that the position and orientation errors of the rotary axis
average lines can be analytically identified by the finished test piece geometry. An experimental case study
demonstrates that the position and orientation errors of the rotary axis average lines, which change due to the
thermal influence, can be observed from the finished test piece geometry.
 
Keywords: Machine tool; Thermal error; Machining test; Five-axis; Kinematics
 
 
 
 
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