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Toward the Interpretation of Acoustic Emissions in Machining
R.H. Sturges, D. Bourne, and W. Yang
tech. report CMU-RI-TR-91-25, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, November, 1990.

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Abstract

The application of human speech processing techniques to the machine shop may provide a new means to interpret the sounds created by the metal cutting process. Realtime signal processing in the frequency domain can identify those bandpass responses which indicate the health of the tools. When combined with knowledge of the tooling and the cutting path, spectrograms can verify the cutting phases and geometric features expected of a normal process.


Notes

Sponsor: Air Force Wright Aeronautical Labs
Grant ID: F-33615-86-C-5038

Associated center: CIMDS
Associated lab/group: Rapid Manufacturing Lab

Number of pages: 15


Text Reference

R.H. Sturges, D. Bourne, and W. Yang, Toward the Interpretation of Acoustic Emissions in Machining, tech. report CMU-RI-TR-91-25, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, November, 1990.


BibTeX Reference

@techreport{Sturges_1990_269,
   author = "R. H. Sturges and David Bourne and Wei Yang",
   title = "Toward the Interpretation of Acoustic Emissions in Machining",
   institution = "Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University",
   month = "November",
   year = "1990",
   number = "CMU-RI-TR-91-25",
   address = "Pittsburgh, PA"
}


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