Monday, 9 December 2013
P8
P8 identify the appropriate heat treatment processes, secondary, finishing and assembly techniques needed to manufacture four given components.
Given components are
Upright for the front suspension on the Green power racer. Anodise it .
A garden gate, hot galvanised
Waterpump shaft
Use this for the Water pump Grind the main shaft as the finishing technique
Lathe and surface hardening should come into play!
http://fuelpumps.tpub.com/TM-5-4320-258-34/TM-5-4320-258-340026.htm
an engine block rough cast to finished surfaces. Milling machine.
Friday, 15 November 2013
None traditional machining techniques
Know how a range of non-traditional techniques are used
Electro discharge: machines eg spark erosion, wire erosion; features of the
workpiece eg holes, faces (such as flat, square, parallel, angular), forms
(such as concave, convex, profile, square/rectangular), other features (such as
threads, engraving, cavities, radii/arcs, slots)
Broaching: machines eg horizontal, vertical; features of the workpiece eg
keyways, holes (such as flat sided, square, hexagonal, octagonal), splines,
serrations, other special forms
Honing and lapping: machines eg honing (such as horizontal, vertical), lapping
(such as rotary disc, reciprocating); features of the workpiece eg holes (such
as through, blind, tapered), faces (such as flat, parallel, angular)
Friday, 25 October 2013
Spec for homework to help you
1 Understand how a range of
secondary machining techniques are used
Turning: machine eg centre lathe, turret; features of the workpiece eg
flat faces, diameters (such as parallel, stepped, tapered), holes (such as
drilled, bored, reamed), profile forms, threads (such as internal, external),
eccentric features, parting off, chamfers, knurls or special finishes, grooves,
undercuts
Milling: machine eg horizontal, vertical, universal, planer/gantry;
up-cut; down-cut; features of the workpiece eg faces (such as flat, square,
parallel, angular), steps/shoulders, slots (such as open ended,
enclosed/recesses, tee), holes (such as drilled, bored), profile forms (such as
vee, concave, convex, gear), serrations, indexed or rotated forms, special
forms
Boring: machine eg horizontal,
vertical; features of the workpiece eg bored holes (such as through workpiece,
to a depth, tapered), holes (such as drilled to depth, drilled through
workpiece, reamed, threaded), external diameters, grooves/recesses,
chamfers/radii, faces (such as flat, square, parallel, angular, milled), slots,
forms (such as indexed, rotated), external tapers
Grinding: machine eg surface (such as horizontal, vertical), cylindrical
(such as external, internal), centreless, universal, thread, profile; features
of the workpiece eg faces (such as flat, vertical, parallel, square to each
other, shoulders and faces), slots, diameters (such as parallel, tapered),
bores (such as counterbores, tapered, parallel), profiles forms, thread forms
(such as vee, right hand, single start, multi-start, internal, external),
angular faces
Presswork: machines eg single action, multiple action; features of the
workpiece eg blanking, notching, piercing, joggling, cropping/shearing,
bending/forming, coiling/rolling, planishing/flattening, first draw, second
draw, compound operations, cupping, embossing, coining
Health and safety: appropriate legislation and regulations eg Health and Safety
at Work Act 1974, Fire Precautions Act 1971, manual handling, Reporting of
Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations (RIDDOR) 1995,
Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations (PUWER) 1998, Health and Safety
(First Aid) Regulations 1981; use of personal protective equipment (PPE)
Materials: eg ferrous, non-ferrous, non-metallic, stainless, special
alloys, deep drawing steels
Kinematics: machine tool design;
generation and forming of shapes; six degrees of freedom
Gomework to be handed in by 1st Tueasday back from 1/2 term
P1 explain how five
different secondary machining techniques are used safely on a range of
materials
|
P2 explain kinematics in
secondary machining techniques
|
Friday, 20 September 2013
Monocoque Design
Looking at the lesson you need to research monocoque race car design. Look at the work of Colin Chapman from the 1960's as he was the father of the design revolution which overtook formula 1 design.
Thursday, 19 September 2013
BTEC
Produce a list of components you think you will need to do in order to build the car. Look at techniques for its construction. Welding machining GRP etc.
Wednesday, 4 September 2013
Cambridge Uni solar car.
Try this as an idea for getting your ideas flowing .
http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/new-and-under-the-sun
http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/new-and-under-the-sun
Tuesday, 11 June 2013
Deadline date
Hi we need to finish off the unit by the second last week of term. Unit 307. If you fail to complete by then there is no extension!
Best regards
Best regards
Wednesday, 30 January 2013
Unit 305 LOL1
Hi Chaps here is the mark scheme for LOL1 to help you check you are on the right lines
Guidance for allocating marks
This
section provides further guidance for the assessor on how to award marks within
each mark
band in an
objective way.
Marking
grid A
Assessment
focus LO.1.1
Mark Band
1–3
(0–9 marks)
There are
typically up to 2 marks for each of the two descriptions, but could
go to 3
marks if either the consequences of failure or the effect on
production
is answered well and above that required for this mark band but
up to a
maximum of 4 marks.
Up to 2
marks can be awarded for the explanation of the effects and should
be based on
the how well it shows the effects are appropriate to customer
expectation
and corporate image and 1 mark can be awarded for linking
image and
customer expectation within the explanation.
Up to 2
marks could be awarded for indicate why consequences affect
corporate
image; this could be in the form of advantages and limitations.
Sunday, 20 January 2013
Unit 305 Snow work
Dear All
If you can look at Unit 5 as we have just started this unit. . I recommend you look at the mark scheme as we have been doing in class as this will assist in getting the marks clearly allocated for Learning Objective LOL1
You will have downloaded this into your area already.
You need to clearly identify 2 areas. of maintenance. Suggest areas of System failure, such as the case study on the Bombadeir undercarriage, Rail signal failure
Mark Band 1–3
(0–9 marks)
There are typically up to 2 marks for each of the two descriptions, but could
go to 3 marks if either the consequences of failure or the effect on
production is answered well and above that required for this mark band but
up to a maximum of 4 marks.
Up to 2 marks can be awarded for the explanation of the effects and should
be based on the how well it shows the effects are appropriate to customer
expectation and corporate image and 1 mark can be awarded for linking
image and customer expectation within the explanation.
Up to 2 marks could be awarded for indicate why consequences affect
corporate image; this could be in the form of advantages and limitations.
If you can look at Unit 5 as we have just started this unit. . I recommend you look at the mark scheme as we have been doing in class as this will assist in getting the marks clearly allocated for Learning Objective LOL1
You will have downloaded this into your area already.
You need to clearly identify 2 areas. of maintenance. Suggest areas of System failure, such as the case study on the Bombadeir undercarriage, Rail signal failure
Mark Band 1–3
(0–9 marks)
There are typically up to 2 marks for each of the two descriptions, but could
go to 3 marks if either the consequences of failure or the effect on
production is answered well and above that required for this mark band but
up to a maximum of 4 marks.
Up to 2 marks can be awarded for the explanation of the effects and should
be based on the how well it shows the effects are appropriate to customer
expectation and corporate image and 1 mark can be awarded for linking
image and customer expectation within the explanation.
Up to 2 marks could be awarded for indicate why consequences affect
corporate image; this could be in the form of advantages and limitations.
Wednesday, 16 January 2013
New Unit 305
Hi chaps
Pleased with the exam and your feedback from it. Looks like you should have done well and you appeared to have got the majority of the marks in the feedback session. Well done
We have now started Unit 5 and this is the maintenance unit . Following the lesson ensure you have downloaded all the unit documentation into your area.. I need you to research
Plant equipment and system with a view to maintanence so you have a clear view tto this before next lesson. That way we can start unit 5 LO1.1 and have an idea as to covering 2 areas
See if you cxn find some examples of these failures, Plane rail crashes etc.
Mark Band 1–3
(0–9 marks)
There are typically up to 2 marks for each of the two descriptions, but could
go to 3 marks if either the consequences of failure or the effect on
production is answered well and above that required for this mark band but
up to a maximum of 4 marks.
Up to 2 marks can be awarded for the explanation of the effects and should
be based on the how well it shows the effects are appropriate to customer
expectation and corporate image and 1 mark can be awarded for linking
image and customer expectation within the explanation.
Up to 2 marks could be awarded for indicate why consequences affect
corporate image; this could be in the form of advantages and limitations.
Pleased with the exam and your feedback from it. Looks like you should have done well and you appeared to have got the majority of the marks in the feedback session. Well done
We have now started Unit 5 and this is the maintenance unit . Following the lesson ensure you have downloaded all the unit documentation into your area.. I need you to research
Plant equipment and system with a view to maintanence so you have a clear view tto this before next lesson. That way we can start unit 5 LO1.1 and have an idea as to covering 2 areas
See if you cxn find some examples of these failures, Plane rail crashes etc.
Mark Band 1–3
(0–9 marks)
There are typically up to 2 marks for each of the two descriptions, but could
go to 3 marks if either the consequences of failure or the effect on
production is answered well and above that required for this mark band but
up to a maximum of 4 marks.
Up to 2 marks can be awarded for the explanation of the effects and should
be based on the how well it shows the effects are appropriate to customer
expectation and corporate image and 1 mark can be awarded for linking
image and customer expectation within the explanation.
Up to 2 marks could be awarded for indicate why consequences affect
corporate image; this could be in the form of advantages and limitations.
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