
DeGarmo's Materials and Processes in Manufacturing
12th Edition
ISBN: 9781118987674
Author: J. T. Black, Ronald A. Kohser
Publisher: WILEY
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 18, Problem 92RQ
What is burnishing?
Expert Solution & Answer

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Students have asked these similar questions
2.
3.
4.
clockwise from
Four masses A, B, C and D revolve at equal radii and are equally spaced along a shaft. The mass B
is 7 kg and the radii of C and D make angles of 90° and 240° respectively with the radius of B. Find
the magnitude of the masses A, C and D and the angular position of A so that the system may be
completely balanced.
[Ans. 5 kg: 6 kg; 4.67 kg; 205° from mass B in anticlockwise direction]
A rotating shaft carries four masses A, B, C and D which are radially attached to it. The mass
centres are 30 mm, 38 mm, 40 mm and 35 mm respectively from the axis of rotation. The masses
A, C and D are 7.5 kg. 5 kg and 4 kg respectively. The axial distances between the planes of
rotation of A and B is 400 mm and between B and C is 500 mm. The masses A and C are at right
angles to each other. Find for a complete balance,
1. the angles between the masses B and D from mass A,
2. the axial distance between the planes of rotation of C and D.
3. the magnitude of mass B.
[Ans. 162.5%,…
1. Four masses A, B, C and D are attached to a shaft and revolve in the same plane. The masses are 12
kg. 10 kg. 18 kg and 15 kg respectively and their radii of rotations are 40 mm, 50 mm, 60 mm and
30 mm. The angular position of the masses B, C and D are 60°, 135° and 270 from the mass A.
Find the magnitude and position of the balancing mass at a radius of 100 mm.
[Ans. 7.56 kg: 87 clockwise from A]
3. The structure in Figure 3 is loaded by a horizontal force P = 2.4 kN at C. The roller at E is
frictionless. Find the axial force N, the shear force V and the bending moment M at a section
just above the pin B in the member ABC and illustrate their directions on a sketch of the segment
AB.
B
P
D
A
65°
65°
E
all dimensions in meters
Figure 3
Chapter 18 Solutions
DeGarmo's Materials and Processes in Manufacturing
Ch. 18 - Briefly describe the evolution of forming...Ch. 18 - What are some of the possible means of classifying...Ch. 18 - How are bulk deformation processes different from...Ch. 18 - Prob. 4RQCh. 18 - Prob. 5RQCh. 18 - Prob. 6RQCh. 18 - Prob. 7RQCh. 18 - Why is it undesirable to minimize friction between...Ch. 18 - Prob. 9RQCh. 18 - Prob. 10RQ
Ch. 18 - Prob. 11RQCh. 18 - Prob. 12RQCh. 18 - Prob. 13RQCh. 18 - Prob. 14RQCh. 18 - Why is foil almost always rolled on a cluster...Ch. 18 - Prob. 16RQCh. 18 - Prob. 17RQCh. 18 - Prob. 18RQCh. 18 - Prob. 19RQCh. 18 - Explain how hot�rolled products can have...Ch. 18 - What is mill scale, and how can it be removed?Ch. 18 - Discuss the problems in producing uniform...Ch. 18 - Prob. 23RQCh. 18 - How might the addition of horizontal tensions act...Ch. 18 - What are some other techniques to reduce roll...Ch. 18 - What is thermomechanical processing, and what are...Ch. 18 - Provide a concise description of the forging...Ch. 18 - What are some of the types of flow that can occur...Ch. 18 - Prob. 29RQCh. 18 - Prob. 30RQCh. 18 - Prob. 31RQCh. 18 - Prob. 32RQCh. 18 - Prob. 33RQCh. 18 - Prob. 34RQCh. 18 - Prob. 35RQCh. 18 - Prob. 36RQCh. 18 - Prob. 37RQCh. 18 - Prob. 38RQCh. 18 - Prob. 39RQCh. 18 - Describe some of the primary differences among...Ch. 18 - What are some common examples of impression�die...Ch. 18 - What are some of the significant requirements of...Ch. 18 - Why are different tolerances usually applied to...Ch. 18 - What are some of the roles played by lubricants in...Ch. 18 - What are some of the attractive features of...Ch. 18 - What types of product geometry can be produced by...Ch. 18 - What is upset forging?Ch. 18 - What are some of the typical products produced by...Ch. 18 - What types of products can be produced by...Ch. 18 - What are some of the attractive features of...Ch. 18 - How does roll forging differ from a conventional...Ch. 18 - Describe the swaging process.Ch. 18 - What kind of products are produced by swaging?Ch. 18 - How can the swaging process impart different sizes...Ch. 18 - What are some possible objectives of...Ch. 18 - Provide a concise definition of extrusion.Ch. 18 - What metals can be shaped by extrusion?Ch. 18 - What are some of the attractive features of the...Ch. 18 - What is the primary shape limitation of the...Ch. 18 - What is the primary benefit of indirect extrusion?Ch. 18 - What are some temperature considerations in hot...Ch. 18 - Why might lubricant selection be more critical in...Ch. 18 - What are some possible causes of surface cracks in...Ch. 18 - How might tubular products be made by extrusion?Ch. 18 - What types of products are made using a...Ch. 18 - Why can lubricants not be used in spider�mandrel...Ch. 18 - What are some of the attractive features of...Ch. 18 - What are some unique concerns and limitations of...Ch. 18 - What is the unique capability provided by...Ch. 18 - How is the feedstock pushed through the die in...Ch. 18 - Describe the Conform process of continuous...Ch. 18 - What types of feedstock can be used in continuous...Ch. 18 - How is wire, rod, and tube drawing different from...Ch. 18 - Why are rods generally drawn on draw benches,...Ch. 18 - Why is the reduction in area significantly...Ch. 18 - What is the difference between tube drawing and...Ch. 18 - For what types of products might a floating plug...Ch. 18 - What are some of the benefits of cold drawing of...Ch. 18 - What types of materials are used for...Ch. 18 - What is the benefit of a tandem wire drawing...Ch. 18 - What is cold forming?Ch. 18 - What types of products are produced by cold...Ch. 18 - What is impact extrusion and what variations...Ch. 18 - If a product contains a large�diameter head and...Ch. 18 - What are some of the attractive properties or...Ch. 18 - What process can be used to produce seamless pipe...Ch. 18 - What type of products can be made by the...Ch. 18 - What types of rivets can be used when there is...Ch. 18 - How is coining different from a process known as...Ch. 18 - Why might hubbing be an attractive way to produce...Ch. 18 - How might a peening operation increase the...Ch. 18 - What is burnishing?Ch. 18 - Prob. 1PCh. 18 - Consider the extrusion of a cylindrical billet,...Ch. 18 - The force required to compress a cylindrical solid...Ch. 18 - Prob. 4PCh. 18 - Prob. 5PCh. 18 - Prob. 6PCh. 18 - Prob. 7PCh. 18 - Prob. 8PCh. 18 - Based on the size, shape, and desired precision,...Ch. 18 - What types of engineering materials might be able...Ch. 18 - For each of the shape generation methods in part...Ch. 18 - Which of the combinations of part 4 do you feel...Ch. 18 - For this system, outline the specific steps that...Ch. 18 - For your proposed solution, would any additional...
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, mechanical-engineering and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- 4. The distributed load in Figure 4 varies linearly from 3wo per unit length at A to wo per unit length at B and the beam is built in at A. Find expressions for the shear force V and the bending moment M as functions of x. 3W0 Wo A L Figure 4 2 Barrow_forward1. The beam AB in Figure 1 is subjected to a uniformly distributed load wo = 100 N/m. Find the axial force N, the shear force V and the bending moment M at the point D which is midway between A and B and illustrate their directions on a sketch of the segment DB. wo per unit length A D' B all dimensions in metersarrow_forward5. Find the shear force V and the bending moment M for the beam of Figure 5 as functions of the distance x from A. Hence find the location and magnitude of the maximum bending moment. w(x) = wox L x L Figure 5 Barrow_forward
- Dry atmospheric air enters an adiabatic compressor at a 20°C, 1 atm and a mass flow rate of 0.3kg/s. The air is compressed to 1 MPa. The exhaust temperature of the air is 70 degrees hottercompared to the exhaust of an isentropic compression.Determine,a. The exhaust temperature of the air (°C)b. The volumetric flow rate (L/s) at the inlet and exhaust of the compressorc. The power required to accomplish the compression (kW)d. The isentropic efficiency of the compressore. An accounting of the exergy entering the compressor (complete Table P3.9) assuming that thedead state is the same as State 1 (dry atmospheric air)f. The exergetic efficiency of the compressorarrow_forwardA heat pump is operating between a low temperature reservoir of 270 K and a high temperaturereservoir of 340 K. The heat pump receives heat at 255 K from the low temperature reservoir andrejects heat at 355 K to the high temperature reservoir. The heating coefficient of performance ofthe heat pump is 3.2. The heat transfer rate from the low temperature reservoir is 30 kW. The deadstate temperature is 270 K. Determine,a. Power input to the heat pump (kW)b. Heat transfer rate to the high-temperature reservoir (kW)c. Exergy destruction rate associated with the low temperature heat transfer (kW)d. Exergy destruction rate of the heat pump (kW)e. Exergy destruction rate associated with the high temperature heat transfer (kW)f. Exergetic efficiency of the heat pump itselfarrow_forwardRefrigerant 134a (Table B6, p514 of textbook) enters a tube in the evaporator of a refrigerationsystem at 132.73 kPa and a quality of 0.15 at a velocity of 0.5 m/s. The R134a exits the tube as asaturated vapor at −21°C. The tube has an inside diameter of 3.88 cm. Determine the following,a. The pressure drop of the R134a as it flows through the tube (kPa)b. The volumetric flow rate at the inlet of the tube (L/s)c. The mass flow rate of the refrigerant through the tube (g/s)d. The volumetric flow rate at the exit of the tube (L/s)e. The velocity of the refrigerant at the exit of the tube (m/s)f. The heat transfer rate to the refrigerant (kW) as it flows through the tubearrow_forward
- Water enters the rigid, covered tank shown in Figure P3.2 with a volumetric flow rate of 0.32L/s. The water line has an inside diameter of 6.3 cm. The air vent on the tank has an inside diameterof 4.5 cm. The water is at a temperature of 30°C and the air in the tank is at atmospheric pressure(1 atm) and 30°C. Determine the air velocity leaving the vent at the instant shown in the figurearrow_forwardUsing method of sections, determine the force in member BC, HC, and HG. State if these members are in tension or compression. 2 kN A 5 kN 4 kN 4 kN 3 kN H B C D E 3 m F 2 m -5 m 5 m- G 5 m 5 m-arrow_forwardDetermine the normal stresses σn and σt and the shear stress τnt at this point if they act on the rotated stress element shownarrow_forward
- Using method of joints, determine the force in each member of the truss and state if the members are in tension or compression. A E 6 m D 600 N 4 m B 4 m 900 Narrow_forwardQuestion 5. The diagram below shows a mass suspended from a tie supported by two horizontal braces of equal length. The tie forms an angle "a" of 60° to the horizontal plane, the braces form an angle 0 of 50° to the vertical plane. If the mass suspended is 10 tonnes, and the braces are 10m long, find: a) the force in the tie; & b) the force in the braces Horizontal Braces, Tie Massarrow_forward= MMB 241 Tutorial 2.pdf 1 / 3 75% + + Tutorial z Topic: Kinematics of Particles:-. QUESTIONS 1. Use the chain-rule and find y and ŷ in terms of x, x and x if a) y=4x² b) y=3e c) y = 6 sin x 2. The particle travels from A to B. Identify the three unknowns, and write the three equations needed to solve for them. 8 m 10 m/s 30° B x 3. The particle travels from A to B. Identify the three unknowns, and write the three equations needed to solve for them. A 40 m/s 20 m B 1arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Welding: Principles and Applications (MindTap Cou...Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9781305494695Author:Larry JeffusPublisher:Cengage LearningPrecision Machining Technology (MindTap Course Li...Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9781285444543Author:Peter J. Hoffman, Eric S. Hopewell, Brian JanesPublisher:Cengage Learning

Welding: Principles and Applications (MindTap Cou...
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781305494695
Author:Larry Jeffus
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Precision Machining Technology (MindTap Course Li...
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781285444543
Author:Peter J. Hoffman, Eric S. Hopewell, Brian Janes
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Types of Manufacturing Process | Manufacturing Processes; Author: Magic Marks;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koULXptaBTs;License: Standard Youtube License