Method of making partially welded spots in wire-cut electrical discharge machining
09724775 · 2017-08-08
Assignee
Inventors
- Masatoshi Kawano (Fukuoka-ken, JP)
- Keisuke Tasaki (Fukuoka-ken, JP)
- Takashi Mitsuyasu (Fukuoka-ken, JP)
Cpc classification
B23H7/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K37/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23H7/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B23H7/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23H7/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
In a method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece at a preselected area in a thickness direction of the workpiece in a wire electrical discharge machining to retain temporarily or tentatively the part on the workpiece, a wire electrode 5 tilted in posture cuts the workpiece 6 to form a slant cutting surface 30 at a spark discharge location in a desired contour 21 in the workpiece 6. The wire electrode 5 after kept in an upright posture executes the welding process on the workpiece 6 along the slant cutting surface. A plurality of the welded spots is formed over a preselected length at preselected areas in the thickness direction of the workpiece 6. Even if the cut-out part 26 weighs more or the spark discharge is executed on the workpiece 6 overlapped one on the other, the welding spot 20 is formed in the thickness direction of the workpiece 6 adequately depending on the working situation to tentatively retain the cut-out part 26 on the workpiece 6.
Claims
1. A method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece in wire electrode discharge machining, comprising of the steps of cutting a part to be separated from the workpiece with electrical discharge using spark energy generated by application of an inter-electrode voltage which occurs across a wire electrode and the workpiece lying in opposition to the wire electrode and, in doing so, changing an electrical processing condition applied across the wire electrode and the workpiece from a cutting phase to a welding phase at a preselected spot in a cutting path or kerf of the part, fusing at least partially the wire electrode and welding the part with the workpiece at the spot in a preselected contour of the part to retain the part on the workpiece, and further comprising of the steps of changing the electrical processing condition to the cutting phase at a preselected spot to weld the part with the workpiece, thereby carrying out the discharge machining to rough cut the workpiece in a thickness direction of the workpiece along a cutting contour in the workpiece to form a rough cut surface on the part, and then tilting the wire electrode in posture with respect to the rough cut surface lying in the thickness direction of the workpiece, subsequently changing the electrical processing condition to the welding phase to execute a welding process on the workpiece along the rough cut surface thereby forming the welded spot to weld the part with the workpiece along the rough cut surface at an ingress side of the workpiece for the wire electrode, the welded spot extending over a preselected length at a preselected area in the thickness direction of the workpiece to retain the part on the workpiece with the welded spot.
2. A method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece in wire electrode discharge machining, as set forth in claim 1, wherein the rough cut surface on the workpiece is a slant cutting surface which is rough cut with the wire electrode while tilting or kept tilted with respect to the upper and lower surfaces of the workpiece, and then after wire electrode is changed from a posture lying on the slant cutting surface to a substantially upright posture perpendicular to the upper and lower surfaces of the workpiece, the welding process is carried out along the slant cutting surface at an ingress side of the workpiece for the wire electrode upward from a lower end of the slant cutting surface to form the welded spot of the preselected length at the preselected area in the thickness direction of the workpiece.
3. A method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece in wire electrode discharge machining, as set forth in claim 2, wherein the welded spot to join the cut-out part with the workpiece is formed at a preselected location lying upward from a lower side of the slant cutting surface over a preselected length in the thickness direction of the workpiece.
4. A method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece in wire electrode discharge machining, as set forth in claim 2, wherein the slant cutting surface on the workpiece is spark charge machined with using the wire electrode kept in a tilted posture in which an upper head goes ahead of a lower head along a desired cutting contour in the workpiece.
5. A method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece in wire electrode discharge machining, as set forth in claim 2, wherein the slant cutting surface spark discharged on the workpiece is composed of two partially slant cutting surfaces intersected each other to form an uncut peak midway between the upper and lower surface of the workpiece, and the welded spot is formed at the uncut peak.
6. A method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece in wire electrode discharge machining, as set forth in claim 1, wherein the rough cut surface on the workpiece is a substantially upright surface rough cut in the workpiece by the wire electrode kept at an upright posture substantially perpendicular to the upper and lower surfaces of the workpiece, and wherein the welding process is executed on the workpiece along the rough cut surface thereby forming the welded spot to weld the part with the workpiece along the rough cut surface at an ingress side of the workpiece for the wire electrode, the welded spot extending over a preselected length at a preselected area in the thickness direction of the workpiece.
7. A method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece in wire electrode discharge machining, as set forth in claim 6, wherein the upper head to feed the wire electrode is moved to go back of the lower head along the cutting path or kerf made in the workpiece to get the wire electrode tilted in posture.
8. A method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece in wire electrode discharge machining, as set forth in claim 6, wherein the upper head to feed the wire electrode is advanced ahead of the lower head to increase an angle of inclination of the wire electrode relative to the upper surface and the lower surface of the workpiece thereby to form the welded spot along the upright rough cutting surface while varying the angle of inclination of the wire electrode.
9. A method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece in wire electrode discharge machining, as set forth in claim 1, wherein the welded spot on the rough cut surface is formed at one or more locations along the rough cut surface of the workpiece.
10. A method of welding a cut-out part with a workpiece in wire electrode discharge machining, as set forth in claim 1, wherein the spark discharge is carried out in the thickness direction of the workpiece composed of a plurality of layers overlapped one on the other to form the welded spot to join the part with the workpiece at least an undermost layer to retain the part on the workpiece.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(19) A preferred embodiment of the wire electrical discharge processor to carry out the method of cutting the part with making welded spots in wire electrical discharge machining according to the present invention will be hereinafter described in detail with reference to
(20) The wire-cut electrical discharge processor is generally composed of a source bobbin 7 mounted on a machine frame 15 and having wire electrode coils 5 wound around the bobbin 7, change-of-direction rollers 8 to control threading directions of the wire electrode 5 unwound out of the bobbin 7, a brake roller 9 to keep the delivery of the wire electrode better, a tension roller 12 to apply a tensile force to the delivered wire electrode 5 and a guide roller 32 to turn the wire electrode 5 towards a feeder tube 13. The wire electrode 5, after moving past the change-of-direction rollers 8 and the guide roller 32 in a wire-supply system, travels through a pair of wire-delivery rollers 10 serving as annealing rollers installed in a machine head 1, a feeder tube 13 suspended below a wire-electrode delivery unit 24 and a pair of common rollers 11 in order as stated above to stretch between the wire-delivery rollers 10 and the common rollers 11. Then, after the wire electrode 5 is firmly gripped by the wire-delivery rollers 10 and the common rollers 11, an electric current from a power source is applied to the wire electrode 5 through an electric feeder brush 18, see
(21) Between the annealing rollers 10 and the common rollers 11, there is provided the cutter 14 to cut off the end of the wire electrode 5 at the renewal of wire-end to render the wire electrode 5 preferable for threading, the breakage of the wire electrode 5, the execution of annealing process and so on. Moreover, there is installed a clamp, not shown, to dispose the waste wire-electrode 5 cut off by the cutter 14 which is actuated with a cutter unit to cut the wire electrode 5. Upon the resumption of threading after the breakage of the wire electrode 5, the wire-delivery rollers 10 rotate at a low velocity to advance the wire electrode 5 through the feeder tube 13 into the upper head 2. The wire electrode 5, after having advanced past the upper head 2, is threaded through a start hole, cutting path or kerf 19 in the workpiece 6 and then received in a lower head 4 lying below the workpiece 6 in opposition to the upper head 3. After the wire electrode 5 has been threaded past the lower head 4, the wire delivery rollers 10 was shifted to high-speed rotation to advance the wire electrode 5 out of the lower head 4. The wire electrode 5 pulled out of the lower head 4 is led in turn through a change-of-direction roller, a wire guide tube 37, a water separator located at an egress of the wire guide tube 37, all of which are installed inside the lower arm 3. Further, the wire electrode 5 is pulled out by winding rollers 35 lying downstream of the water separator and successively forced into a waste-wire hopper 36 by means of any suction means farther downstream of the winding rollers. An encoder 16 to detect the rpm of the brake roller 9 is installed on the brake roller 9 and a sensor 17 is installed on a lower supporter, not shown, of the machine head 1 to monitor any distortion, bending, threading conditions and so on caused in the wire electrode 5.
(22) The workpiece 6 processed in the wire-cut electric discharge processor of the present invention is selected from, for example, iron series or carbide products. The wire electrode is metallic material including for example tungsten series, copper alloy series (brass family), piano wires and so on. As an alternative, a composite material may be used in which the metallic material as stated earlier is used as a core member and clad with other metallic member. For example, the core member made of material other than copper alloy family is clad with copper alloy family. In contrast, the core member made of copper alloy family is clad with zinc family and so on. With the embodiment discussed now, the workpiece 6 is made in a flat sheet or plate as shown in
(23) More especially, the potential difference is applied across the wire delivery rollers 10 and an upper end of a guide-tube holder or the sensor 17. Thus, when the wire electrode 5 comes into contact with the sensor 17, the distortion in the wire electrode 5 is detected with sensor 17. The wire electrode 5 is applied with potential difference under such condition that the wire-delivery rollers 10 are fed with electricity while the wire-delivery rollers 10 are closed each other to grip the wire electrode 5 between them. Thus, the abutment or collision of the wire electrode 5 applied with potential difference can be detected with the sensor 17.
(24) A method of making welded spots or coalescence in wire-cut electrical discharge using the wire-cut electrical discharge machine according to the present invention, although aimed at cutting out the part 26 along the desired contour 21 from the workpiece 6, is especially features the steps of fusing partially the wire electrode 5 in the cutting path or kerf to make fused area on the wire electrode 5 to weld the cut-out part 26 with the workpiece 6 to keep temporarily the cut-out part 26 in the workpiece 6. The fused area in the wire electrode 5 is limited to only a wire periphery over a predetermined length of the wire electrode 5 to make certain that the wire electrode 5 is fed continuously without interruption even after the wire electrode 5 has been partially fused to weld together the cut-out part 26 with the workpiece 6.
(25) In the method of cutting the workpiece with making welded spots of the present invention, the wire electrode 5 containing copper alloy series is better for the welding of the cut-out part 26 with the workpiece 6. According to the method of joining the cut-out the part with the workpiece at the welded spots, the wire-delivery rollers 10 mounted on the machine head 1 pinch between them the wire electrode 5 unwound from the source bobbin 7 installed on the machine frame 15. As the wire-delivery rollers 10 is driven, the wire electrode 5 is threaded through the feeder tube 13, upper head 2, workpiece 6 set below the upper head 3 and the lower head 4 lying just below the workpiece 6 in opposed alignment with the upper head 3. The wire electrode 5 is further pulled out by the winding rollers 35 to run through the guide unit lying below the lower head 4 into the waste-wire hopper 5. With the method of making welded spots according to the present invention, more especially, the electrical processing condition to apply the potential difference across the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6 is switched from the cutting or machining phase to the welding phase at more than one spot in the cutting path or kerf 21 to define a predetermined contour of the workpiece 26. In the welding phase of the electrical processing condition, the wire electrode 5 is fused partially to provide welded spots 20 at preselected locations in the cutting path 21, where the workpiece 26 is welded together with the workpiece 6 to be held in the workpiece 6 so as not to fall apart from the workpiece 6. As the welded spots 20 between the workpiece 26 and the workpiece 6 as shown in
(26) On switching of the electrical processing condition from the cutting phase to the welding phase in the method of making the welded spot to connect the cut-out part with the workpiece of the present invention, a current flow (A) into the wire electrode 5, as seen in
(27) The basic principle of the method of making the welded spots in the wire electrode discharge machining according to the present invention will be described later with reference to
(28) An electric circuitry shown in
(29) More especially, the first circuit is a detector to determine whether the wire electrode 5 is kept at a correct geometric relation with the workpiece 6 to carry out the electrical-discharge processing.
(30) The function of the resistance R is to adjust the amount of electricity flowing through the first circuit. The switch S1 is on/off controlled in time for in advance to the electrical-discharge machining of the workpiece 6. In contrast, the second circuit is provided for the discharge processing or machining and has no resistance therein because of ensuring a large amount of electricity at discharge machining of the workpiece 6.
(31) Next, the cutting or machining phase and the welding phase in the method of cutting the workpiece with making welded spots in the wire electrode discharge machining according to the present invention will be explained in detail later.
(32) In the routine or ordinary cutting or machining phase shown in
(33) In the welding phase shown in
(34) Moreover, the concrete embodiments in the method of making the welded spots in the wire electrode discharge machining according to the present invention will be described with reference to
(35) Especially in
(36) With the method of making the welded spots, for the cutting phase for the workpiece 6 by the wire electrode 5 with the basic circuitry as stated earlier, the first switch S1 is turned on to energize the low-voltage load LV to apply a potential difference across the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6. Then, the first switch S1 is turned off and the second switch S2 is turned on to energize the high-voltage load HV to execute the cutting phase. With the welding phase to weld together the cut-out workpiece 26 and the workpiece 6, the first switch S1 is turned on while the third switch S3 is kept turned on to energize the low-voltage load LV to apply a potential difference across the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6. Then, the first switch S1 is turned off and the second switch S2 turns on to energize the high-voltage load HV and finally the second switch S2 is turned off to execute the welding phase. With the on/off control of the switches as stated earlier, the electrical processing condition is switched over from the voltage/ampere wave form of the cutting phase in which the wire electrode 5 cuts the workpiece 6 to another voltage/ampere wave form of the welding phase in which the cut-out part 26 is welded together with the workpiece 6. In the welding phase, although the second switch S2 is turned off after a lapse of a fixed interval of time, the third switch S3 remains “ON” and therefore a circulating current passing through the first diode D1 and the third switch S3 flows across the inter-electrode space between the workpiece 6 and the wire electrode 5 to generate an electric current long in pulse width. As a result, the spark condition turns into the arc discharge by which the wire electrode 5 makes the coalescence spot or the welded spot between the cut-out part 26 and the workpiece 6 to weld together the part 26 with the workpiece 6.
(37) The cutting and the welding phases in the method of cutting the part with making welded spots, as being same in details with the cutting and the welding phases disclosed in the commonly-assigned Japanese Patent Appln. No. 2011-212 221 (Publication No. 2012-166 332), will be explained in brief hereinafter.
(38) One example of the cutting phase in the method of cutting out the part from the workpiece with making welded spots in the wire electrode discharge machining according to the present invention will be described later with reference to
(39) In first step, the first switch S1 is turned on to energize the low-voltage load LV. After the lapse of time, for example about 2 μ sec, the discharge occurs between the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6.
(40) In second step, after the second switch S2 has been turned on, the voltage drop triggers off the application of the high-voltage load HV and the electric current rises to cause the spark discharge in which the cutting or machining of the workpiece 6 by the wire electrode 5 is carried out.
(41) In third step, the electrical-discharge machining time between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6, though determined dependent on processing condition of the workpiece 6, is for example about 0.8 μ sec.
(42) In fourth step, after the first, second and third switches S1, S2 and S3 have been once turned off, the potential difference across the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6 becomes lost in load, resulting in downtime.
(43) The cutting path or kerf 21 in the workpiece 6 is completed by the wire electrode 5 through repetition of the cycle of the steps as stated just above with the period of 125 k ˜2000 kHz.
(44) Moreover, one example of the welding phase in the method of cutting out the part from the workpiece with making welded spots in the wire electrode discharge machining according to the present invention will be explained later with reference to
(45) In first step, the first switch S1 is turned on to energize the low-voltage load LV. After the lapse of time, for example about 2 μ sec, the discharge occurs between the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6.
(46) In second step, after the second switch S2 has been turned on, the voltage drop triggers off the application of the high-voltage load HV and the electric current rises to cause the spark discharge in which the cutting or machining of the workpiece 6 by the wire electrode 5 is carried out.
(47) In third step, upon change-over from the machining or cutting phase to the welding phase, the second switch S2 is turned off after the lapse of a fixed interval of time. However, the third switch S3 remains “ON” and, therefore, a circulating current flows across the inter-electrode space between the workpiece 6 and the wire electrode 5 to generate an electric current long in pulse width, when the wire electrode 5 fuses to produce coalescence or the welded spot between the cut-out part 26 and the workpiece 6, thereby welding the cut-out part 26 with workpiece 6.
(48) In fourth step, after the circulating current has been consumed completely, the third switch S3 is turned off, resulting in downtime.
(49) Another example of the cutting phase in the method of cutting out the part from the workpiece with making welded spots in the wire electrode discharge machining according to the present invention will be described later with reference to
(50) In first step, the first switch S1 is turned on to energize the low-voltage load LV. After the lapse of time, for example about 2 μ sec, the discharge occurs between the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6.
(51) In second step, after the second switch S2 has been turned off and the fourth switch and fifth switch S are turned on, the voltage drop triggers off the application of the high-voltage load HV and the electric current rises to cause the spark discharge in which the cutting or machining of the workpiece 6 by the wire electrode 5 is carried out.
(52) In third step, while the fourth switch S4 and the fifth switch S5 are kept at turned-on state, the electrical-discharge machining time between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6, though determined dependent on processing condition of the workpiece 6, is for example about 0.8 μ sec.
(53) In fourth step, after the fourth switch S4 has been turned off while the fifth switch S5 is kept at turned-on state, the fifth switch S5 is turned on for only sub-μ sec to release the energized state of the high-voltage load HV to bring the current waveform closer to a trapezoid.
(54) In fifth step, after the first, fourth and fifth switches S1, S4 and S5 have been once turned off, the potential difference across the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6 becomes lost in load, resulting in downtime.
(55) The cutting path or kerf 21 in the workpiece 6 is completed by the wire electrode 5 through repetition of the cycle of the steps as stated just above with the period of 125 k ˜2000 kHz.
(56) Another example of the welding phase in the method of cutting out the part from the workpiece with making welded spots in the wire electrode discharge machining according to the present invention will be explained later with reference to
(57) In first step, the first switch S1 is turned on to energize the low-voltage load LV. After the lapse of time, for example about 2 μ sec, the discharge occurs between the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6.
(58) In second step, after the fourth switch S4 and the fifth switch S5 have been turned on, the voltage drop triggers off the application of the high-voltage load HV and the electric current rises to cause the spark discharge in which the cutting or machining of the workpiece 6 by the wire electrode 5 is carried out.
(59) In third step, the fourth and fifth switches S4 and S5 are kept at the “on” state and the discharge occurs for the discharge time determined depending on the processing condition, for example a matter of 0.8 μ sec.
(60) In fourth step, the fourth switch S4 is turned off after the lapse of a fixed interval of time. However, the fifth switch S5 remains “ON” state and, therefore, a circulating current flows across the inter-electrode space between the workpiece 6 and the wire electrode 5 to release the energization of the high-voltage load HV to generate an electric current long in pulse width, when the arc is maintained between the workpiece 6 and the cut-out part 26 to weld together them.
(61) In fifth step, after the circulating current has been consumed completely, the fifth switch S5 turns off, resulting in downtime.
(62) A preferred embodiment of the electric circuitry to carry out the method of cutting out the part from the workpiece with making welded spots in the wire electrode discharge machining according to the present invention will be described later with reference to
(63) The embodied circuitry to accomplish the method of cutting out the part from the workpiece with making welded spots in the wire electrode discharge machining according to the present invention is composed of a first circuit in which an inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6 is connected in series with a low-voltage load LV combined with a resistance R to confirm an inter-electrode state between charged electrodes and a first switch S1, a second circuit in which the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6 is connected in series with a high-voltage load HV for the electric discharge cutting, a fourth switch S4 and a fifth switch S5, a third circuit in which the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6 is connected in series with a second diode D2 and a fifth switch S5, and a fourth circuit in which an inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece is connected in series with a third diode D3 and a fourth switch S4, and the first, second, third and fourth circuits being connected in parallel with each other. With the circuitry constructed as stated just earlier, when the fourth and fifth switches S4 and S5 are turned on, the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6 is energized with the high-voltage load HV.
(64) Change-over of the electrical processing condition from the machining or cutting phase to the welding phase in the electric circuitry constructed as stated earlier is executed with the on/off control of the first, fourth and fifth switches S1, S4 and S5. After the fourth switch S4 has turned off under the condition the fifth switch S5 has been kept at “OFF” state, a first circulating current passing through the second diode D2 and the fifth switch S5 flows across the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6. In contrast, after the fifth switch S5 has turned off under the condition the fourth switch S4 has been kept at “ON” state, a second circulating current passing through the third diode D3 and the fourth switch S4 flows across the inter-electrode space between the wire electrode 5 and the workpiece 6. In the electric circuitry discussed now, the first and second circulating currents are allowed to flow alternately with the ON/OFF control of the first, fourth and fifth switches S1, S4 and S5. With the method of cutting out the part from the workpiece with making welded spots in the wire electrode discharge machining according to the present invention, as two circulating currents are generated by using the electric circuits having the diodes D2 and D3 therein, the waveform of the current for discharge machining nears trapezoidal shape. Thus, alternate occurrence of the two circulating currents makes it possible to alleviate or lessen a problem of generation of heat caused by switching action. With the method of cutting out the part with making welded spots, as the cut-out part 26 and the workpiece 6 are welded together by using the circulating currents, the waveform of the current can be lowered more slowly, compared with the discharge machining of the workpiece 6.
(65) Moreover, the ON/OFF timing of the fourth and fifth switches S4 and S5 may be reversed each other.
(66) The method of making welded spots on the part in the wire electrode electrical discharge machining will be explained later regarding punching operation and die plate process in die manufacturing from the workpiece 6. The cutting phase and the welding phase in the method of cutting out the part with making the partially welded spots in the wire-cut discharge are shown in detail in the commonly-assigned JP publication No. 2012-166 332, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. Incidentally, in the punching operation in the wire discharge processor, the part 26 of preselected contour is cut out from the workpiece 6 and used as a blanking part for the product. The workpiece 6 has the start hole 19 other than the part 26. As alternatives, the start hole 19 is anew made is made anywhere other than the part 26 in the workpiece 6 or the start hole 19 is provided outside of the workpiece 6. In contrast with the above, in the die plate process in which the part 26 of the preselected contour is gouged out of the workpiece 6, the gouged-out part 26 is called the core which becomes disused article, whereas the residual workpiece 6 is used as the blanking part for the production. The start hole is made in the gouged-out part 26 called for the core or opened anew in the location of the gouged-out part 26.
(67) Preferred embodiments of the method of making welded spots on the part in the wire electrode electrical discharge machining of the present invention will be described later with reference to
(68) Referring to
(69) Referring to
(70) Further referring to
(71) In
(72) In
(73) In
(74) In
(75) In
(76) Desired relative movement between the worktable 23 and the wire electrode 5 of the wire electrode discharge processor is adequately controlled the X-Y coordinate for the worktable 23 and the U-V coordinate for the upper head 2.
(77) In
AVAILABILITY ON INDUSTRY
(78) The method of making the welded spots in the wire electrode electrical of the present invention is preferably befitted for the wire-cut electrical discharge processor which is envisaged retaining the part cut out form the workpiece so as not to fall away from the workpiece.
DESCRIPTION OF REFERENCE SIGNS
(79) 1 Machine head
(80) 2 Upper head
(81) 4 Lower head
(82) 5 Wire electrode
(83) 6 Workpiece
(84) 7 Source bobbin
(85) 10 Wire-delivery roller
(86) 13 Feeder tube
(87) 15 Machine frame
(88) 20 Welded spot
(89) 21 Cut contour
(90) 22 Cutting path or kerf
(91) 26 Cut-out part
(92) 27 Cutting path
(93) 28 Imaginative upright upper surface
(94) 29 Upright cutting surface
(95) 30 Slant cutting surface
(96) 31 Imaginative slant upper surface
(97) 32 Guide roller
(98) 33 Upper surface
(99) 34 Lower surface
(100) 35 Winding rollers