This past April, I was fortunate enough
to be part of a factory tour put together by Freud Tools, a leading
manufacturer of woodworking carbide saw blades, router bits and
shaper cutters. A group of nine woodworking publication editors from
the U.S. were taken to
northeastern Italy to visit two of the six manufacturing plants
that Freud has in Western Europe. One plant is dedicated to the
fabrication of saw blades and the other to the manufacture of the
carbide teeth, router bit tips and shaper cutter knives/inserts used
in all of Freud’s products, as well as a number of Bosch products
(Bosch acquired Freud in April of 2009).
One of my first surprises upon arriving
in Italy was to learn that the company’s name “Freud” isn’t a
family name like “Sigmund Freud.” Instead, the word is a
contraction of “Fre” which is short for “fresa” (the Italian
word for cutter), and “Ud,” the abbreviation of “Udine”
(pronounced “OO-dee-nay”), the place where the Freud company was
founded in 1950. The other editors and I had a very pleasant stay in
this lovely city of about 100,000 people. Besides a panoramic view of
the Alps, Udine boasts loads of impressive Venetian Gothic
architecture, like the Torre dell’Orologio clock
tower in the city’s central Piazza della Libertà.
The first factory we visited was
Freud’s carbide plant in the hamlet of Martignacco, about five
miles northeast of central Udine. It was interesting to
learn that very few tool companies actually make their own carbide;
most buy from a carbide tip and insert manufacturer, such as Sandvik
in Sweden. The reason for this is simple: Creating the best carbide
for cutting tools is a highly technical and very tricky process which
requires state-of-the art
metallurgical science and specialized (and
expensive!) machinery. Our tour leader, technical plant manager
Stefano Driussi, took us through the entire process, starting with the
combination of raw metallic powders — carbide, cobalt, tungsten,
titanium, etc.). Specific mixtures of these powders are formulated for each of the 16
grades of carbide that Freud makes, including their patented
MicroGrain “TiCo” carbide, a combination of titanium and cobalt.
Each mixture is designed to give the carbide a particular balance of
hardness and toughness (also impact and wear resistance) that suits a
particular type of machining application — a saw blade to rip
hardwoods or composite materials; a router bit for shaping plastics,
etc. The metal powers are carefully measured, then mixed together and
combined with alcohol. They are then poured into a large Ball Mill —
a sealed spherically-shaped tank filled with stainless steel balls
that agitate the mixture 100 kilograms at a time. The ball mill runs
for anywhere between 36 and 120 hours and creates a muddy-looking
sludge. After the steel balls are removed, the sludge is transferred
to a spray plant — an even bigger steel vessel that resembles a
huge dust collection cyclone. The spraying action inside the device
evaporates liquids and turns the sludge into zillions of perfectly
round, homogeneous droplets. These teeny carbide balls are between .8
and 2 microns in size.
Next, a tumbling machine smoothes the
surface of each ball-like droplet. Smoothing is necessary because the
metallic powder must flow freely when it is next poured into tiny
molds — one for each little carbide saw blade tooth (or
router bit
insert or shaper knife). Special automated machines make these teeth,
dispensing exact amounts of carbide powder into short rows of molds,
then pressing the powder to compact it to give it enough density for
it to keep its shape when the tooth is pushed out of its mold. Each
carbide tooth is now in a “greenwork” stage; it’s hard enough
to hold in your hand, but still easy to crumble apart with your bare
fingers. Many dozens of press-molded tips are deposited onto metal
trays, which are stacked into holding frames. The automated presses
in Freud’s plant run 24 hours a day, and each one produces between
55 and 93 thousand saw blade teeth per eight hour shift! At this rate
of production, the plant churns out around 6-7 million saw blade tips
a week!
Next is the most crucial step in the
carbide-making process: Sintering permanently transforms the molded
greenwork into solid carbide teeth ready for the rigors of
woodworking. After the trays are sprayed with a nonstick coating,
they go into large (1-1/2 meters in diameter) pressure vessels which
are sealed, put under a very high vacuum and heated up to a maximum
temperature of around 1,450 degrees centigrade. To get the disparate
metals to meld properly, heat is applied slowly during a computer
control cycle that ramps up heat in a precise way that’s specific
to each carbide formulation and tip size.
Sintering is a necessary and complex
process because the various metals that make up carbide teeth don’t
easily bond together. If you were to simply heat the powder until all
the disparate metals melted, some would evaporate before others had
dissolved completely. To put it a different way, sintering carbide is
like shaking the salad dressing bottle; the agitation gets the oil,
water and vinegar to combine into a well blended mixture.
The finished teeth come out of the
sintering vessel very slightly smaller than they were they went in,
due to shrinkage. They’re now ready to be sent to the saw blade
factory where they’ll be brazed onto blades and ground to final
sharpness. By keeping the tooth size shrinkage tolerances very tight,
the teeth require very little grinding, thus saving raw materials as
well as wear and tear on the grinding equipment.
To help keep their carbide
manufacturing on track, Freud’s carbide plant has its own on-site
laboratory, which handles both quality control for production, as
well as research and development for new products and
improvements in
the manufacturing process. The lab analyzes all raw materials that
come into the factory, to assure that they’re up to Freud’s high
standards. They also spot check the carbide products after
manufacture (each carbide batch is bar coded so that it’s easily
trackable). These checks include hardness testing using a special
optical device that measures surface deflection. In another test,
technicians use an optical microscope to inspect the carbide’s
surface to evaluate grain size and porosity, as well as to make sure
the carbide is free of fractures and “lakes” — blobs of binder
material that compromise the grain structure and weaken a tooth or
cutter and make it more susceptible to chipping and breakage. There’s
a magnetic saturation test to evaluate the brittleness of the
carbide, and an electron microscope is used to check the carbide’s
surface structure as well, to assure that the brazing alloys used to
attach the tips to a blade body will stick properly.
One of the coolest things about Freud’s
carbide manufacturing plant is that, in addition to producing
jillions of saw blade teeth in standard shapes and sizes, they’re
also geared up for producing smaller batches of custom-made carbide
parts. They do this using either of two methods: One is to press the
carbide powder into standard shapes, such as square or round blanks,
and then mill the green blanks to near-final shape before sintering
them. The other process is to create the greenwork in specially made
molds used in Freud’s powder pressing machines (described above).
That process begins in a special mold making shop inside the plant.
The molds used for making both custom and standard shape teeth and
cutters are cut from thick blocks of stainless steel using a powerful
electro-discharge machine (EDM). The EDM passes large amounts of
electricity through a copper wire electrode or punch that actually
erodes away the stainless to create the desired mold shape. It’s a
slow process that removes as little as three millimeters of material
in 24 hours! The positive and negative halves of each mold must then
be hand polished, to achieve a final fit with a tolerance of less
than plus or minus 2 microns. Such a tight fit is necessary to
prevent carbide powder from leaking out when it’s poured into the
mold (thank goodness woodworkers don’t need to work anywhere near
this level of accuracy!).