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Oxygen Cutting

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oxygen cutting

[′äk·sə·jən ‚kəd·iŋ]
(engineering)
Any of several types of cutting processes in which metal is removed with or without a flux by a chemical reaction of the base metal with oxygen at high temperatures.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

oxygen cutting

oxygen cutting tip
A metal cutting operation in which the separation of the metal is effected by chemical reaction, between oxygen and the metal, at a high temperature.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Oxygen Cutting

 

(also gas-torch cutting), a method for cutting metal parts based on the property of metals heated to the ignition temperature of burning in industrial-grade oxygen. Oxygen cutting is performed by preheating the metal to 1200°-1300°C and directing against it a stream of oxygen, which burns through the metal and cuts it apart. The resulting iron oxides flow out in the molten state and are blown out of the region of the cut. The method is used for cutting articles of low- and medium-alloy carbon steels, usually 1 mm to 200–300 mm thick (it is possible to cut steel up to 2 m thick).

Oxygen cutting is performed with a cutter, a special welding torch equipped with an additional device for supplying oxygen. A distinction is made between manual and machine acetylene-oxygen, hydrogen-oxygen, and gasoline-oxygen cutting techniques, depending on the gas used for preheating the metal. Machine cutting with oxygen yields high precision and clean cuts, with high output. Cutting from stencils, special guides, and blueprints, which may be copied on any scale, is done on machines. Several cutters may also be used for simultaneous cutting of several patterns. Oxygen cutting may be automated by using photoelectric devices.

A variety of oxygen cutting is oxygen-flux cutting, which is used for separating metals that are difficult to cut (high-chromium and chromium-nickel steels), as well as for cast iron and alluminum alloys. In this case, the process may be facilitated by blowing powdered fluxes into the cutting area, together with oxygen. In addition to separation oxygen cutting, during which the stream of oxygen is almost perpendicular to the metal surface, oxygen machining is also used. In this case the stream is directed at a slight angle (almost parallel) to the metal surface.

Oxygen cutting is widely used in machine building, shipbuilding, ferrous and nonferrous metallurgy, and construction. Plasma cutting is widely used in industry in addition to oxygen cutting.

REFERENCE

Khrenov, N. K. Svarka, rezka i paika metallov, 4th ed. Moscow, 1973.

K. K. KHRENOV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
The horizontal oxygen cutting machine RS 13 was used.
Piercing involves drilling a hole through the sheet metal prior to starting a cut, which must be smooth walled, particularly for oxygen cutting. Piercing thick mild steel can take a long time as it's common to pulse the laser to improve the pierce quality, but if higher beam qualities are used the piercing time is significantly reduced.
In most instances, these operating problems are fairly easy to identify and correct: premature or improper consumable changeout, pierce height, ramp-down errors in oxygen cutting systems, gas supply, coolant flow, and work cable connection.
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