Undercut (manufacturing)

In manufacturing, an undercut is a special type of recessed surface that is inaccessible using a straight tool. In turning, it refers to a recess in a diameter generally on the inside diameter of the part. In milling, it refers to a feature which is not visible when the part is viewed from the spindle. In molding, it refers to a feature that cannot be molded using only a single pull mold. In printed circuit board construction, it refers to the portion of the copper that is etched away under the photoresist.

Turning

An example of a turned part with and without an undercut

On turned parts an undercut is also known as a neck or "relief groove". They are often used at the end of the threaded portion of a shaft or screw to provide clearance for the cutting tool.

Molding

A simple example of molding an external undercut

Undercut - Any indentation or protrusion in a shape that will prevent its withdrawal from a one-piece mold.

Milling

Top and Front view of a milled undercut slot

In milling the spindle is where a cutting tool is mounted. In some situations material must be cut from a direction where the feature can not be seen from the perspective of the spindle and requires special tooling to reach behind the visible material.

An example of a machining undercut

The corners may be undercut to remove the radius that is usually left by the milling cutter this is commonly referred to as a relief.

Etching

  1. An isotropic etchant that creates an undercut
  2. An anisotropic etchant leaves no undercut

Undercuts from etching (microfabrication) are a side effect, not an intentional feature. Undercuts from etching can occur from two common causes. The first is over etching, which means the etchant was applied too long. The second is due to an isotropic etchant, which means the etchant etches in all directions equally. To overcome this problem an anisotropic etchant is used.[1]

Gears

References

Bibliography

  • Degarmo, E. Paul; Black, J T.; Kohser, Ronald A. (2003), Materials and Processes in Manufacturing (9th ed.), Wiley, ISBN 0-471-65653-4.
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