Chuck

Rotating clamping device for holding workpieces.

In production use, Chuck is commonly defined as: Rotating clamping device for holding workpieces. It determines whether the part is located and supported consistently under load. Managed well, it improves process repeatability and lowers correction workload. Validate this under real cutting load, because static setup checks can miss deformation effects.

Practical Controls

  • Reconfirm datum transfer after each reclamp operation.
  • Check seating condition with witness marks on first-off parts.
  • Define locating strategy that constrains required degrees of freedom.
  • Set clamping force to prevent slip without deforming compliant areas.

Practical Warning Signs

  • Local distortion near clamping points
  • Frequent manual touch-up after reclamp
  • Datum shift between first and later parts

Troubleshooting Signals

Over-clamping introduces elastic error that appears after unclamp. Fixture wear and contamination are common but underestimated drift sources.

How Teams Standardize It

Teams usually stabilize this area by balancing location precision with clamping compliance.

  • Keep setup records and inspection evidence linked to each process revision.
  • Re-validate after tooling, fixture, or control-logic changes.
  • Use first-article and restart checks as mandatory release gates.

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