Tungsten carbide rotary burs consist of a tungsten carbide cutting head (responsible for cutting and grinding) and a steel shank (facilitating equipment installation). Brazing is the key process for connecting these two parts, with two mainstream types: copper brazing and silver brazing.
During operation, rotary burs need to run at high speed (tens of thousands of revolutions per minute) and grind hard metals. Brazing can combine the high hardness of tungsten carbide with the toughness of steel, preventing the cutting head from falling off and ensuring operational safety and efficiency.
| Comparison Dimension | Copper Brazing | Silver Brazing |
|---|---|---|
| Brazing Temperature | Ultra-high (≈1083℃) | Low to medium (≈650-800℃) |
| Bond Strength | Extremely High | Good |
| Shock Resistance/Toughness | Average | Excellent |
| Heat Resistance | Excellent (no softening during continuous operation) | Average (prone to softening during continuous operation) |
| Production Process | Batch vacuum furnace brazing | Induction heating/flame brazing |
| Weld Appearance | Copper color, clean and free of impurities | Silver white, requires residue cleaning |
| Material Cost | Low (economical copper material) | High (silver is a precious metal) |
| Application Scenarios | Factory batch production, heavy-duty/prolonged grinding | Manual precision grinding, micro burs, small-batch production |
Copper brazing is suitable for industrial-grade batch and high-intensity grinding, with outstanding cost performance and stability; silver brazing is suitable for manual precision operation and small-batch production, offering better material protection.
Selecting the right brazing process can extend tool life and improve efficiency. For specific application scenarios, customized solutions can be further matched.
Contact Person: Mrs. Lilian
Tel: +86 159 280 92745
Fax: 86-028-67230808