thumb|Extruded holes with the punch and die used to create them. No pilot hole was used on the left.
thumb|Extruded holes with the punch and die used to create them. No pilot hole was used on the left.
Punching is a forming process that uses a punch press to force a tool, called a punch, through the workpiece to create a hole via shearing. Punching is applicable to a wide variety of materials that come in sheet form, including sheet metal, paper, vulcanized fibre and some forms of plastic sheet. The punch often passes through the work into a die. A scrap slug from the hole is deposited into the die in the process. Depending on the material being punched this slug may be recycled and reused or discarded.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).