The invention concerns an abrasive cut-off wheel with an abrasive cut-off ring, the abrasive body of which comprises bound abrasive, wherein the abrasive cut-off ring is fixed in the operating state by means of two circular clamping discs that can be clamped together in axial direction by means of central clamping flanges on the machine side, and at least one clamping disc is connected in an anti-twist manner to the abrasive cut-off ring by means of interacting projections and recesses.
In known devices of that type (see AT 502 285), the clamping discs are connected with the abrasive cut-off ring in the area of the abrasive body. This requires providing it with positionally and dimensionally accurate indentations, which makes the moulding of the abrasive body more expensive if you want to forego a subsequent grinding of the indentations. At any rate, the provided introduction of the torque directly in the area of the abrasive cut-off ring that consists of bound abrasive limits the continuous load-bearing capacity at usual work speeds of 80 or 100 m/s.
The invention is based on the consideration that a permanent connection between the metal part of the device and the bound abrasive is less problematic than the connection of the clamping discs in the area of the bound abrasive provided according to the state of the art. Consequently the invention assumes a configuration of the abrasive cut-off ring as it is, for example, described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,256,646, i.e. an abrasive cut-off ring with a metal insert which is closely connected with the abrasive body. Such a connection is achieved, for example, by the fact that projections of the insert project into the abrasive body and that the material of the abrasive body penetrates openings in the insert.
In order to achieve the desired metal-metal connection, the invention suggests that the projections and recesses respectively on the side of the abrasive cut-off ring are provided on a metal insert of the abrasive cut-off ring which projects beyond the abrasive body in axial direction.
Abrasive cut-off wheels according to the invention are especially designed for stationary use on machinery for cutting hard work pieces. These cut-off wheels are used from outside diameters of approx. 1250 mm, mainly in the steel industry, in order to cut casts (slabs) during ongoing production. A cutting gap according to the total thickness of the cut-off wheel is produced in the slab. Depending on the diameter of the slab, the cutting process is realised with one cut or several cuts, while the cast has to be rotated several times in axial direction in the process. Larger cut-off wheel diameters enable, on the one hand, a cutting process with one cut, but they used to require thicker cut-off wheels to ensure stability and stiffness and to absorb the lateral loads that develop. The disadvantage of thicker discs is a wider cutting gap and consequently more waste.
Now the invention enables, on the one hand, larger disc diameters, and on the other hand, the disc thickness that is necessary for reasons of stability is reduced with the given diameter. Together with the disc thickness, however, the cutting gap is reduced and waste of material and energy consumption in proportion to that.
Preferably the insert provided in the abrasive cut-off ring does not only ensure a tight fit between the clamping disc(s) and the abrasive cut-off ring, but also the force fit produced by the clamping discs. In this sense, it is planned that the abrasive cut-off ring is only compressed in the area of the insert of the clamping discs and that there is a gap between the clamping discs and the abrasive body.
Surprisingly it was found that the vibration behaviour of the device improves when the frictional connection between clamping discs and insert is realised completely evenly across the entire circumference, which can be achieved by placing the clamping discs at a distance from the insert in axial direction in the area of the projections of the insert. Even the entire inner edge of the insert can be positioned at a small distance from the clamping discs.
Further details of the invention are illustrated below with the aid of the drawings. There
The abrasive cut-off wheel shown in
Relevant for the invention is insert 9 in the abrasive body 10, which can be made, for example, out of steel. In this insert 9, there are alternately oriented openings (notches) 14, the curved edges of which protrude in the material of the abrasive body 10 and penetrate adjacent tissue layers 15. Consequently, there is a strong, permanent connection between insert 9 and the abrasive body 10.
The insert 9 projects beyond the abrasive body 10 in the direction of the centre of the abrasive cut-off ring 1. The projecting edge has projections 5 and recesses 7 in between.
The abrasive cut-off ring 1 is held by clamping discs 2 and 3 exclusively in the projecting area of the insert 9. Consequently, there is at least a small gap 11 between the abrasive body 10 and the clamping discs 2 and 3.
As can be seen in
In order to explain the form-closed connection of the abrasive cut-off ring 1 with the clamping discs 2, 3 which is essential for the invention in more detail,
When mounting the abrasive cut-off wheel, first clamping flange 4b and then clamping disc 2 shown in
In order to complete assembly, only the clamping disc 3 remains to be positioned, with the borings 18 in the clamping disc 3 (see
A major advantage of the illustrated structure is that only the insert 9 and the remainder of the abrasive body 10 that surrounds this insert have to be disposed of, and the abrasive body in the area of the insert can even be made of more cost-efficient abrasive grain. On the other hand, an essential part of the entire device remains with the user with the clamping discs 2 and 3. In the face of this advantage, the effort necessary for the fixing of abrasive cut-off ring 1 on the clamping discs is negligible.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| A 446/2011 | Mar 2011 | AT | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/AT2012/000080 | 3/27/2012 | WO | 00 | 2/26/2014 |
| Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| WO2012/129584 | 10/4/2012 | WO | A |
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2508946 | Hoffman | May 1950 | A |
| 2735243 | Allison | Feb 1956 | A |
| 3256646 | Mockli | Jun 1966 | A |
| 5516326 | Virnich | May 1996 | A |
| 6071185 | Genau et al. | Jun 2000 | A |
| 6454639 | Huber | Sep 2002 | B1 |
| 7115029 | Lang et al. | Oct 2006 | B2 |
| 7588484 | Momosaki | Sep 2009 | B2 |
| 8113920 | Gissing | Feb 2012 | B2 |
| Number | Date | Country |
|---|---|---|
| 338 130 | Aug 1977 | AT |
| 502 285 | Feb 2007 | AT |
| 202 20 516 | Nov 2003 | DE |
| 0 909 612 | Apr 1999 | EP |
| Entry |
|---|
| International Search Report issued Jul. 16, 2012 in International (PCT) Application No. PCT/AT2012/000080. |
| Austrian Search Report issued Nov. 18, 2011 in Austrian Patent Application No. A 446/2011 with English translation. |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20140162539 A1 | Jun 2014 | US |