This application claims benefit from German Patent Application No. 10 2007 017 073.6 filed Apr. 10, 2007, incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The invention relates to a device for holding an essentially cylindrical work piece, in particular a jewelry ring, for machining with a laser beam.
When laser machining a cylindrical work piece, in particular a jewelry ring, it is customary in the prior art for a device, which is adapted to the respective concrete intended use, to be built into the laser system and to be adjusted there. Depending on the intended use, for example internal gravure or external gravure of a jewelry ring or other similarly shaped work pieces, it then becomes necessary to replace or reequip the entire device. The conversion requires a large amount of time, which significantly exceeds the actual machining time, i.e. the time in which the work piece or jewelry ring is machined with the laser beam. Furthermore, in the known devices, the holding is carried out with the aid of mechanical clamping devices that are designed to withstand powerful machining forces and therefore if improperly or carelessly used, can exert forces on sensitive work pieces, causing deformation of the latter.
The object of the present invention, therefore, is to create a device for holding an essentially cylindrical work piece, in particular a jewelry ring, for machining with a laser beam, which largely avoids an inadvertent damage to a sensitive work piece.
This object is attained according to the invention by means of the defining characteristics of claim 1. Since clamping elements are provided that automatically fix the work piece in position through the exertion of a spring force, this avoids an inadvertent exertion of excessive force on the work piece of the kind that can occur, for example, with a clamping device that is manually adjustable by means of levers or screws.
The invention is based on the consideration that the machining of a work piece with a laser beam occurs with practically no exertion of force so that for the laser machining, it is sufficient for the work piece to be fixed in the machining position with moderate holding forces. Using spring-loaded clamping elements, which automatically fix the work piece in position by exerting a spring force, avoids an undesirable, excessive exertion of force when clamping the work piece. To accomplish this, the clamping elements need only be brought directly or indirectly with the aid of mechanical adjusting elements into a position that permits the work piece to be placed into the holding position on the chuck. When the clamping elements are released, the action of the spring force causes them to automatically come to rest against the work piece and fix it in the machining position without the exertion of additional external forces on the work piece except for the spring force that is structurally predetermined and adapted to the work piece.
If the chuck is interchangeably affixed to a shaft of a rotary drive unit situated on a support, this permits a particularly flexible machining of differently shaped work pieces.
In another advantageous embodiment of the invention, the rotary drive unit is supported on the support so that it can pivot around a pivot axis extending perpendicular to the shaft. This increases the flexibility in the machining of the work piece.
If the rotary drive unit can also be locked in different detent positions on the support that are associated with different pivot positions, then it is possible to reproducibly set different machining positions without additional adjustment effort.
Other advantageous embodiments of the invention are disclosed in the remaining dependent claims.
The invention will be explained in greater detail in conjunction with the exemplary embodiment shown in the drawings.
According to
An interchangeably supported first chuck 20 is affixed to a shaft of the rotary drive unit 16 so that it is able to rotate around the rotary axis 18 of the shaft and an essentially cylindrical work piece 22; in the example, a hollow cylindrical work piece, e.g. a jewelry ring, is clamped centrally into this first chuck 20.
The rotary drive unit 16 is mounted in a holder 24 that is supported so that it can pivot around the pivot axis 14 on the support 6 so that it is possible to pivot the work piece 22 into different machining positions relative to the laser beam L.
A monitoring camera 26 is mounted on the arc-shaped support plate 12 and its field of view, indicated in the drawing in the form of a monitoring cone B, includes the machining zone, i.e. the focus of the laser beam L in order to thus permit a visual control of the machining process.
The support plate 12 has recesses 28 that are let into it at various angular positions and are engaged in detent fashion by a spring loaded releasable pin 29, which is supported on the holder 24 of the rotary drive unit 16, thus permitting the rotary drive unit 16 and therefore the first chuck 20 supported on it to be pivoted into various predetermined, indexed pivot- or detent positions and locked in place in them without requiring a precise adjustment for each one. In accordance with the different position of the machining location associated with the different angular positions, the laser beam L is positioned with the aid of a beam-guiding device that is also not shown in the drawings.
The monitoring camera 26 can be situated on the support plate 12 in various positions that on the one hand, do not hinder the path of the laser beam L and on the other hand, permit an optimal monitoring of the machining process.
In a receptacle provided on the support plate 12, there is a second chuck 30 that is structurally different from the first chuck 20. Depending on the work piece 22 to be machined, the first chuck 20 can be replaced with the second chuck 30. In a receptacle also provided on the support plate 12, there is an auxiliary device 32 that is used for inserting a hollow cylindrical work piece into the first or second chuck 20 or 30; the operation of this auxiliary device 32 will be explained in greater detail below.
According to
The clamping chuck 20 has a knurled rotation ring 50 on which the pivoting levers 52 are supported so that they can pivot around a pivot axis extending parallel to the clamping axis 48. Depending on the rotation direction of the rotation ring 50, the first clamping elements 40 can be moved inward or outward by means of the pivoting levers 52. In the example shown in the drawing, a situation is shown in which the first clamping elements 40 are clamping an annular work piece 2 at its outer circumference by means of a spring force oriented toward the clamping axis 48. It is also possible, however, to use the first chuck 20 shown to clamp a hollow cylindrical work piece at its inner circumference, i.e. with an outward-directed spring force centered in relation to the clamping axis 48.
In order to fix the work piece in position, it is therefore only necessary to rotate the rotation ring 50 into an intermediate position (starting position) in which the first clamping elements 40 are situated either inside or outside the work piece. Depending on the starting position, when the rotation ring 50 is released, the first clamping elements either push radially outward (positions between a and c) or inward (positions between e and c) and automatically fix the work piece in position either at its inner circumference or at its outer circumference. The situation depicted in
In lieu of the spring element 56 schematically depicted in the form of a tension spring in
According to
One of these second clamping elements 60 is supported in sliding fashion in the circumference direction in a guide groove 64 extending in this circumference direction in order to thus make it possible to accommodate a work piece 22 that is not exactly cylindrically shaped.
It is also clear from
According to
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