The present invention relates to a cutting insert which is designed for producing a V-shaped profile in a workpiece by radial piercing with respect to an axis of rotation of the workpiece, having a reference plane and a V-shaped piercing region, the V-shaped piercing region having two cutting edges which are contained in the reference plane and converge in a V-shaped manner towards each other in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, a cutting edge angle which can be measured between the cutting edges in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane and lies in the range of 20° to 60°, an axis of symmetry contained in the reference plane and with respect to which the cutting edges are formed mirror-symmetrically to each other, a rake face, a plurality of elongate chip-guiding depressions in the rake face, said chip-guiding depressions each having a low point lying below the reference plane and each extending to a depression axis of extent contained in the reference plane, in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, and a cutting corner via which the two cutting edges are connected to each other.
The present invention furthermore relates to use of such a cutting insert.
Finally, the present invention relates to a machining method in which such a cutting insert is provided.
A cutting insert of the type mentioned at the beginning is used in particular in the production of V-belt pulleys from the workpiece by the cutting insert being pierced radially into the workpiece with respect to the workpiece axis of rotation. By means of this piercing, when the cutting insert or the workpiece is rotated about the workpiece axis of rotation, a V-shaped peripheral groove is produced in the workpiece, in which groove a V belt for driving a V-belt pulley produced in such a way can engage.
However, the piercing customarily produces long chips, for example long tangled chips. This is problematic because long chips frequently wind around the workpiece or the cutting insert. Process malfunctions during the piercing and damage to the cutting insert occur as a result. In addition, long chips frequently have to be removed manually. This conventionally leads to machine downtimes, which reduces the productivity. The formation of long chips should consequently be avoided.
The cutting insert according to EP 1 454 690 A1 therefore has a rake surface with a depression which extends along the cutting edge in order to promote chip breaking.
However, it has been shown that such a formed rake surface does not provide sufficient chip breaking when piercing ductile material.
It is therefore the object of the present invention to specify in each case a cutting insert, use of the cutting insert and a machining method with in each case a chip formation that is improved in comparison to the prior art.
The object is achieved by the cutting insert according to claim 1. Advantageous developments of the cutting insert according to claim 1 can be gathered from the claims which are dependent on claim 1.
The cutting insert which is designed for producing a V-shaped profile in a workpiece by radial piercing with respect to an axis of rotation of the workpiece has a reference plane and a V-shaped piercing region, the V-shaped piercing region having two cutting edges which are contained in the reference plane and converge in a V-shaped manner towards each other in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, a cutting edge angle which can be measured between the cutting edges in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane and lies in the range of 20° to 60°, an axis of symmetry contained in the reference plane and with respect to which the cutting edges are formed mirror-symmetrically to each other, a rake face, a plurality of elongate chip-guiding depressions in the rake face, said chip-guiding depressions each having a low point lying below the reference plane and each extending parallel to a depression axis of extent contained in the reference plane, in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, and a cutting corner via which the two cutting edges are connected to each other, wherein the depression axes of extent each extend at a depression chip-guiding angle in the range from 0° to 45°, wherein the depression chip-guiding angle can in each case be measured on the side of the cutting corner between the axis of symmetry and the depression axis of extent in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane. The advantage of this cutting insert consists in that the chip-guiding depressions are used for the chip formation which is undertaken plastically in such a manner that sliding of the chip into the respective chip-guiding depression causes beads to be produced in the chip along the longitudinal axis of the chip, the beads leading to stiffening of the chip, and therefore the chip can break more easily in comparison to the prior art. It has been shown that this positive effect no longer occurs if the depression chip-guiding angle lies outside the range from 0° to 45°.
If the depression chip-guiding angle is 0°, the chip-guiding depressions each extend parallel to the axis of symmetry in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane. If the depression chip-guiding angle lies in the range greater than 0° to 45°, the chip-guiding depressions extend obliquely with respect to the axis of symmetry in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane.
The fact that the depression chip-guiding angle can in each case be measured on the side of the cutting corner between the axis of symmetry and the depression axis of extent in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane means that the one limb of the depression chip-guiding angle is a portion of the depression axis of extent in the region of the chip-guiding depression and the other limb of the depression chip-guiding angle is in each case a portion of the axis of symmetry on the side of the cutting corner.
Within the meaning of the present disclosure, the two cutting edges can each be rectilinear, convex or concave, wherein they are in each case formed mirror-symmetrically to each other with respect to the axis of symmetry.
The cutting corner can be punctiform or linear in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane. If it is linear, it may be, for example, circular, oval or polygonal.
Within the meaning of the present disclosure, the reference plane is an imaginary plane in which the cutting edges are contained.
The term V-shaped means the shape of the letter V, wherein the sides of the V may be rectilinear, convex or concave and the tip of the V may be punctiform or linear. If it is linear, it may be, for example, circular, oval or polygonal.
According to a development of the cutting insert, the depression chip-guiding angle lies in the range from 10° to 40°. It has been shown that this narrower range leads to an even shorter chip breaking. A further improvement in this respect occurs in the range from 10° to 20°. The range from 12° to 18° is most preferred.
According to a development of the cutting insert, at least two of the depression axes of extent are arranged mirror-symmetrically to the axis of symmetry in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane. As a result, in each case at least one chip-guiding depression is provided for each of the two cutting corners, and therefore a conventionally symmetrical cutting condition is taken into account in the piercing.
According to a development of the cutting insert, the chip-guiding depressions in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane each have a maximum length, measured parallel to the depression axis of extent, and each have a maximum width, measured perpendicularly to the depression axis of extent, wherein the ratio between the length and width is in each case in the range from 1.1 to 20. This is advantageous because the chip-guiding depressions are therefore designed as elongate flutes which can accordingly guide the chips laterally and in the chip discharge direction. It has been shown that the range from 1.1 to 10 is particularly readily suitable for this effect. The range from 3 to 8 is most preferred.
According to a development of the cutting insert, the cutting corner is linear in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane and has a maximum cutting corner width, measured in the reference plane perpendicular to the axis of symmetry, wherein, in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, the chip-guiding depressions keep to a minimum distance, measured parallel to the axis of symmetry, from a point of intersection of the cutting corner with the axis of symmetry, said minimum distance being greater by a factor of 1 to 3 than the cutting corner width. By the chip-guiding depressions keeping to said minimum distance, differently shaped chip-guiding depressions can be provided between the chip-guiding depressions and the cutting corner in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane. This is expedient because, in such a cutting corner region, which is defined in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, different cutting conditions prevail during the piercing in comparison to the remaining region of the V-shaped piercing region, and therefore a chip formation which is adapted thereto can be realized.
According to a development of the cutting insert, the rake face has a plurality of chip-guiding elevations which each extend to above the reference plane and are arranged alternately alternating with the chip-guiding depressions in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane. Owing to such an arrangement, the chip-guiding elevations provide improved chip guidance which acts counter to the chips deviating laterally as they emerge from the respective chip-guiding depression. By this means, the chip can be bent upward over greater radii until it breaks.
According to a development of the cutting insert, the chip-guiding elevations are elongate and each extend parallel to an elevation axis of extent contained in the reference plane in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, wherein the elevation axes of extent each extend at an elevation chip-guiding angle in the range from 0° to 45°, wherein the elevation chip-guiding angle can in each case be measured on the side of the cutting corner between the elevation axis of extent and the axis of symmetry in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane. It has been shown that the chip guidance is thereby improved even further because, owing to the elevation chip-guiding angle in the range from 0° to 45°, the chips are guided away even further from the cutting edge and the workpiece. The elevation chip-guiding angle is measured analogously to the depression chip-guiding angle. The elevation chip-guiding angle preferably lies in a narrower range of in the range from 0° to 45°, even more preferably in the range from 10° to 20°, and, most preferably, the range extends from 12° to 18°.
According to a development of the cutting insert, the chip-guiding elevations and the chip-guiding depressions are arranged alternately alternating in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, wherein the depression chip-guiding angle of one of the chip-guiding depressions has a difference from one of the elevation chip-guiding angles, said elevation chip-guiding angle belongs to a chip-guiding elevation which directly follows the chip-guiding depression in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, and the difference lies in the range from 0° to 15°. It has been shown that, according to this development, the chip breaking is promoted even more and the discharging chip as it emerges from the chip-guiding depression is guided away from the cutting corner in the direction of the axis of symmetry. This effect is reinforced in the narrower range from greater than 0° to 15°.
According to a development of the cutting insert, the cutting edge angle lies in the range from 35° to 45°. This is particularly expedient for the production of the V-shaped profile because the V-shaped profile then has an opening angle between the sides of the V that is equal to the cutting edge angle from this range, wherein, as a result, the opening angle is firstly of a sufficiently small size, which is advantageous for the lateral guidance of a V belt, and, secondly, leads to a sufficiently large contact surface for the V belt within the V-shaped profile, which is advantageous for frictionally transmitting force from the V belt to the workpiece. This effect is reinforced in the narrower range from 38° to 42°.
According to a development of the cutting insert, at least one of the chip-guiding depressions has an unground, sintered surface. In comparison to a ground surface, such a surface has improved quality and/or a smaller dimensional tolerance, and therefore an even more precise chip formation is possible. The unground, sintered surface is obtainable, for example, by compressing a pulverulent starting material which is subsequently sintered. The unground, sintered surface can also be coated with a hard material layer, which reduces the wear of the cutting insert.
The surface of the rake face can also be unground and sintered outside the at least one chip-guiding depression, which has an unground, sintered surface. This improves the quality and/or reduces the dimensional tolerance of the rake face.
Each of the cutting edges connects the rake face to a respective flank. At least one of the flanks, preferably both flanks, has an unground, sintered surface. This improves the quality and/or reduces the dimensional tolerance of the flank.
It is expressly stated at this juncture that it is particularly advantageous if at least one of the cutting edges, preferably both cutting edges, has/have an uninterrupted profile by the chip-guiding depressions each being spaced apart from the cutting edge or the two cutting edges in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane. This measure improves the stability of the cutting edges. The distance, in each case measured perpendicularly to the cutting edge in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, between the respective chip-guiding depression and the cutting edge can be, for example, in the range from 0.01 mm to 0.1 mm, preferably 0.01 mm to 0.08 mm.
According to a development of the cutting insert, the cutting insert has at least one second V-shaped piercing region, the second V-shaped piercing region having two cutting edges which are contained in the reference plane and converge in a V-shaped manner towards each other in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane, wherein the two cutting edges of the second V-shaped piercing region are arranged directly following the two cutting edges of the first V-shaped piercing region perpendicular to the axis of symmetry. This cutting insert is advantageous because the at least two V-shaped profiles required for a V-ribbed belt are produced in the workpiece by a radial piercing movement with said cutting insert. The second piercing region conventionally has a cutting corner which is designed analogously to the cutting corner of the first V-shaped piercing region. The second piercing region is preferably designed analogously to the first piercing region, and therefore the advantageous chip formation of the first piercing region is also provided in and/or on the rake face of the second piercing region.
It is conceivable and also possible for three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten or even more V-shaped piercing regions to be provided, wherein said piercing regions are each designed like the first or second V-shaped piercing region and are arranged directly following the respective previous piercing region perpendicular to the axis of symmetry. This is advantageous because the V-shaped pulley is intended to be produced with more than two grooves.
The object is also achieved by the use according to claim 12 or according to one of the claims dependent on claim 12 by the cutting insert according to claim 1 or according to one of the claims dependent on claim 1 being used for radially piercing a workpiece with respect to an axis of rotation of the workpiece, wherein the cutting insert or the workpiece is rotated about the workpiece axis of rotation. An advantage of this use is that the cutting insert owing to its chip-guiding depressions which interact with the optional chip-guiding elevations counteracts the formation of long chips, in particular tangled chips.
According to a development of the use of the cutting insert, the cutting insert and the workpiece are at a standstill with respect to each other in the axial direction with respect to the workpiece axis of rotation during the radial piercing. Accordingly, during the radial piercing, no relative movement takes place between the cutting insert and the workpiece in the axial direction with respect to the workpiece axis of rotation. Owing to their arrangement and dimensions, the chip-guiding depressions and the optional chip-guiding elevations are particularly readily suitable for forming beads and guiding chips away from the cutting edges and the workpiece during such radial piercing.
The object is also achieved by a machining method according to claim 14 or according to one of the claims which are dependent on claim 14.
In the machining method for producing a V-shaped profile in a workpiece, the following steps are carried out: a) providing a workpiece with a workpiece axis of rotation, b) providing the cutting insert according to claim 1 or according to one of the claims which are dependent on claim 1, c) rotating the workpiece or the cutting insert about the workpiece axis of rotation, d) radially moving the workpiece and the cutting insert towards each other with respect to the workpiece axis of rotation such that the cutting corner of the cutting insert first of all pierces the workpiece, e) continuing the moving towards each other from step d) such that the two cutting edges penetrate the workpiece at least in sections. An advantage of this method is that the cutting insert, owing to its chip-guiding depressions which interact with the optional chip-guiding elevations, counteracts the formation of long chips, in particular tangled chips.
According to a development of the method, in step e), the cutting insert and the workpiece are at a standstill with respect to each other in the axial direction with respect to the workpiece axis of rotation. Accordingly, during the radial piercing, there is no relative movement between the cutting insert and the workpiece in the axial direction with respect to the workpiece axis of rotation. It has been shown that, owing to their arrangement and dimensions, the chip-guiding depressions and the optionally provided chip-guiding elevations are particularly readily suitable for forming beads and guiding chips away from the cutting edges of the workpiece during such radial piercing.
Further advantages and expediencies of the invention emerge on the basis of the description below of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached figures.
In the figures:
The V-shaped piercing region 1 shown in
The cutting edges 3 and 4 are connected to each other via a rounded cutting corner 5 contained in the reference plane 100. A feeding direction 6 is conventionally oriented radially with respect to an axis of rotation of a metallic workpiece. If the cutting insert 2 with the cutting corner 5 is first of all pierced radially into the workpiece, which rotates about the axis of rotation, parallel to the feeding direction 6 into the workpiece and the cutting edges 3 and 4 penetrate the workpiece in the process, a profile which is designed following the V-shaped profile of the piercing region 1, i.e. is V-shaped with an opening angle of 40°, is consequently produced in the workpiece.
Chips are produced during such radial piercing. The chips are discharged along a rake face 7 of the piercing region 1. The rake face 7 is delimited in the reference plane 100 by the cutting edges 3 and 4 and by the cutting corner 5. The rake face 7 has drop-shaped chip-guiding depressions 8 which each have a low point in the vicinity of the cutting edge (cf. in this respect
The shape and orientation of the chip-guiding depressions 8 act advantageously to the effect that beads are impressed in the discharging chips. The beads act as folding points and predetermined breaking points, which facilitates the rolling and breaking of the chips.
The chip-guiding depressions 8 each extend parallel to a depression axis of extent 10 contained in the reference plane 100. The depression axes of extent 10 each enclose a depression chip-guiding angle 12 with the axis of symmetry 11, which depression chip-guiding angle can be measured on the side of the cutting corner 5 and is contained in the reference plane 100. The depression chip-guiding angles 12 are in each case 15°, by way of example.
The chip-guiding depressions 8 each have a maximum length 13, measured parallel to their depression axis of extent 10, and a maximum width 14, measured perpendicularly to their depression axis of extent 10. The ratio between the maximum length 13 and the maximum width is in each case 5.4.
It has been shown that such a selected elongate shape of the chip-guiding depressions 8 is advantageous for chip guidance away from the cutting edges 3 and 4 and the cutting corner 5 to a stop surface, which will be discussed in more detail with reference to
The cutting corner 5 has a maximum width 15, measured in the reference plane 100 perpendicularly to the axis of symmetry 11, at the transition to the cutting edges 3 and 4. From an intersecting point 5a, contained in the reference plane 100, of the cutting corner 5 with the axis of symmetry 11, a front region 16 of the rake face 7 extends to the front two chip-guiding depressions 8 in the selected viewing direction from
It has been shown that such a shaped region 16 is advantageous for the design of the cutting insert 2 to the effect that further chip-guiding depressions 8 can be provided in the region 16, said chip-guiding depressions being able to have different depression chip-guiding angles and/or shapes in comparison to the chip-guiding depressions 8 illustrated in
In the viewing direction, selected from
The V-shaped piercing region 101, shown in
With respect to the front chip-guiding depressions 8′ and 8″, the maximum length, measured analogously to the other chip-guiding depressions 8, is in each case smaller than the maximum length 13 and their maximum width 14, measured analogously to the other chip-guiding depressions 8, is in each case smaller. The middle of the three front chip-guiding depressions 8″ in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane 100 thus has a ratio of 7.5 with respect to its maximum length to its maximum width. The two other front chip-guiding depressions 8′ arranged on the side of the cutting edge 3 and on the side of the cutting edge 4, in each case in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane 100, have an analogously dimensioned ratio of in each case 5.8. The chip-guiding depressions 8′ and 8″ formed in such a way have a favourable effect on the chip guidance away from the cutting edge 5 parallel to the axis of symmetry 11, and therefore this takes place parallel to the axis of symmetry 11.
The V-shaped piercing region 102, shown in
The V-shaped piercing region 103, shown in
The V-shaped piercing region 104, shown in
The rake face 7 of the piercing region 104 has chip-guiding depressions 80 which act analogously to the chip-guiding depressions 8 and the depression axes of extent 10 of which each span the depression chip-guiding angle 12 with the axis of symmetry 11 in the reference plane 100 on the side of the cutting corner 5. The depression chip-guiding angle 12 of the chip-guiding depressions 80 is in each case 15°, as in the case of the chip-guiding depressions 8 from
In contrast to the rake face 7 of the piercing region 101, the rake face 7 of the piercing region 104 additionally has rib-shaped chip-guiding elevations 90 which each extend above the reference plane 100 as far as a respective high point 91 and converge in a wedge-shaped manner at the respective cutting edge 3 or 4 in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane 100. The reference plane 100 is consequently located between the high points 91 and the low points 81. The chip-guiding elevations 90 are each arranged alternating alternatively with the chip-guiding depressions 80 along the cutting edges 3 and 4, and therefore each chip-guiding depression 80 is arranged between two chip-guiding elevations 90. Chip-guiding elevations 90 arranged in such a way prevent the chips from breaking out laterally as emerge from the chip-guiding depressions 80.
The chip-guiding elevations 90 extend analogously to the chip-guiding depressions 80 in each case parallel to the one elevation axis of extent 92 which is contained in reference plane 100 and in each case encloses with the axis of symmetry 11 an elevation chip-guiding angle 93 on the side of the cutting corner 5, said elevation chip-guiding angle in each case being smaller than the depression chip-guiding angle 12 of an immediately adjacent chip-guiding depression 80. It has been shown that such a difference promotes the chip breaking into smaller chips as the chips emerge from the chip-guiding depressions 80. The elevation chip-guiding angles 93 are thus 12° in each case. The difference between the depression chip-guiding angle 12 of one of the chip-guiding depressions 80, which directly follows a chip-guiding elevation 90 in the direction along the cutting edge 3 or 4, and the elevation chip-guiding angle 93 of said chip-guiding elevation 90 is consequently in each case 3°.
Two front chip-guiding depressions 80′ are formed analogously to the chip-guiding depressions 8′. A chip-guiding depression 80″ arranged between the two chip-guiding depressions 80′ in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane 100 is formed analogously to the chip-guiding depression 80, with the difference that the chip-guiding depression 80″ is narrowed inwards in a viewing direction perpendicular to the reference plane 100 into the axis of symmetry 11, which promotes the chip breaking in this region.
It can be seen with reference to the profile lines in
It can be seen in
It can also be seen in
In the side view, shown in
During the piercing according to
The action of the cutting insert 204 and therefore of the piercing region 104 can be seen from a comparison of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20174465.3 | May 2020 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2021/058422 | 3/3/2021 | WO |