The present invention relates to the adjustment of the position of tools, whether cutting tools such as inserts, or end tools such as drills, relative to the central bore axis of the guide bush holding the workpiece, generally metal bar stock, on an automatic lathe, still called “décolleteuse”, with fixed or sliding headstock.
Significant developments in automatic lathes, particularly automatic lathes with sliding headstocks, means that some very high performance machines now exist. These machines enable the turning of complex parts to increasingly tight dimensional and geometric tolerances. However, in order to achieve such accuracy, increasingly precise and reliable means for presetting the tool position are essential. These presetting configurations consist primarily of a measurement set-up comprising a mount which accepts the cutting tool with its tool holder, as well as comparators (contact type measurement) or a projector fitted with a measuring system (contactless measurement), which offer the possibility of defining and registering the coordinates from the tip of cutting tool or end tool within a plane (e.g. X, Y), or within a three-dimensional space (e.g. X, Y, Z).
However, alignment accuracy once the tool is installed in the machine is far from satisfactory. Alignment errors resulting from inaccuracies between the measurement set-up mount and the tool holder mount in the automatic lathe, the bore quality of the guide bush holding the bar stock, as well as the true position of the guide bush centreline which varies with each start-up of the machine.
In automatic lathes, this guide bush directs and precisely defines the position of the bar stock. These alignment errors are within an approximate bandwidth of 15 μm to 20 μm and, consequently, lead to rapid tool wear, greater machining forces which are very detrimental for small diameter workpieces, larger boring diameters than the diameter of the drill, as well as poor repeatability of machining dimensions.
The present invention proposes a new device for presetting the position of cutting tools or end tools. This new optical device for presetting cutting tools or end tools enable the alignment and referencing of tools in relation to the axis of the guide bush of an automatic lathe, particularly one with a moving headstock, directly in the machine. The invention thus aims to offer the possibility of avoiding tool alignment errors in relation to the axis of the guide bush, irrespective of whether the automatic lathe has a moving or fixed headstock.
Generally, the invention proposes a new optical device for presetting cutting tools or end tools, wherein at least one part capable of transmitting images, by virtue of its design and construction, i.e. by virtue of its embodiment, can be introduced into a guide bush holding the bar stock in an automatic lathe, particularly one with a sliding headstock. This part of the device is held in the guide bush by the collet or workholder of the headstock. As the device is at least partially placed inside the guide bush, it enables simultaneous visualisation of the diameter of the pilot bore and the tool, either the cutting tool or the end tool, which will have been pre-positioned on the front of the guide bush.
This optical device is used for acquiring images by a computer and on a display screen, which will enable the operator to take reference coordinates and to align the tool relative to the bore diameter of the guide bush in an automatic lathe. A circular array of light-emitting diodes (LED) is installed in front of the guide bush to obtain optimum illumination.
In its general embodiment, the optical device for the positioning adjustment of cutting tools or end tools of an automatic lathe relative to the central bore axis of the guide bush holding the workpiece, which is the subject of the invention, is characterised in that it includes at least one camera equipped with at least one extension tube fitted with at least one lens and capable of being placed in the guide bush, in such a way that said extension tube is directed towards the cutting tool or tools or end tool or tools, the camera also being fitted with the means of transmitting the image of the opening of said guide bush in the direction of said cutting tool or tools or end tools and the image of the part of said cutting tools or end tools visible through the opening of the guide bush.
In a first special embodiment of the invention, the device is characterised in that the extension tube includes at least one gradient index lens.
In a second special embodiment, applicable to the two preceding special embodiments, the device is characterised in that it comprises at least one achromatic lens placed between the extension tube and the camera.
In a third special embodiment, applicable to the three preceding special embodiments, the device is characterised in that the camera is fitted with a CCD sensor.
In a fourth special embodiment, applicable to the four preceding embodiments, the device is characterised in that it comprises the means enabling the camera to move in the direction of the axis of the lens mount.
In a fifth special embodiment, applicable to the five preceding embodiments, the device is characterised in that it comprises a computer to which the image of the guide bush opening and of the part of the end tools or cutting tools visible through this opening is transmitted, said computer being programmed in such a way as to enable the registering of the position of at least one reference point from the image of said opening of the bush and to cause said point to appear on a screen, thus enabling the positioning of tools in relation to said reference point.
In a sixth special embodiment, applicable to the preceding special embodiment, the device is characterised in that the reference point coincides with the central axis of the guide bush.
In a seventh special embodiment, applicable to the two preceding special embodiments, the device is characterised in that the computer is programmed so as to display a pattern on the screen comprising two orthogonal axes forming a Cartesian coordinate system.
In a eighth special embodiment, applicable to the seventh special embodiment, the device is characterised in that the computer is programmed to register and/or display the position of the cutting edge of at least one cutting tool according to the Cartesian coordinate system.
In an ninth special embodiment, applicable to the preceding embodiments, the device is characterised in that the computer is programmed to register and/or display the position of the rotary axis of at least one end tool, particularly a drill, according to the Cartesian coordinate system.
In a tenth special embodiment, applicable to the preceding fifth to ninth special embodiments, the device is characterised in that the reference point is the centre of a circle the circumference of which is positioned so as to be tangential to or superposed on the arcs of circles formed by the image of the internal surface of the jaws of the guide bush workholder.
In an eleventh special embodiment, applicable to the tenth special embodiment, the device is characterised in that the reference point is the origin of the Cartesian coordinate system.
In a twelfth special embodiment, applicable to the general embodiment and to the first to eighth embodiments, and the tenth and eleventh embodiments above, the device is characterised in that it comprises illumination by a set of light-emitting diodes placed behind the cutting tool or tools in relation to the camera.
In a thirteenth special embodiment, applicable to the ninth embodiment above, the device is characterised in that it comprises illumination by light-emitting diodes, each diode being placed on a plane perpendicular to the central bore axis of the guide bush, said plane being located in front of the end tool in relation to the camera.
In a fourteenth special embodiment, applicable to the preceding special embodiments, the device is characterised in that the internal surfaces of the extension tube, lens mount, and camera housing are treated so as to minimise internal reflections.
In a fifteenth special embodiment, applicable to the preceding embodiment, the device is characterised in that the surface treatment is anodisation.
In a sixteenth special embodiment, applicable to the preceding embodiments, the device is characterised in that it comprises at least one guide sleeve capable of encircling the end of the extension tube, the external diameter of which corresponds to the bore defined by the jaws of the guide bush workholder.
The best embodiment of the device according to the invention is that shown in
The camera 3 is inserted in a housing 18 and its axis corresponds to the axis 7 of the lens mount, which itself coincides, once the optical assembly is introduced into the guide bush 2, with the central axis 1 of said bush. The camera is fixed on an internal ring 24, which is mounted in a part 25 inserted into the housing 18. The assembly formed by the camera 3, the ring 24 and the part 25 can slide longitudinally in the direction of the axis 7 of the lens mount, and consequently in the direction of the central axis 1 of the guide bush. The displacement is guided by two cheese-head screws 26. The axial displacement of the camera enables the operator to adjust the clarity of the image. A set of lenses 17 is attached to the housing 18, shown here in the form of a cylindrical part wherein the part adjacent to the housing 18 has a greater diameter than the part further away from said box.
The part of the greater diameter cylindrical part 17 contains the achromatic lens 10, while the smaller diameter part contains the extension tube 4 wherein the gradient-index lens 9 is placed. This gradient-index lens is specially designed for imaging. The assembly formed by the camera 3, the housing 18 and the set of lenses 17, including the extension tube 4 and the gradient-index lens, once introduced into the guide bush, is held by the headstock 28 by means of a fixing end piece 27 fixed behind the housing 18 and which is gripped and held in place by the headstock workholder.
At the face of the guide bush, the tool or tools to be positioned are in place. In
The outside diameter of the extension tube is small enough to allow its introduction into the bore of the guide bush 2.
The end of the extension tube is fitted with a guide sleeve 19. This consists of a simple hollow cylinder, whose outside diameter corresponds to the bore of the guide bush, which surrounds the end of the extension tube 4. This sleeve enables the extension tube to be centred as precisely as possible in the guide bush thereby avoiding image distortions which could occur in the event of poor centering, such distortions could lead to measurement inaccuracy. In practice, the device should be delivered with a series of sleeves of varying diameters, which correspond to the usual bore diameters on the market. The lens or lenses 9 of the extension tube acquire the image of the guide bush opening in the direction of tools 5 or 6, as well as the image of the part of the tools which appear in this opening. The image is transmitted to the achromatic lens 10 and then passes into the camera 3, which then passes it from its CCD sensor to a computer, not shown in the drawings, via a cable 8. This computer is programmed such as to enable the operator to find the centre of the circle formed by the image of the opening of the bush, the centre corresponding to the position of the bore axis 1 of the guide bush 2. Acquisition of the position of this centre, which is the reference point, is carried out as follows: on the image of the opening of the guide bush which appears on the computer screen, the operator draws a line segment 21 between the two angles 22 of one of the workholder jaws 20. The characteristics of this segment 21 are recorded in the computer. The operator then proceeds in the same manner for the two other workholder jaws. The computer, which is programmed to this effect, then calculates the position of the centre of the guide bush bore and shows it on the screen, in the centre of a circle 14 which coincides with the circle formed by the image of the bore opening. It should be noted here that the verb “coincide” should be understood in an approximate sense, since the three workholder jaws only form a real circle in one very precise clamping position—as is shown in FIGS. 5 and 6—in most cases, the three jaws are at such a distance from the centre that the three arcs of the circle 15 that they form can only be tangential to a circle through the centre of which the axis of the guide bush passes. The computer also shows two orthogonal straight lines 11 and 12 which cross in the centre thus defined, so constituting a Cartesian coordinate system wherein the origin is the centre of the image of the opening of the guide bush, which coincides with the axis 1 of the guide bush.
The operator can then proceed to acquire the position of the tool in the Cartesian coordinate system thus obtained, and to measure and record the difference between the coordinates of this position and the coordinates of this same position in the coordinate system of the automatic lathe.
For the cutting tools, acquisition of the edge 13 of the tool 5 is carried out by the computer as follows: the computer is programmed to automatically enter the position of the intersection of the two straight lines each of which is superimposed on one of the segments that forms the image of the edge on the screen. The dotted segments 29 in
For end tools, the position of the tool centre cannot be acquired in the same way. The computer is programmed to show a second circle 23, smaller and concentric with the first circle 14, and centred like the one on the origin of the Cartesian coordinate system. The operator reduces the diameter of this circle such that it touches the perimeter of the image of the tool. The operator modifies the position of the tool and reduces the diameter of the circle 23, such as to reduce as much as possible the space between the circle and the perimeter of the image of the tool. The position of the centre of the circle according to the coordinates of the automatic lathe system is then recorded as well as the difference from the coordinates of the same position according to the system created on the basis of the camera data, and the offset is corrected to arrive at the desired position of the tool in relation to the axis of the guide bush.
The invention is applicable to automatic lathes in the extensive field of bar turning.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH2005/000524 | 9/2/2005 | WO | 00 | 5/2/2008 |