The present invention relates to linear motion guiding devices, more particularly to a linear motion guiding device having a guide rail that an end has been made into a tapered shape.
Conventionally, in a case of linking and using the guide rails of the linear motion guiding device used in a machine toll and so forth, when a connection accuracy of a connecting portion configured by connecting together their mutual end faces was low, it sometimes happened that a level difference that they were misaligned in a width direction on the connecting portion was generated. When such a level difference was generated, an operation failure occurred and a ball was damaged when the slider passed the connecting portion, and due to which it sometimes happened that the durability as the linear motion guiding device was reduced.
Therefore, conventionally, it was conducted to manually form a chamfer on an end of a raceway face of a rolling body by using a hand grinder.
However, when the chamfer is manually formed on the end of the raceway face of the rolling body, machining man-hour is increased and it becomes difficult to form a smooth inclined portion. Accordingly, it was difficult to solve the above-mentioned problems which would occur when the slider passes the connecting portion of the guide rails.
In addition, in the conventional linear motion guiding device having the guide rail that the chamfer has been formed on the end of the raceway face of the rolling body, when the rolling body collides with a chamfered portion, an indentation is generated on the rolling body and there is a possibility that peeling may occur on the rolling body while the slider is traveling on the guide rail. In addition, there is a possibility that the chamfered portion may be chipped every time the rolling body collides with the chamfered portion of the guide rail. Further, there is a possibility that positional misalignment of the mutual guide rails which are linked together may occur due to collision of the rolling body with the chamfered portion.
Accordingly, techniques of providing an inclination on the connecting portion are disclosed in Patent Literature 1 and Patent Literature 2, aiming to prevent a reduction in durability of the above-mentioned connecting portion.
The invention disclosed in Patent Literature 1 is a technique of forming a raceway face of a rolling body on an end of a track rail into the gently inclined raceway face of the rolling body by removing elastic deformation of the end of the track rail by removing a wedge member from a slit provided in the connecting portion of the track rail.
On the other hand, the invention disclosed in Patent Literature 2 is a technique of providing a crowning on a connecting portion of an arc rail. A length of this crowning is defined to ½ of a length of a slider and a depth of the crowning is set to a ball deformation amount when loading a static rated load.
PTL 1: Japanese Patent Publication No. H05-32610
PTL 2: Japanese Patent No. 4259857
However, also in the technique disclosed in Patent Literature 1, it sometimes happened that when attaching the guide rails and mutually abutting the rail end faces in a production site and so forth, it sometimes happened that the level difference was generated depending on flatness and straightness of abutting faces of the rails and a size tolerance of the rail abutting faces and so forth.
In addition, when attaching the guide rails to a base and so forth with bolts, it sometimes happened that the end faces of the guide rails were misaligned depending on installation position accuracy of a bolt through hole and therefore the level difference was generated.
On the other hand, although also in the embodiment disclosed in Patent Literature 2, 1 to 50 μm are exemplified as the depth of the inclined portion for preventing the rolling body from being damaged, there is a possibility that the depth of the inclined portion may become excessive or insufficient depending on width-direction misalignment on the connecting portion and a load condition and there was concern about the effect of preventing a reduction in durability.
Accordingly, the present invention has been made taking notice of the above-mentioned problems, and an object thereof is to provide a linear motion guiding device which is surely capable of suppressing the reduction in durability of the guide rail that a tapered portion has been provided on its end.
An embodiment of the linear motion guiding device for attaining the above-mentioned object is, in a linear motion guiding device having a guide rail, a slider, and a plurality of rolling bodies,
Here, in the above-mentioned linear motion guiding device, when a width size of the guide rail is S(mm), an external load thereof in a radial direction is F(N), a dynamic rated load thereof is C (N), and the rolling body is a ball, the rolling body elastic deformation amount B(mm) may be expressed by the following (2).
In addition, in the above-mentioned linear motion guiding device, when a width size of the guide rail is S(mm), an external load thereof in a radial direction is F(N), a dynamic rated load thereof is C(N), and the rolling body is a roller, the rolling body elastic deformation amount B(mm) may be expressed by the following (4).
According to one aspect of the present invention, the linear motion guiding device which is surely capable of suppressing the reduction in durability of the guide rail that the tapered portion has been provided on the end can be provided.
In the following detailed description, many specific particulars will be described so as to provide full understanding of embodiments of the present invention. However, it will become apparent that one or more embodiment(s) can be carried out even in the absence of such specific particulars. In addition, well known structures and devices are schematically illustrated in order to simplify the drawings.
In the following, an embodiment of a linear motion guiding device will be described with reference to the drawings.
As illustrated in
In addition, as illustrated in
<Tapered Portion>
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
A length (the size of the tapered portion 10B in the longitudinal direction) L of the tapered portion 10B is not less than 0.5 times and not more than 1.5 times a diameter r of the rolling body 30. Here, relations between the length of the tapered portion and the rolling body will be described with reference to
First, in a case where the length L is 0.5 times the diameter r, as illustrated in
Next, in a case where the length L is 1.5 times the diameter r, as illustrated in
Next, in a case where the length L is less than 0.5 times the diameter r, as illustrated in
Next, in a case where the length L exceeds 1.5 times the diameter r, as illustrated in
A depth (the size which has been reduced in the width direction on one side face from the edge portion 10C to the end face 10a) t of the tapered portion 10B satisfies the following (1). Here, in the following (1), A is a width direction connecting portion level difference amount (mm) between one guide rail and another guide rail and B is a rolling body elastic deformation amount (mm). It is preferable that a contact angle α be 45° to 50°.
The connecting portion level difference amount A (mm) indicates a size of a level difference which is generated in the width direction when the end faces 10a, 10a of the two guide rails 10, 10 have been mutually brought into abutment as illustrated in
The rolling body elastic deformation amount B is an elastic deformation amount (mm) when the rolling body 30 in the rolling path has received a radial load as illustrated in
Here, definition of the rolling body elastic deformation amount B is made different depending on whether the rolling body 30 is the “ball” or the “roller”.
In a case where the rolling body 30 is the “ball”, the rolling body elastic deformation amount B is expressed by the following (2).
That is, in the case where the rolling body 30 is the “ball”, the depth t of the tapered portion 10B is defined as the following (3).
On the other hand, in a case where the rolling body 30 is the “roller”, the rolling body elastic deformation amount B is expressed by the following (4).
That is, in the case where the rolling body 30 is the “roller”, the depth t of the tapered portion 10B is so defined as in the following (5).
Here, in the above-mentioned formulae (2) to (5), “S” indicates a width size (mm) of the guide rail 10, “F” indicates an external load (N) in a radial direction (see
The reduction in durability of the connecting portion can be surely suppressed by defining the depth t of the tapered portion 10B in accordance with the kind of the rolling body 30, and the connection portion level difference amount A and the load condition in this way.
In addition, since a shock that the rolling body gives to the tapered portion when passing the two guide rails is weak by having configured the tapered portions on the ends of the guide rails, occurrence of peeling of the rolling body, chipping of the end of the guide rail, positional misalignment of the mutual guide rails and so forth can be reduced.
Although, in the foregoing, the present invention has been described with reference to the specific embodiment, it does not intend to limit the invention by these descriptions. Also other embodiments of the present invention will become apparent to a person skilled in the art together with various modified examples of the disclosed embodiment by referring to the description of the present invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the scope of the patent claims also covers these modified examples or embodiments included in the scope and the gist of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2014-007005 | Jan 2014 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2015/000165 | 1/15/2015 | WO | 00 |