The invention concerns a machine for superfinishing workpieces by honing or precision grinding according to the preamble of claim 1.
Honing machines are used for the above-mentioned tasks. A honing tool is provided with an appropriate coating (e.g. of diamond or corundum) and is introduced into a bore while simultaneously being turned and reciprocated to process the inner surface of the bore. To take into account the wear of the honing tools, these are i.a. designed to have honing strips provided with a honing layer which can be adjusted in a radial direction by means of a widening bar which rotates along with the honing tool but can be displaced therein in an axial direction.
Machines can moreover be used, with which a tool must be mounted to the device in a direction which corresponds to the axial direction of the rotational motion of the machine. These may be honing tools (e.g. for so-called “mandrel honing”) and also lapping tools. They could also be precision grinding tools to subject e.g. pre-ground valve seat surfaces to final superfinishing, wherein only a few micrometers must be removed in an exactly defined manner thereby simultaneously improving the surface.
The lifting motion of the carriage supporting the honing spindle of honing machines has generally been conventionally effected via a hydraulic drive, while the rotational motion of the honing spindle and thereby also that of the honing tool disposed therein, is effected by a common electromotor. The simultaneous rotational and lifting motions of the honing tool during honing produces a cross-grinding pattern on the surface to be processed, which is typical for this type of treatment, this pattern being important for the bearing and lubricating properties of the processed workpiece and also for the fitting accuracy of further components (e.g. pistons). For processing smaller bores having a diameter of only a few millimeters and simultaneous increase of the rotational speed of the honing tool to reduce the processing time, the stroke speed must be correspondingly increased. The hydraulic drives used to provide the stroke motion are thereby limited with regard to speed and reversibility of the system during operation. This is particularly true when the strokes are short as is the case when the processing depth of the bores is in the range of a few millimeters.
It is the underlying purpose of the invention to eliminate these disadvantages. In particular, means should be provided for the stroke motion which permit higher stroke speeds while thereby maintaining high reversal accuracy to ensure that small and short bores can also be processed more exactly and rapidly at higher honing tool rotational speeds. This object also addresses the problem of exactly realizing very short delivery paths for the carriage supporting the honing spindle, such as those which occur e.g. during precision grinding of valve seat surfaces. Moreover, the entire construction should be simplified by reducing the number of moving parts thereby also reducing costs.
This object is achieved in accordance with the invention with the means stated in the characterizing part of the claims.
A so-called linear motor is used which permits higher lifting and delivery speeds, has considerably less components, can be reversed with more precision and allows short stroke paths at high speed.
The use as honing machine, i.e. use of a honing tool with radially adjustable honing strips, is facilitated in that the widening bar for radial adjustment of the honing strips, which is actuated by a connecting rod disposed in the honing machine, can also be actuated in a more simplified manner using a servomotor which, in turn, may preferably be flanged coaxially to the coupling housing and disposed as a linear extension to the spindle housing. The connecting rod can also be preferably adjusted via a further linear drive. The invention may then also be used to perform a rapid and precise, minimum, exactly defined, stroke motion of a precision grinding tool, e.g. for processing a valve seat.
Embodiments of the invention are described in more detail below with reference to the enclosed drawings.
The spindle housing 8 is disposed on a carriage 12 in which the primary part 13 of a linear motor is integrated. The primary part 13 forms a linear motor 18 together with the secondary part 17 which is integrated in the vertically extending carrier 15 (see
Use of a linear motor whose moving part carries the honing spindle and thereby performs the stroke motion with the required speed and reversal accuracy is of primary importance to the invention. To process the bore 3, the spindle housing 8, including honing spindle 7 and honing tool 4 received therein, is lowered to such an extent that the honing strips 5 penetrate into the bore 3. The honing spindle 8 is simultaneously reciprocated (lifted and lowered) and turned. These two motions are matched to generate the “cross-grinding pattern”, which is typical for honing, on the workpiece surface at an angle of e.g. 10° to 50°. For smaller diameters of the bore to be processed and high rotational speeds, this pattern requires a relatively fast lifting and lowering of the honing spindle 8, which is ensured by the linear motor 18. An inventive honing machine with e.g. a stroke of 80 mm can have a stroke speed of 50 m/min with a reversal accuracy of ≦0.05 mm (reversal is the change of motion from one direction to the opposite direction). With a stroke of 20 mm, it can have a stroke speed of 25 m/min with a reversal accuracy of ≦0.04 mm.
As is shown in
The person skilled in the art is familiar with linear motor construction and an exact description is therefore unnecessary herein. Linear motors can be obtained from various manufacturers. They are driving elements which are developed from a normal rotary current electromotor by “cutting open” the stator and unfolding it into a plane. The rotor is also planar such that it moves along the linear extension of the stator in correspondence with the alternating electromagnetic field which propagates along the windings of the stator. In the present case, the primary part 13 corresponds to the stator, the secondary part 17 to the rotor of an electromotor. It is a synchronous device and is designed as a long stator motor. The speed is controlled via frequency variation in a frequency converter of an associated control. A programmable control (not shown) permits adjustment of corresponding speed as stated above.
A carrier frame 171 is mounted on the carrier 15 using screws 170, only one of which is visible, and a measurement transducer 173 is disposed on the carrier frame 171 via screws 172. It contains conventional measurement markings (not shown) which generate measuring signals in sensors (not shown) disposed on the carriage during motion of the carriage 12 perpendicular to the plane of the drawing of
The structure of the spindle housing 8 is shown in
The radial coupling housing 51 which joins the connecting plate 34 on the left-hand side, and the servomotor 10 which adjusts the widening bar 11 of the honing strips 5 of the honing tool 4 are shown in
The honing spindle 7 has a continuous bore 40 in which the connecting rod 110 is disposed to be displaceable in an axial direction. The right-hand end of the connecting rod 110 has a bore 112 with inner thread into which the widening bar 11 is rigidly screwed, such that the connecting rod 110 and the widening bar 11 form a unit and can be commonly displaced in the longitudinal direction (axial direction) of the axis of rotation. The honing strips 5 are thereby radially displaced towards the outside. Honing tools 4 of this type are known in the art. During operation, the honing strips are radially pulled inward through springs and have inclined adjustment surfaces on their inner sides which cooperate with correspondingly inclined adjustment surfaces at the end of the widening bar 11 such that, when the widening bar 11 is axially displaced, the honing strips 5 are radially adjusted (spreading mechanism).
The connecting rod 110 and the widening bar 11 rotate together with the honing spindle 7 but can also be axially displaced therein (in the longitudinal direction) as mentioned above. This is realized in that the connecting rod 110 is penetrated by a pin 46 whose ends are guided in opposite grooves 46′ in the honing spindle 7. The bore 40 in the honing spindle 7 has a shoulder 43 onto which a ring 41 is urged via a spring 45 which is supported with its other end on the pin 46. At rest, the connecting rod 110 is forced by the spring 45 in its outermost upper position shown in
The plunger 47 is a continuation of a coupling piece 49 into the axial recess 49′ of which the driven shaft 150 of the servo motor 10 projects. Coupling in the rotational direction with simultaneous displaceability in the longitudinal direction is realized by a tongue/groove connection formed by a groove 151 and wedge (“spring”) 152.
The coupling housing 51 is screwed to the front end plate 34 of the spindle housing 8. The screws are not shown. A sleeve 52 is inserted into the coupling housing 51. The sleeve 52 rotates together with the coupling housing 51 and can be axially displaced therein, since a block 160 which is screwed into the sleeve 52 and radially projects past it, projects into a groove 161 in the sleeve 53 and is guided therein. The sleeve 52 can be displaced relative to the coupling housing 51 through a stroke H. The upper end of the connecting rod 110 is rotatably disposed in the sleeve 52 using bearings 165. The inner shells of the bearings 165 are rigidly connected to the connecting rod. A lid 166 is screwed to the connecting rod 110 to fix the bearing 165.
The sleeve 52 also receives an adjusting sleeve 53 which rotates therewith and can be displaced and adjusted in a longitudinal direction. This connection is also realized through a tongue and groove connection which is formed by the wedge 54 and the groove 55. The adjustment sleeve 53 is penetrated by a bore which has an inner thread 56. An outer thread 56′ of the plunger 47 engages therein. The adjustment sleeve 53 is secured in the sleeve 52 through a lid 167 which is screwed to the sleeve 52. If the servomotor 10 and thereby also its driven shaft 150 rotate, the coupling piece 49 is also rotated due to the tongue and groove connection 151, 152. Due to engagement of the threads 56, 56′, the coupling piece 49 is displaced in an axial direction and the plunger 47 is moved in a longitudinal direction (to the right). When the plunger 47 is forced against the bottom 48′ of the recess 48, the connecting rod 110 together with the widening bar 11 are displaced to the right-hand side against the force of the spring 45, thereby effecting radial adjustment of the honing strips 5 within the honing tool 4 as mentioned above.
170 is a sensor having an end switch which transmits the shown end position consisting of sleeve 52, block 160, bearing 165 and connecting rod 110, and a corresponding measured signal to the control (not shown).
A further embodiment is described below with reference to
The embodiment with axial delivery of the bar 306 in accordance with
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 25 514.8 | Jun 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/00379 | 1/16/2003 | WO | 4/16/2005 |