The invention relates to a machine tool.
Machine tools are generally used, by way of example, to machine workpieces by milling, drilling/boring, grinding and/or curling.
Machine tools, in particular five-axis milling machines, are operated with special hand-held operating devices, particularly when setting up the workpiece. In addition to the geometric axes X, Y and Z, the round axes required to orient the tool (in the case of head kinematics) or the workpiece (in the case of table kinematics) are commercially oriented via direction keys or handwheels. A frequent application is the alignment of the tool or of the workpiece perpendicular to the desired machining plane. In this context, commercially available machine tools have great difficulty in producing the desired orientation, that is to say the desired alignment, of the tool and/or the workpiece.
It is the object of the invention to provide a machine tool that enables the tool and/or the workpiece to be aligned easily.
This object is achieved by a machine tool wherein the machine has a control device for controlling the movement of machine axes of the machine, the machine having an operating device that can be held by a human hand and has a longitudinal axis, the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis being determined, the movement of at least one machine axis being controlled by the control device in such a way that the spatial orientation of a tool or a workpiece substantially corresponds to the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis of the operating device.
Advantageous designs of the invention follow from the dependent claims.
It turns out to be advantageous when the movement of at least two machine axes is controlled in such a way that the orientation of the tool or of the workpiece substantially corresponds to the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis of the operating device, since then the workpiece and/or the tool can be quickly aligned in a simple way even with workpieces of complex construction.
It also turns out to be advantageous when the operating device has an actuating element, upon actuation of the actuating element the spatial orientation of the tool or of the workpiece being defined by assigning the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis of the operating device to the spatial orientation of the tool. This measure enables the spatial orientation of the tool or of the workpiece to be defined easily by the operator.
It also turns out to be advantageous when the operating device has the actuating element, since then the movement of the tool or the workpiece can be prescribed manually.
It also turns out to be advantageous when the operating device has at least two transmitters for determining the orientation of the longitudinal axis. This enables an orientation of the longitudinal axis to be determined easily.
It also turns out to be advantageous when the machine tool has receivers for determining the orientation of the longitudinal axis. This enables the orientation of the longitudinal axis to be determined easily.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is illustrated in the drawing and will be explained in more detail below. In the drawing:
A workpiece 2 to be machined is clamped on the second rotatable machine axis 4. The workpiece 2 has a surface F that is to be machined and into which the aim is to mill a cutout running perpendicular to the surface F in the context of the exemplary embodiment. The workpiece 2 further has a so-called workpiece vector FN that is formed in the context of the exemplary embodiment as a surface normal vector running perpendicular to the surface F. The orientation of the tool 7 in space in this case forms a tool vector W what runs in the direction of the rotation axis of the tool 7 about which the tool 7 rotates.
If, as already stated above, the operator of the machine would like to mill into the surface F a cutout running perpendicular to the surface F, he needs to align the surface F, which forms a machining plane, by means of the first rotatable machine axis 3 and the second rotatable machine axis 4 such that for machining purposes the tool 7 can subsequently be moved vertically downward by means of the second linearly movable axis 6 in order to mill the cutout. The workpiece therefore needs to be moved by means of the first rotatable machine axis 3 and a second rotatable machine axis 4 such that the workpiece vector FN is spatially aligned in a fashion parallel to the rotation axis of the tool 7. In practice, this often faces the operator with a difficult task, since the machining plane, which is formed by the surface F in the context of the exemplary embodiment, cannot be directly pivoted accordingly, but can be moved only by means of rotational movements of the first rotatable machine axis 3 and the second rotatable machine axis 4. In practice, the alignment is frequently therefore associated with a substantial time outlay for rotating the surface even only approximately correspondingly so that it is at all possible to make a start on the milling machining.
The inventive machine tool therefore has an operating device 11 that can be held by a human hand and, in particular, can be grasped by the human hand. The operating device 11 has a longitudinal axis 12 with a corresponding orientation in space, as illustrated in
In order to rotate the surface F as required, the operator firstly holds the operating device 11 to the machining plane, which is formed by the surface F in the context of the exemplary embodiment, such that the orientation of the longitudinal axis 12 is approximately perpendicular to the surface F, that is to say the orientation of the longitudinal axis 12 runs substantially parallel to the spatial orientation of the workpiece vector, which is formed by the surface normal vector FN in the context of the exemplary embodiment. Subsequently, the operator presses the actuating element 13, as a result of which the spatial orientation of the workpiece vector is coupled to the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis 12. As long as the actuating element remains actuated, the movement of the first rotatable machine axis 3 and of the second rotatable machine axis 4 is controlled by the control device in such a way that the spatial orientation of the workpiece 2, which is represented by the workpiece vector FN, corresponds substantially, in particular corresponds to the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis of the operating device. If the operating device 11 is, for example, rotated in space, and thereby the orientation of the longitudinal axis 12 in space is altered, the control device uses the kinematic transformation which is commercially integrated in the control device in any case, to control the first rotatable machine axis 3 and the second rotatable machine axis 4 precisely such that the spatial orientation of the workpiece 2 substantially corresponds, in particular corresponds to the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis of the operating device the result being that the orientation of the workpiece follows the orientation of the longitudinal axis of the operating device. Consequently, by a simple rotational movement of the hand in which he aligns the operating device, and thus the longitudinal axis 12 parallel to the rotation axis of the tool 7, the operator 11 can rotate the surface F upward such that the latter is perpendicular to the rotation axis of the tool 7 after the movement operation.
If, as in the exemplary embodiment, the machine also has appropriate machines axes that also enable alignment of the tool, the orientation of the tool 2, which is represented by the tool vector W that is given by the rotation axis of the tool in the context of the exemplary embodiment, is coupled to the orientation of the longitudinal axis 12 of the operating device. To this end, the operator aligns the operating device 11 along the rotation axis of the tool 7 and actuates the actuating element 13. By appropriate rotation of the operating device 11 in space, he can subsequently rotate the tool 7 appropriately, the control device 8 correspondingly driving the two rotatable machine axes 9 and 10 such that the spatial orientation of the tool substantially corresponds, in particular corresponds to the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis 12, and thus the spatial orientation of the tool 7 follows the rotational movement of the operating device 11.
It is rational in this case for the coupling of the movement of the operating device 11 to the workpiece or to the tool to be retained only for as long as the actuating element remains in the actuated state, in particular remains pressed. Consequently, for an extreme pivoting of the workpiece or of the tool it is possible for the operator to reposition the coupling to the workpiece or to the tool. The advantage of the invention resides in the assignment of a spatial machine movement to a corresponding movement of the operating device 11. According to the invention, the operator is able to move the “coupled” workpiece to be machined or the tool in any desired way on an imaginary sphere. If, as in the exemplary embodiment, the machine has a kinematics in which both the workpiece and the tool can be aligned by means of rotatable machine axes, the actuating element 13 can have a changeover switch that determines whether upon actuation of the actuating element 13 the tool 7 or the workpiece 2 is to be moved in accordance with the subsequent movement of the operating device 11. However, most commercially available machine tools (for example five-axis milling machines) permit either the alignment of the workpiece by means of two round axes (table kinematics) or the alignment of the correspondingly two tool by means of rotatable machine axes (head kinematics) that move the tool.
It is important for understanding the invention that the orientation of the tool does not necessarily, as in the exemplary embodiment, correspond to the orientation of the rotation axis of the tool and that the orientation of the workpiece need not necessarily correspond to the orientation of the surface normal vector, but that the orientation of the tool or of the workpiece is defined only upon actuation of the actuating element. At the moment of actuation of the actuating element, the orientation of the tool or of the workpiece is defined by assigning the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis 12 of the operating device to the orientation of the tool or of the workpiece such that at the beginning the orientation of the tool or the workpiece corresponds by definition to the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis 12 of the operating device. If, subsequently, the orientation of the longitudinal axis of the operating device is changed, for example by rotation of the hand, the workpiece on the tool is moved in such a way that the orientation of the tool or workpiece substantially corresponds, in particular corresponds to the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis of the operating device.
Strictly speaking, it is not the case, as described at the beginning in the explanation relating to
The principle of the invention may also be explained once again with the aid of the schematic in accordance with
Moreover, the invention also has the further advantage that if the control device knows the geometric shape of the workpiece and/or of the tool, the movement of the workpiece or of the tool can always be carried out by the control device such that no collision occurs between workpiece/tool and machine elements during the movement.
Furthermore, it may be remarked at this juncture that the spatial orientation of the longitudinal axis can, of course, also be determined in a different way than described in the exemplary embodiment. To this end, the operating element can also have other suitable means for determining the orientation of the longitudinal axis of the operating element.
The control device is usually designed as a CNC controller.
It may further be remarked that the actuating element need not necessarily be a component of the operating device, but can also, for example, be a component of an operating console for operating the machine tool.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 026 117.0 | Jun 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/056619 | 5/29/2008 | WO | 00 | 12/4/2009 |