This invention relates generally to methods and tools for machining parts and, more particularly, to machines that are capable of performing profiling operations.
Machining operations fall into two large categories: Hole-making and profiling. Hole-making includes drilling, tapping, and counterboring. Profiling is the removal of material from a workpiece by means of cutting to produce a specified shape and surface finish. Both lathes and mills can perform profiling operations. Generally, lathes produce parts at faster material removal rates and with finer surface finishes than mills. However, the profiling operation of a lathe is restricted to a two-dimensional work envelope which limits the parts it can produce to those with circular cross-sections. A mill can profile within a three-dimensional work envelope, which permits the production of parts with a greater range of shapes, although at a slower material removal rate and with a rougher finish than a lathe. The present invention combines the advantages of the lathe and the mill in profiling operations without their limitations by producing parts with an unrestricted range of shapes with very fine surface finishes at high rates of material removal.
The profiling operations of lathes and mills are limited because they rely upon rotary motion to cut away material from the workpiece. Rotary motion creates a sufficiently high surface footage to remove material. Those skilled in the art will recognize that surface footage is the linear rate of movement of the cutting edge of the tool calculated by multiplying the revolutions per minute of the workpiece or tool by its circumference. However, rotary motion imposes symmetry about the axis of rotation upon either the shape of the part to be produced or the cutting tool used. In the case of the lathe, the workpiece rotates and the cutting tool does not. It is the need to rotate the workpiece that restricts the lathe to a two-dimensional work envelope and so limits the parts a lathe can profile to those with circular cross-sections, i.e., axial symmetry. In the case of the mill, the cutting tool rotates and the workpiece does not. This permits a three-dimensional work envelope and so the profiling of parts within a wide range of complex surfaces, i.e., non-symmetrical shapes, including those with non-uniform rational B-spline (NURBS) surfaces which are also known as Bezier curves. However, the need to rotate the cutting tool, which imposes axial symmetry upon it, limits the shape and surface finish that a mill can produce on a workpiece and the material removal rate at which it can do so. Moreover, the rough surface finish left by milling often necessitates a secondary grinding operation or polishing by hand to create a finer finish on a part, therefore adding time and expense to its production.
Machine tools that profile by means of non-rotary methods exist in prior art, including planers, shapers, broaching machines and, most recently, U.S. Patent Publication No. U.S. 62003/0103829 to Suzuki et al. which is herein incorporated by reference. However, none of these machine tools are capable of producing the unrestricted range of shapes provided by the present invention. This is because the profiling operations of all of these machine tools are restricted to one-dimensional cutting paths within a two-dimensional work envelope. For example, the Suzuki invention discloses a method of cutting long, straight rails made of hardened steel. In this method a static, i.e., non-rotating, cutting tool is fixtured at a starting point within a two-dimensional work envelope to cut the workpiece along a linear one-dimensional path. To cut along a different one-dimensional path, the tool must be re-fixtured at a different starting point within the work envelope. Like all other methods of non-rotary machining in the prior art, this device is constrained to a one-dimensional cutting path within a two-dimensional work envelope. Lacking three-dimensional motion within a three-dimensional work envelope, none of these non-rotary methods of machining can produce anything more than simple shapes on a workpiece and so have only highly specialized and severely limited applications.
Therefore, the need exists to provide a method and apparatus for profiling operations with three-dimensional non-rotary machining characteristics that overcome the shortcomings of all present machine tools and machining methods in order to produce substantially fine finishes and complex shapes at rapid material removal rates without the expense of secondary operations and manual labor.
The present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein like reference numerals in the following written description correspond to like elements in the several drawings identified below.
Comparison with the Prior Art. The present invention is distinguished from current machining methods and apparatuses for profiling operations by: [1] A non-rotating cutting tool that is unconstrained by axial symmetry and [2] driven along a one-, two-, or three-dimensional cutting path [3] within a three-dimensional work envelope [4] to remove material from a non-rotating workpiece. No other method or apparatus for machining possesses all of these characteristics. As a consequence of these characteristics the present invention can machine: [1] Parts with an unrestricted range of shapes from simple to complex, symmetrical and asymmetrical, [2] including those with thin cross-sections, [3] with fine surface finishes [4] at high rates of material removal. No other method or apparatus for machining can produce these results on a single machine tool in a single profiling operation. The comparison of these characteristics and capabilities between the present invention and prior art are illustrated in Table 1 below.
The present invention is most directly compared to the profiling operations of mills, because it mostly obsoletes the need for such. The primary utility a mill will retain is hole-making within a three-dimensional work envelope. The reason for this obsolescence is that the non-rotary machining method of the present invention can execute any profiling operation that a mill can: [1] Without any restriction of the shape required for the part [2] with a finer lathe-like surface finish, thus eliminating or reducing the need for grinding or polishing, [3] at material removal rates generally five to forty times faster. These advantages are a direct consequence of the present invention employing a static (i.e., non-rotating) cutting tool instead of a rotating one. This difference is well demonstrated by the significantly increased material removal rates of the present invention, as will be fully described later. Furthermore, an apparatus embodying this method will generally be less expensive, less complex, and sturdier than a comparable mill.
Unrestricted Range of Shapes. Despite their significant disadvantages mills are presently used to machine parts with complex shapes, such as large die sets used in the automotive industry to form car roofs, hoods, and fenders or smaller precision components like impellers or the like. For example,
As specifically seen in
Finer Surface Finishes. Even when a mill can profile a shape to its specified dimensions, it will leave a rough or scalloped edge. As noted above, prior art
Faster material removal rates.
The difference between the two types of cutting motions is that a rotating cutting tool 300 leaves a series of scallops 308 from side-cutting on the surface of the workpiece 306 and a rough finish from bottom-cutting, whereas a non-rotating cutting tool 400 leaves a smooth finish on the workpiece 500. This is because the variable force of a rotating cutting tool 300 has the effect of mostly tearing material away from the workpiece 306 rather than shearing it as does a non-rotating cutting tool 400 from the workpiece 500. Additionally, by shearing material with constant force to remove it rather than tearing it away with variable force, the non-rotary machining method can produce parts with thinner cross-sections more precisely, more quickly, and with less scrap than is possible with milling. Also, shearing instead of tearing keeps the heat from the friction of the cutting motion in the chip rather than the cutting tool 400 or the workpiece 500, which improves tool life and reduces defects and distortions in the finished part, especially those with complex shapes or thin cross-sections. Less obvious is that the variable force of a rotating cutting tool 300 introduces a much larger element of chaos into the cutting motion than does the constant force of a non-rotating cutting tool 400. This disorder, often manifesting itself as chatter, increases the unpredictably of a profiling operation on a mill compared to the present invention and therefore significantly restricts the range, performance, and productivity of mills even for simple operations. The constancy of force in the cutting motion of a non-rotating cutting tool 400 along a three-dimensional path through a three-dimensional work envelope is the essence of the present invention which cannot be replicated by any machining method or apparatus of prior art.
The stable, constant cutting force that the present invention applies through a non-rotating cutting tool ensures that energy is not drawn away from the task of material removal in the form of chaotic motion such as chatter. Therefore, constancy of the cutting force is critical to increasing the material removal rate of the present invention in comparison to milling. Even more fundamental to the present invention's significantly faster material removal rates is that, unlike a mill, none of the cutting force it delivers is diverted to the rotation of the cutting tool. Because the rate of material removal is the result of the depth of cut multiplied by the width of cut multiplied by the linear rate of the cutting tool's motion through the workpiece, commonly called the “feed rate,” the rotation of the cutting tool is not a direct factor. Consequently, any cutting force that must be diverted to rotation of the tool, commonly called the “cutting speed” or “surface footage”, reduces the force available to increase the feed rate and, in turn, increases the material removal rate. Table 2 compares the non-rotary method of the present invention to milling for four common machining operations using the best practices for each to illustrate the greater material removal rates of the present invention by factors of 12, 23, 33, and even 200. For this and the other reasons stated above, the present invention can remove material from a workpiece in profiling operations at rates generally 5 to 40 times faster than a mill.
Still more complex embodiments are the “5-axis” and the “7-axis” machines. These embodiments have all of the three-axis linear and fourth-axis rotary motions of the “4-axis” machine plus additional rotary or tilt axes to orient the cutting tool's face in any direction to maintain its perpendicularity to any three-dimensional cutting path. These machines are unrestricted in the shapes and surfaces they can produce, including NURBS surfaces, by means of the process flowcharted in
While the present invention has been described in terms of the preferred embodiments discussed in the above specification, it will be understood by one skilled in the art that the present invention is not limited to these particular preferred embodiments, but includes any and all such modifications that are within the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined in the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US06/62572 | 12/22/2006 | WO | 00 | 12/7/2009 |