The invention relates to a method for detachably securing a gripper tool to a movable transverse beam, normally called crossbar, of a transfer press, which gripper tool has two saddles disposed with spacing between them and with them is brought into engagement with two bearings mounted on the crossbar and is locked in a defined engagement position, and to a bearing assembly for performing such a method.
From U.S. Pat. No. 5,746,567, it is known for a gripper tool, comprising two saddles and two supporting tubes to which suction grippers are secured, to be placed first with both saddles on the crossbar of a transfer press and then displaced along the crossbar, overcoming friction, by means of a clamping and locking lever in order to bring parallel wedge faces on both sides simultaneously into contact with corresponding wedge faces on bearings fixedly connected to the crossbar, and furthermore during this motion to introduce centering bolts into fitting centering bores on the saddles and bearings, respectively. The time and force required for horizontally displacing the gripper tool on the crossbar and forcing it between the crossbars is problematic.
It is therefore the object of the invention to make a method and a bearing assembly of the type defined above available that permit faster, simpler, positionally precise fastening and fixation of the gripper tool to the crossbar.
This object is attained in terms of the method, as proposed by the invention, in that the gripper tool, in an inclined position relative to the center longitudinal axis of the crossbar, is introduced, with at least one protrusion of rounded longitudinal section or tapering in wedgelike fashion, on the first saddle into a correspondingly rounded or V-shaped narrowing recess in the first bearing and is then pivoted with the second saddle toward the crossbar, whereupon wedge faces on the second saddle and on the second bearing press the protrusion by the force of gravity axially against the wall of the recess, and then the second saddle is locked to the second bearing.
The invention offers the advantage that for precise positioning of the gripper tool, it suffices to introduce one end of it, having the protrusion, into the associated recess in the first bearing and then to lower the other end of the gripper tool or let it drop. During this pivoting motion, the cooperating wedge faces on the second saddle and on the second bearing come into contact with one another and automatically push the gripper tool into its predetermined position relative to the crossbar. In this end position, the gripper tool is clamped between the wedge face on the second bearing and the recess on the first bearing. Next, this end position of the gripper tool merely needs to be secured by locking the second saddle to the second bearing. To that end, preferably at least one locking bolt, axially guided in the second bearing, is introduced, in the direction parallel to the center longitudinal axis of the crossbar, into a fitting bore in the second saddle. In the process, by means of cooperating wedge or conical faces on the locking bolt and on the bore, it can be assured that in a case where the gripper tool is not yet aligned precisely parallel to the center longitudinal axis of the crossbar, it is pivoted a little farther during the locking until it reaches the predetermined end position.
In a further preferred feature of the invention, in the pivoting of the gripper tool into the predetermined end position, underpressure supply lines are connected to underpressure lines on the tool via cooperating pneumatic couplings on the second bearing and on the second saddle. Since the pivoting of the gripper tool takes place automatically by gravity, for this coupling operation as well no additional manipulation or expenditure of force is needed.
The bearing assembly of the invention is distinguished in that the first saddle can be introduced, with at least one protrusion mounted on it and having a rounded longitudinal section or tapering in wedgelike fashion, already in an inclined position of the gripper tool relative to the center longitudinal axis of the crossbar, into a correspondingly rounded or V-shaped narrowing recess in the first bearing, and in the engagement position the gripper tool can be pivoted with the second saddle toward the crossbar; that the second saddle and the second bearing are provided with wedge faces, which in the course of the pivoting motion come to rest on one another, by which faces the protrusion can be pressed axially against the wall of the recess by the force of gravity; and that in this braced position, the second saddle can be locked to the second bearing.
On its free end the protrusion may have an approximately semicylindrical shape, for example, with a cylinder axis that in the mounted state of the gripper tool extends horizontally. In that case, the rounded recess should be embodied correspondingly hollow-cylindrically, expediently with a widened entrance region. Alternatively, the free end of the protrusion could be embodied with an upper and a lower wedge face, and the recess could be designed with complementary counterpart faces. In the preferred embodiment, however, two protrusions which on the free end are substantially in the shape of a spherical cap are mounted on the axially outer side of the first saddle and can be introduced into corresponding spherical caplike concave recesses with a conically widened entrance region in parts of the first bearing that are mounted on the side faces of the crossbar. The two spherical caplike protrusions, which in the mounted state are located horizontally side by side, permit simple introduction into the spherical cap shaped concave recesses with a widened entrance region, but then guide the gripper tool reliably into a position aligned with the longitudinal center plane of the crossbar, in which position the end phase of the pivoting motion occurs as the gripper tool is set down onto the crossbar.
On the end of the gripper tool opposite from the spherical caplike protrusions, in a further preferred feature of the invention, two wedges are mounted, with space between them, side by side on the axially outer side of the second saddle, and their effective outer wedge faces recede axially from top to bottom and come to rest on corresponding wedge faces, which are embodied on parts of the second bearing that are mounted on the side faces of the crossbar. Once again, the paired arrangement of wedge faces with a relatively great spacing between them is favorable for automatically aligning the gripper tool with the center longitudinal plane of the crossbar. For the same reason, if possible, the two wedge faces on the second saddle should be located in the same straight plane.
The locking of the gripper tool in its predetermined position is intended to cause it to maintain its position on the crossbar. In a preferred feature of the invention, this is attained in a simple way by providing that on each of the two lateral parts of the second bearing, one locking bolt each, extending in the longitudinal direction of the crossbar, is supported axially displaceably and in the wedged position can be introduced through the wedge faces into an aligned bore in the associated wedge on the second saddle. Because in this version the free end of the locking bolt and/or the entrance region of the bore is embodied as wedge-shaped or conical, it is attained that the locking bolt contributes to pulling the second saddle into the predetermined end position on the crossbar. Moreover, by a suitable disposition and dimensioning of the parts, it is attained that the wedges connected to the second saddle, as they are lowered or dropped down, automatically press the locking bolts, which are preferably prestressed in the locking direction by springs, back until they snap into the associated bores and lock there.
In the same way as the automatic positioning and locking are attained, the pneumatic connections of the gripper tool can also be automatically connected to one or more supply lines, in that the second bearing and the second saddle are provided with coupling parts, fitting one another, of pneumatic couplings of one or more underpressure lines, which enter into coupling engagement upon pivoting of the gripper tool into the wedged position.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention will be described in further detail below in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Because of the high capital investment costs of large-scale transfer presses, the changeover times for removing certain gripper tools and installing gripper tools adapted to the next workpiece to be processed or machined must be as short as possible. Moreover, despite short changeover times, the system for securing the gripper tools 12 must assure very precise positioning and reliable locking in the predetermined position.
As in the fastening system described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,746,567, the gripper tools 12 are set down from above onto the crossbar 10 with their saddles 14, 16, so that in the mounted state, the essentially U-shaped saddles 14, 16 are seated on the top of the crossbar 10 and embrace its upper side edges. For precise positioning and locking of the saddles 14, 16, a first bearing 24, shown in
In
The bearing 24, cooperating with the first saddle 14 and secured to the crossbar 10, comprises two bearing halves of matching shape, each of which is mounted on one side of the crossbar 10. The two halves of the bearing 24, in this example, are screwed together via bolts 34 that extend horizontally crosswise through the crossbar 10. As a result of the bracing to the crossbar 10 via the bolts 34 or corresponding tubes, the two halves of the first bearing 24 are seated immovably firmly in a parallel arrangement on the side faces of the crossbar 10. Alternatively, the bearing halves could be screwed individually to the side faces of the crossbar.
Each of the two halves of the first bearing 24 comprises a solid L-shaped angle piece of steel, whose lower leg 36, in the mounted state, extends horizontally in the longitudinal direction of the crossbar 10. At its axially outer end, it changes over into a vertically upward-extending leg 38. In the mounted state of the gripper tool 12, it is located on the axially outer side of the first saddle 14. A rounded recess 40 is machined into the vertical leg 38, on its axially inner side, toward the saddle 14. In this example, this recess has the form of a circular, axially extending blind bore, with a not entirely hemispherical caplike concave inner region and with an entrance region that widens conically toward the outside.
For cooperation with the bearing 24 having the two rounded recesses 40, two spherically rounded protrusions 42 are mounted on the outside of the first saddle 14, with the same transverse spacing as the recesses 40 in the bearing 24 and adapted to the spherical caplike concave cross section of those recesses. (See, e.g.
The second saddle 16, shown in its details in
The second bearing 26, in a way corresponding to the first bearing 24, comprises two L-shaped angle pieces, mounted on the side faces of the crossbar 10 and joined to one another and to the crossbar 10 by screw bolts 34, each with one horizontal leg 51, extending in the longitudinal direction of the crossbar 10 in the mounted state, and one vertical leg 52, rising in front of the axially outer side of the second saddle 16. The axially inner side of each vertical leg 52 is provided with a wedge face 52′ that fits the axially outer wedge face 44′ of the wedge 44. In the mounted state of the gripper tool shown in
Coupling halves, not shown, of pneumatic couplings are mounted on the horizontal legs 51 of the second bearing 26; in the mounted position shown in
Mounting the gripper tools 12 on the crossbar 10 is very simple and proceeds largely automatically, despite the simple mechanical means described. At the beginning of the assembly process it suffices to set the first saddle 14 down on the horizontal legs 36 of the first bearing 24 and, in a slanting position of the tubes 18 relative to this bearing, to introduce the rounded protrusions 42 into the rounded recesses 40. After that, one need merely allow the other end of the gripper tool 12, that is, the second saddle 16, to drop from a low height onto the second bearing 26. In the falling motion, the lower ends of the wedges 44 press the locking bolts 54 axially outward back; the wedge faces 44′ and 52′ come to rest on one another, and as a result of the wedging action, the overall gripper tool 12 is displaced axially farther toward the first bearing 24, so that there the protrusions 42, with their hemispherical free ends, come into contact with the hemispherical concave bottom faces of the recesses 40, and the gripper tool 12 is axially firmly fastened between this axial bearing point and the wedge faces 52′ and is thereby exactly positioned. The locking bolts 54 in cooperation with their receiving bores 56 provide for the maintaining of this situation. Normally, the second saddle 16 drops on its own far enough that the locking bolts 54 are aligned with the receiving bores 56. Should that not yet be entirely the case, a sufficiently strong spring prestressing of the locking bolts, optionally supplemented by manual pressure, forces their conical free end into the associated receiving bore and thus forces the second saddle 16 into the predetermined mounted position, in which the tubes 18 extend horizontally and parallel to the center longitudinal axis of the crossbar 10.
It is understood that the locking bolt may engage the second saddle 16, or some part connected to it, in a different position and/or at a different point. However, the locking arrangement proposed in the exemplary embodiment on the wedge faces 44′, 52′ which are required anyway for precise positioning is more economical than another version, with which the attempt is again made to cause the locking bolts to engage automatically. A further consideration is that the locking bolts 54 in cooperation with the receiving bores 56 assure a precise lateral alignment of the second saddle/16 relative to the crossbar 10.
Alternative embodiments are also possible in the design of the rounded protrusions 42 and of the recesses 40. Instead of a hemispherical free end of the protrusions 42, a semicylindrical free end of the protrusions 42, for example, with a horizontal cylinder axis extending crosswise to the longitudinal direction of the crossbar 10, or a wedge, or a wedgelike free end with one upper and one lower wedge face, could be employed. For example, referring to
It is understood that furthermore the external shape of the saddles 14, 16, their connection to the tubes 18, and the external shape of the bearings 24, 26 and their connection to the crossbar 10 allow many different variant embodiments. For instance, the protrusions 42 may be mounted on the bearing 24 and the recesses 40 on the saddle 14, and they can equally well, as optionally can the wedge faces 44′, 52′, be located on the axially inner side of the respective saddle 14 or 16. Such modifications are no problem, as long as the inward pivoting of the gripper tool 12 as shown and described above into the predetermined position on the crossbar 10 can be executed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 026 245 | May 2004 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country |
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1 402 970 | Mar 2004 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050265640 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |