The invention relates to a method for grinding the main and rod bearings of a crankshaft by external cylindrical grinding.
Crankshafts made of steel or cast materials are mass-produced for the internal combustion engines of motor vehicles. An important factor here, in addition to economical mass production, is in particular the greatest possible accuracy with regard to diameter, roundness and centricity. Very high demands are therefore imposed on grinding methods of said type. According to EP 1 181 132 B1, it has already been recognized that the grinding result can be improved by the main and rod bearings of the crankshafts being ground in a very specific sequence.
This is because stresses are released during the grinding of the crankshafts, which to begin with are only machined by chip removal, and these stresses lead to the deformation of the crankshaft blanks during the grinding. The deformations after the grinding of the rod bearings are especially pronounced. It has therefore been proposed according to EP 1 181 132 B1 to finish-grind the rod bearings as far as possible at an early stage. The instruction is therefore given to firstly rough-grind the main bearings, then rough- and finish-grind the rod bearings and lastly finish-grind the main bearings. The known method has the advantage that deformations of the crankshaft which originate from the grinding of the rod bearings can partly be removed again during the finish grinding of the main bearings. In addition, the known method can be carried out in a single setup of the crankshaft. In this known method, the grinding started with the rough grinding of the main bearings so that the crankshaft is clamped in a precisely defined rotation axis, namely its defining geometrical longitudinal axis, for the grinding of the rod bearings. This defining geometrical longitudinal axis must be available as a reference axis for the machining of the rod bearings. On a finish-ground crankshaft, all the main bearings and also other regions of the crankshaft that are arranged concentrically to the main bearings must be oriented exactly according to the defining geometrical longitudinal axis of the crankshaft with regard to diameter, roundness, true running and centricity. The same applies to the center line of the crank journals, which again is a defining geometrical longitudinal axis for the rod bearings.
To this end, the existing geometrical longitudinal axis is established by means of centering bores at the end faces of the crankshaft. The crankshaft is clamped between centers at its centering bores and is rotationally driven by a driving device. This type of clamping has the disadvantage that a certain axial pressure has to be exerted on the crankshaft, as a result of which there is the risk of additional deformations because the crankshaft bends under the effect of an axial pressure. It is therefore necessary to also place one or more steady rests.
Attempts have also already been made to exert an axial pull on the crankshaft during the clamping of the latter. But there is still the disadvantage that additional deformations can occur during the first stage of the method according to EP 1 181 132 B1. An optimum grinding result is again made more difficult as a result; in addition, the known method thus becomes more complicated again.
The object of the invention is therefore to improve the known method for grinding the main and rod bearings of crankshafts in such a way that the accuracy of the grinding result is further improved in a procedure that is still economical.
The method according to the invention for grinding the main and rod bearings has the advantage that all the rod bearings of the crankshaft are already ground to finished size in the first method stage by CNC-controlled external cylindrical grinding. Experience shows that the greatest deformation of the crankshaft, this deformation originating from the release of stresses, therefore occurs right at the start of the grinding. After that, the stresses in the crankshaft have been completely removed and further appreciable distortion no longer occurs. Only after that is the grinding of the main bearings started, wherein there is still the greatest possibility for correction. During the grinding of the main bearings themselves, far smaller deformations occur than during the grinding of the rod bearings.
The invention achieves this result in a surprising manner by already dispensing with the rotation of the crankshaft about the defining geometrical longitudinal axis during the grinding of the rod bearings. This longitudinal axis is certainly known and is established by centering bores located on the end faces of the crankshaft. However, the crankshaft is clamped at two unground bearing points which are at a distance from one another in the common longitudinal extent of the main bearings. The clamping is accomplished, for example, by shell chucks, which comprise the two unground bearing points, always without exerting an axial pressure on the crankshaft. These two bearing points define an actual rotation axis, the deviation of which from the defining geometrical longitudinal axis of the crankshaft is known by measurement. The known deviation is taken into account as a correction function in the computer of the CNC control during the grinding of the rod bearings. The finish-ground rod bearings then have an exact reference to main bearings of the crankshaft, which would be ground strictly according to the defining geometrical longitudinal axis of the crankshaft.
Following the finish grinding of the rod bearings, the setup of the crankshaft is changed and a second setup is prepared in which the crankshaft is clamped at its axial ends and is rotationally driven about its defining geometrical longitudinal axis; in this second setup, all the main bearings are ground to the finished size by external cylindrical grinding.
In the method according to the invention, the grinding in a single setup is therefore dispensed with. However, this disadvantage is easily compensated for by a greater accuracy in the grinding result with regard to diameter, roundness, true running and centricity. Comparative tests of the applicant have shown that a true-running tolerance at the central main bearings of conventional crankshafts, which hitherto was around 0.05 mm, could be improved to about 0.03 mm by the method according to the invention.
The blanks of the crankshaft are advantageously pre-machined by chip removal, then the pre-machined bearing points provided for the first setup are measured with regard to diameter, roundness and centricity and a correction function is formed for the pin-chasing grinding process of the rod bearings from the deviation of the measured values from the defining geometrical longitudinal axis.
For the practical implementation of the method, it is advantageous if centering bores are provided at the end faces of the crankshaft in order to determine the position of the geometrical longitudinal axis, at which centering bores the crankshaft can be clamped in a centering manner in a grinding machine.
Furthermore, it is advantageous if a radially running straight line starting from the defining geometrical longitudinal axis is established as a reference line for the angular position of the measured values and a reference bore in an end face of the crankshaft is measured for this purpose.
Suitable bearing points for the clamping of the crankshaft during the grinding of the rod bearings are the two outer main bearings or other end cylindrical sections which lie in the same common longitudinal extent as the main bearings.
In the first setup, the two suitable bearing points of the crankshaft are advantageously mounted in shell chucks of a grinding machine and as a result the crankshaft is rotationally driven at its two ends. In this case, the drives at the two ends of the crankshaft—normally work headstock and footstock—are driven in an exactly synchronized manner by the machine control.
The grinding of the rod bearings in the pin-chasing grinding process can be carried out with a single grinding wheel which serves for the rough grinding right through to the finish grinding and is used successively at the various rod bearings. However, a pin-chasing grinding process in which a plurality of grinding wheels are used simultaneously is especially economical. For example, in four-cylinder engines, two respective rod bearings have the same phase position with respect to the defining geometrical longitudinal axis. Therefore two respective rod bearings can be ground simultaneously and with the same radial infeed movement onto the crankshaft. In this case, first of all the two inner rod bearings and then—after the two grinding wheels are moved apart axially—the two outer rod bearings are ground. It is also possible to attach two grinding spindles to a single cross slide, which are used simultaneously but with a different radial infeed to two rod bearings having different or identical phase position.
According to a further advantageous configuration, the main bearings can also be ground in a CNC-controlled manner.
The main bearings are ground in the second setup of the crankshaft, in which the latter is advantageously clamped between locating centers and is rotationally driven by driving devices at least at its work-headstock end. The driving devices in this case advantageously consist of compensating chucks, the chuck jaws of which automatically abut against the still unground clamping point and compensate for irregularities and dimensional deviations in the process. Such compensating chucks are based on the action of a pneumatic or hydraulic pressure medium and are known. The interaction between the locating centers and the centering bores located on the crankshaft then always ensures that the crankshaft rotates exactly about its defining geometrical longitudinal axis in the second setup.
The clamping of the crankshaft between the locating centers has no adverse effects on the grinding result if the main bearings are ground after the rod bearings. This is because the deformations of the crankshaft which originate from the release of stresses are now already complete. In so far as they have an effect on the accuracy of the main bearings, these inaccuracies are removed again by the finish grinding of the main bearings. It is therefore essential for the method according to the invention that the crankshaft, in the first method stage, is clamped at two unground bearing points which are at a distance from one another in the common longitudinal extent of the main bearings, without clamping being effected by locating centers. For example, rigid clamping of the crankshaft is accomplished in this case by shell chucks without an axial pressure having to be exerted on said crankshaft. It is therefore essential for the method according to the invention that the specified different clamping has to be effected in each case in the two method stages.
The circumferential grinding of the main bearings in the second setup is effected in an especially economical manner using a multiple grinding wheel set, the grinding wheels of which are located on a common driven spindle and have the same diameter. However, it is also possible to carry out the second machining stage using a single grinding wheel which is fed in successively to the individual main bearings.
If required by the design of the crankshaft, support can be provided by means of one or more steady rests in the second method stage.
The invention also deals with apparatuses for carrying out the method according to the invention. In principle, the method according to the invention does not have to be carried out in a specific apparatus. For example, the delivered crankshaft blanks merely machined by chip removal can be measured in a measuring station and then brought by in-house transport to a first grinding machine in which the pin-chasing grinding of the rod bearings takes place. There may in turn be a further grinding machine at another location, in which the crankshaft only finish-ground at the rod bearings is now ground at the main bearings.
In most cases, there will be a common installation of measuring station and first and second grinding stations. An especially advantageous apparatus for carrying out the method according to the invention is specified in claim 14. A common grinding cell having a first and a second grinding station enables driving, control, cooling and transport devices, which have to be present in both requisite grinding stations, to be combined in an economical manner. The arrangement of the measuring station directly upstream is also advantageous in this case.
Finally, it should be emphasized that, with the grinding operations provided according to the invention, the circumferential grinding of the crankshaft at least at the diameters of main and rod bearings is complete and no further grinding has to be carried out. Normal grinding wheels on a corundum and CBN basis can be used.
The invention will subsequently be explained in more detail with reference to an exemplary embodiment shown in the drawings, in which:
A side view of a crank shaft 1 is shown in
At this point in time, the cast or forged crankshaft 1, made of steel or cast materials, is first machined by chip removal, in particular by turning, drilling or trochoidal milling. In the process, the bearing points which are to serve for the first setup during the grinding usually do not lie exactly in the defining geometrical longitudinal axis 10 which is established by the center bores 8 and 9. In the present example, a setup at the outer main bearings 4 is provided. Said main bearings 4 are therefore used as measuring points 11, 12, at which diameter, roundness and centricity are measured. The measured values are determined in relation to the circumferential angle at each measuring point 11, 12 and are stored.
Each crankshaft 1 is measured individually. Measuring and storing are effected in a measuring station 13, which can be located directly next to a grinding machine, cf.
The center points of the two bearing points which lie in radial transverse planes and which are provided for by the two main bearings 4 are measured at the two measuring points 11 and 12 on the basis of these measurements. The connection between the two center points results in the rotation axis of the crankshaft 1 in the first setup. Furthermore, there is a respective taper 14, 15 in the centre bores 8 and 9 for subsequently attaching the locating centers 52, 53 in the second setup, cf.
For the grinding operation, not only must the radial position of the center point of the defining geometrical longitudinal axis 10 be known at each clamping point, that is to say at the two outer main bearings 4, in relation to the circumferential angle, but the initial rotary position of the crankshaft 1 to be ground, that is to say the zero position of the circumferential angle, must be established. To this end, a reference bore 16, for example, in the end face of the flange 6 is measured following the measuring of the crankshaft 1. The crankshaft 1 can thus be fed to the grinding machine and clamped in a pre-oriented rotary position. The arrangement of the reference bore 16 can be seen from
A work headstock 26 and a footstock 27, both of which are synchronously driven by electric motor, belong to the first grinding station 22. A crankshaft 1 is clamped between the work headstock 26 and the footstock 27. A cross slide 28 having a wheelhead 29 on which two grinding spindles 30, 31 are located also belongs to the first grinding station 22.
A work headstock 36 and a footstock 37, between which a crankshaft 1 is clamped and rotationally driven, likewise belong to the second grinding station 23. A cross slide 38 belonging to the second grinding station 23 carries, on a common driven spindle 39, a multiple grinding wheel set having grinding wheels 40, which are jointly fed in toward the main bearings 3, 4 during the grinding of the latter. Designated by 41 are drive motors for the infeed spindle of the cross slides 28, 38, and designated by 42 are covers which keep the swarf away from the slideways of the grinding stations 22, 23.
The clamping and driving devices of the two work headstocks 26, 36 and of the two footstocks 27, 37 lie in the common longitudinal axis 32 already mentioned. The longitudinal axis 32 is at the same time the rotation axis (C axis) of the crankshafts 1 during the grinding.
The two cross slides 28, 38 are traversable in the direction of the axis 34, that is to say parallel to the common longitudinal axis 32, and in addition the wheelhead is traversable perpendicularly thereto in the direction of the axis 33 (X axis). The grinding wheels 31, 40 are fed in toward the crankshafts 1 in the direction of the axis 33 during the grinding. Measuring devices (not shown in detail) are provided for operational measurements during the grinding operation.
To carry out the method according to the invention, it is essential that the work headstock 26 and the footstock 27 of the first grinding station 22 be equipped with shell chucks 43. When the crankshaft first machined by chip removal and measured is clamped in shell chucks 43, it does not rotate about its defining geometrical axis when the work headstock 26 and the footstock 27 are being driven, but rather it rotates about a rotation axis 51 which is defined by the outer main bearings 4, from which the crankshaft 1 has been measured. The shell chucks 43 adapt themselves to the two defining outer main bearings 4. This is explained in more detail with reference to
The essential features of the shell chuck 43 are a supporting shell 44 and two pivotable chuck jaws 47. The supporting shell 44 and the pivotable chuck jaws 47 are all connected to a rotating part of the work headstock 26. The supporting shell 44 has two projections 45, on which the crankshaft 1 rests with its outer main bearings 4. The two pivotable chuck jaws 47 are provided on that side of the shell chuck 43 which is opposite the supporting shell 44, said chuck jaws 47 likewise abutting with projections 47a against the outer main bearing 4 of the crankshaft 1. The pivoting direction, lying in the radial plane, of the pivotable chuck jaws 47 is indicated by 50.
The left-hand pivotable chuck jaw 47 is shown in its raised position and the right-hand chuck jaw 47 is shown in its chucking position in
Provided in a position axially offset from the supporting shell 44 is a movable ejector punch 48 which facilitates the removal of the crankshaft 1 from the shell chucks 43. A sleeve 49 also provides a longitudinal stop for exactly fixing the crankshaft 1 in its axial direction.
Since the four projections 45 and 47a adapt themselves to the circumference of the outer main bearing 4, the crankshaft 1, during the rotary drive of the work headstock 26 and of the footstock 27, does not rotate about its defining geometrical longitudinal axis 10 but rather about the rotation axis 51 of the shell chuck 43. It becomes especially clear from
Therefore, in the first grinding station 22, the entire crankshaft 1 is clamped at eight points which are of small circumferential extent and are narrow in the axial direction and are of arched contour 46 for example. The arrangement of these eight clamping regions with a subdivision into two groups located at a distance from one another means that the crankshaft 1 can assume small inclinations during rotation in the first grinding station if the deviation of the rotation axis 51 from the defining geometrical longitudinal axis 10 in the two outer main bearings 4 varies. A relatively slight inclination can then occur without constraints or stresses occurring in the crankshaft 1. The clamping by means of shell chucks results in rigid firm clamping and reliable rotary drive of the crankshaft without an axial pressure being exerted thereon.
Another type of setup is required in the second grinding station 23 of the grinding cell 21 if the method according to the invention is to be carried out. The crankshaft 1 must be clamped between locating centres 52, 53 in the second grinding station 23, as can be seen from
The crankshaft 1 clamped between the locating centers 52, 53 is rotationally driven by a drive having a compensating chuck.
In the second grinding station 23, therefore, the rotation axis of the work headstock 36 and of the footstock 37 is identical to the defining geometrical longitudinal axis 10 of the crankshaft 1 as established by the centering bores 8 and 9.
It may also be noted that the illustration of the crankshaft 1 and also the spatial direction of work headstock or footstock in
The way in which the method according to the invention takes place on the system described above is described below.
The direction of flow 20 of the crankshafts 1 is depicted in
When a crankshaft 1 is fed to the measuring station 13, it is merely machined by chip removal, the main and rod bearings 3, 4, 5 being pre-machined and requisite bores being incorporated. Furthermore, the centering bores 8 and 9 which establish and identify the defining geometrical longitudinal axis 10 on the crankshaft 1 are already present. In this state of the crankshaft, the inner and outer main bearings 3, 4 are still defective with regard to the diameter, the roundness and the centricity due to the preparation.
In the first grinding station 22, the crankshaft 1, with regions which lie in the common longitudinal extent of the main bearings 3, 4, is clamped in the shell chucks 43 of the work headstock 26 and of the footstock 27. In the exemplary embodiment, the clamping is effected in both outer main bearings 4. Due to the rotary drive, the crankshaft 1 rotates about the rotation axis 51, which is defined by the defective contour of the two outer main bearings 4. Starting from this rotation, the rod bearings 5 of the crankshaft 1 are rough- and finish-ground in a continuous operation in the first grinding station 22. The deviation of the actual rotation axis 51 from the defining geometrical longitudinal axis 10 of the crankshaft 1 is taken into account in the computer of the first grinding station 22. The grinding is effected by the pin-chasing grinding process. Nonetheless, by virtue of the fact that a correction is made in accordance with the stored measurement of the crankshaft 1 during each infeed movement, the rod bearings 5 are in effect ground in strict relationship to the defining geometrical longitudinal axis 10 of the crankshaft 1. The finish-ground rod bearings 5 then have an exact reference to main bearings 3, 4 of the crankshaft 1, which would be strictly ground according to the defining geometrical longitudinal axis 10 of the crankshaft 1.
It is not absolutely necessary for the crankshaft 1 to be clamped at the outer main bearings 4 in the first grinding station 22. Depending on the type of construction of the crankshaft, other main bearings 3 can also be used for the measuring and the clamping, and likewise flange 6 and journal 7, because the latter are provided concentrically to the main bearings 3, 4. During the grinding of the rod bearings 5 in the first grinding station 22, it is not necessary to additionally support the crankshaft 1 by steady rests.
In the present exemplary embodiment, the grinding of a crankshaft 1 having four rod bearings 5 is envisaged. In this type of construction, as a rule two rod bearings 5 each have the same phase position with respect to the defining geometrical longitudinal axis 10 of the crankshaft 1. Therefore two rod bearings 5 each are jointly ground; as a rule these are, in pairs, the inner rod bearings 5 and the outer rod bearings 5; but phase-displaced rod bearings can also be ground simultaneously. When changing over from the grinding of the inner rod bearings 5 to the grinding of the outer rod bearings 5, the two grinding spindles 30 on the cross slide 28 must be moved apart, and vice versa.
However, the arrangement, shown in the exemplary embodiment, of the grinding wheels 30 in the first grinding station 22 is not absolutely necessary. If required by the type of construction of the crankshaft 1, the rod bearings 5 can also be finish-ground individually and one after the other using a single grinding wheel.
The rod bearings 5 are measured during the grinding by means of in-process measuring heads, the diameter of the rod bearings 5 to be ground being measured continuously during the grinding. The diameter and roundness correction is made via the measuring head as a measured value on the rod bearing 5 to be ground and is compared with the desired value via the machine control. A dimensional correction in the direction of the axis 33 (X axis) is then carried out during the infeed movement. It is also possible to perform a correction movement of the second grinding spindle 30 as a function of the infeed movement of the first grinding spindle 30.
Furthermore, it is important that the roundness, produced at the finish-ground rod bearing 5, of the bearing point can be checked. This can likewise be measured in the first grinding station 22; a correspondingly corrected path in the direction of the axis 33 is then controlled during the pin-chasing grinding process, as a result of which an optimally round rod bearing 5 can be achieved.
When all the rod bearings 5 are finish-ground, the stresses and the distortion due to the grinding operation have been largely removed and will no longer crucially affect the true-running accuracy of the main bearings 3, 4. After that, the crankshaft 1 is transferred into the second grinding station 23 by means of the loading gantry. The centering bores 8 and 9 at the ends of the crankshaft 1 are now used, as shown in
In the exemplary embodiment selected, a multiple grinding wheel set having grinding wheels 40 is provided for grinding the main bearings, such that a plurality of main bearings 3, 4 can be ground simultaneously. During the grinding of the main bearings 3, 4, the multiple grinding wheel set is fed in to the main bearings 3, 4 in the direction of the axis 33 (X axis). However, the multiple grinding wheel set is also traversable on the cross slide 38 in the direction of the axis 34 (Z axis) parallel to the direction of the common longitudinal axis 25. This arrangement permits the use of grinding wheels which are narrower than the main bearings 3, 4 to be ground. Furthermore, the diamond dressing wheel can thereby also be advanced for dressing the grinding wheels. The main bearings 3, 4 are also rough- and finish-ground in a single operation. Specifically defined portions of the main bearings 3, 4 can also be face-ground by the displacement in the direction of the axis 34.
The rod bearings 5 must always be ground in a CNC-controlled manner for the method according to the invention. But a CNC control is also always advantageous for the grinding of the main bearings 3, 4.
The use of a multiple grinding wheel set is likewise not absolutely necessary during the grinding of the main bearings 3, 4. If required by the type of crankshaft or by an existing grinding machine, the main bearings can likewise be ground individually and one after the other using a single grinding wheel.
When the crankshaft 1 has passed through the second grinding station 23, the main bearings 3, 4 also have the best possible roundness values, since no further grinding operation takes place on the main and rod bearings 3, 4, 5. The crankshaft is then removed from the grinding cell 21 in the direction of flow 20 by means of the loading gantry.
The system shown in the exemplary embodiment having a combination of measuring station 13 and grinding cell 21 is an especially economical option for carrying out the method according to the invention in mass production. If required by the circumstances, however, the measuring and the various grinding operations can also be carried out at separate locations and on separate equipment or grinding machines.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 007 175 | Feb 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/050321 | 1/13/2009 | WO | 00 | 7/29/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/095299 | 8/6/2009 | WO | A |
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