The invention relates to a method of shaping and threading the inner wall of tubes and, more particularly, thermal exchanger tubes made of materials having high mechanical properties.
There exists a process to broach grooves onto the external wall of a cylinder (U.S. Pat. No. 4,294,568). According to this process, two adjacent grooves are simultaneously broached. One groove is broached by using a roughing tool and the other groove is broached by using a finishing tool. The roughing tool has a staggered profile and the finishing tool matches the final profile of the groove. If this process enables grooves to be made that have a complex profile, the process cannot be adapted to the simple and fast production required with complex rifling on the inside of a tube.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,411,569 also discloses a broaching process for the rifling of a gun barrel in which several broaches are axially joined to a rod while being free to rotate. The traction of the rod machines the grooves. Each broach has a different profile: the first broach ensures a rough machining and the last broach ensures the finishing. The drawback to this process lies in that it can only be used to produce a groove with a simple profile. The process cannot be used to make a groove having a complex profile covering the entire internal surface of the barrel and comprising a succession of concave and convex profiles.
The present invention thus, among other things, economically produces the internal profile of a tube (namely a metallic tube having high mechanical properties (made of refractory steel, for example)) which is complex in shape (namely comprising a succession of grooves with a concave profile separated by convex profiles).
According to an exemplary aspect of the disclosure, a method of alternately producing concave and convex grooves that are evenly spaced inside a tube includes broaching all the grooves of the tube simultaneously using at least one roughing tool or at least one finishing tool, wherein the at least one roughing tool or at least one finishing tool is integral with a bar using a link, the at least one roughing tool being implemented successively and having a convex profile that gradually approaches a concave profile of the grooves and the at least one finishing tool having a concave profile to make a convex profile of the grooves.
Other characteristics, particulars and advantages of the invention will become more apparent from the description hereafter given by way of illustration and in reference to the drawings, in which:
The tube 1 is first pierced following a substantially cylindrical profile 2. The final grooving profile incorporates a succession of concave-profiled grooves 3 separated by convex-profiled crests 4. The global profile obtained in accordance with the invention has the particularity of covering the whole internal surface of the tube 1. The grooves 3 and crests 4 here have a circular profile with a radius R. The maximum depth X of the grooves 3 is less than or equal to 2R. It is naturally possible for profiles to be produced that have a different radius for the concave grooves and the convex crests.
It goes without saying that the grooves 3 may be made along a generating line of the tube 1 at an angle that is nil or different from zero with respect to the generating line so as to be straight or helicoidal. In the first case, the tool has a translational movement and in the other, both a translational and rotational movement. In the latter case, the teeth of the offset tool will be inclined at an angle equal to the angle of the helicoidal groove with respect to the tube generating line.
The tool holder 9 also incorporates intermediate offset tools 13 and 14 enabling the move from roughing to finishing. Naturally, the other components of the machine are known, and namely those devices used to pull the tool 9, and it is thus unnecessary for them to be described more fully.
The first guiding/centering way 19 is formed by a part prolonging the bar 5, the second guiding/centering way 20 is formed by a ring. The guiding/centering ways 19 and 20 have an outer diameter substantially equal to the initial diameter of the tube 1. The two guiding/centering ways 19 and 20 ensure the guidance of the tool holder 9 in the tube 1 to be threaded. In a known manner, cutting fluid is injected, for example through the bar 5 and the spacers 18 by holes, not shown.
Another embodiment is illustrated in
This avoids shavings generated during the grooving operation from accumulating in the lower part of the tube 1 and deteriorating a surface of the tube 1. The spacers 22 are positioned angularly with respect to the tool 9 by cleats 31 such that each tip or cutting profile of the tool 9 is positioned between two successive vanes 24.
The vanes 24 are of a width such that they come into contact with the internal surface of the tube 1 before the grooves are machined. Thus, the vanes 24 press against the crests of the convex profiles and delimit the housings 25 to receive the shavings.
In this embodiment, as many vanes 24 are provided as grooves 25. It goes without saying that the number of vanes 24 can be reduced. The length L of the spacer 22 depends on the length of the bore to be grooved and on the number of offset tools 15 fastened on the bar 5, which should be easily determined.
The tool 28 shown in
The tools according to
As should be appreciated, the number of offset tools to mount on the bar 5 depends on the traction capability of the machine tool, the mechanical properties of the tube material (machinability) and of the shaving surface taken off at each pass. By way of an example, a machine developing 7 tons of traction can draw 1 to 6 tools.
According to the geometry of the tube to be machined (initial diameter, depth and number of grooves) a tool holder will need to be used incorporating more or less numerous offset tools of different types (roughing, finishing, concave or convex).
Thus, for a tube having shallow grooves (less than or equal to 5 mm) a tool holder ensuring the roughing and finishing in a single pass may be used. The first offset tools carried by this tool holder will be the roughing offset tools for the concave profile, the last offset tool will be finishing tools for the convex profile.
For a tube having grooves of greater depth (over 5 mm), several assemblies of tool holders will be needed. The first machining passes will be made with tool holders fitted only with roughing tools for the concave profile.
The last passes will be made with tool holders fitted only with tools (roughing then finishing) machining convex profiles.
By way of example, to produce a grooved bore such as that shown in
The final profile will be obtained, from the initial smooth bore, by 50 passes of a tool holder 9 incorporating 1 to 6 offset tools having ever-increasing cutting diameters from one end to the other of the bar.
As should be appreciated, the number of tools should be selected that is compatible with the power of the machine drawing the tool holder bar.
Note, for example, that for the first machining passes when a small surface is shaven off by each offset tool, a maximum number of tools on the tool holder may thus be used.
For the last passes, when a large shaving is removed at each pass, the machine is under greater strain and the number of tools carried by the traction bar will be reduced.
Machining the convex forms will be carried out after the concave profile has been produced by the passage of a mill fitted with 4 concave shaped tools having ever-increasing relative cutting diameters from one end to the other of the bar 5.
Advantageously, the bar 5 can be made to move in translation so as to create longitudinal grooves or can be made to move in translation and in rotation so as to create helicoidal grooves.
The pitch of the grooves thus obtained depends on the spin rate of the bar with respect to its forward movement. This type of groove may easily be made by a numerical control suitably programmed with the ratio of the bar spin rate over a forward motion.
According to an exemplary aspect of the invention, an internal profile of a complex shape can be made.
According to another exemplary aspect of the invention, grooving tubes of a substantial length (2 to 6 m) can be produced.
According to another exemplary aspect of the invention, the required profile can be economically produced.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
02 05361 | Apr 2002 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR03/01337 | 4/29/2003 | WO | 00 | 10/27/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/092941 | 11/13/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1197132 | LaPointe | Sep 1916 | A |
1310934 | Suverkrop et al. | Jul 1919 | A |
1548451 | Fry | Aug 1925 | A |
1713390 | Lundell | May 1929 | A |
1925837 | Jones et al. | Sep 1933 | A |
2330863 | Bonnafe | Oct 1943 | A |
2408521 | Lapointe | Oct 1946 | A |
3221608 | Russel | Dec 1965 | A |
3847056 | Roger | Nov 1974 | A |
4294568 | Lipowsky et al. | Oct 1981 | A |
4411569 | Pizzola | Oct 1983 | A |
4985609 | Hofele | Jan 1991 | A |
6644358 | Demarest et al. | Nov 2003 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 752 709 | Jul 1971 | DE |
0 739 674 | Oct 1996 | EP |
1 367 980 | Sep 1974 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050229759 A1 | Oct 2005 | US |