The present invention relates in general to fabricating valve bodies and, in particular, to an improved system, method and apparatus for lapping, grinding, honing and polishing seal surfaces on inner diameters of semi-blind cavities in valves bodies.
A valve is a device that generally regulates the flow of a material by opening, closing, or partially obstructing a path through the valve. The material may be a gas, a liquid, a fluidized solid, or slurry. A variety of different types of valves exist, such as gate valves, and globe valves.
A gate valve typically consists of a valve body, a bonnet, a valve member, and a valve seat. The valve body and the bonnet form the area in the valve that contains and directs material through the valve. The valve body, for example, may have a bore that extends through the valve body. The valve member interacts with the valve body to control the flow of material passing through the valve by being positioned to close or restrict flow. For example, a sliding gate with an opening can function as a valve member such that the opening aligns with the passage in the valve body to allow flow. Alternatively, a solid portion of the sliding gate can be aligned partially or fully with the passage to restrict or block flow. The bonnet is attached to the valve to hold other valve components, such as the valve member, in place and can be removed to provide access to the internal parts during maintenance.
In a gate valve, the valve seat is the interior surface in the valve body that contacts the gate to form a seal. The gate comes into contact with the seat when the valve is closed. The body and the seat could both come in a single piece of solid material or, alternatively, the seat could be a separate valve part that is attached or fixed to a seat pocket on the inside of the valve body.
When the seat is a separate valve part, the dimensions of the seat and seat pocket must correspond or the seat will not sit properly within the seat pocket of the valve body and leakage may occur. Thus, it is important that the dimensions of the seat pocket are precisely machined to prevent form errors and surface finish errors. The finishing tools used to correct or prevent such errors can thus be very expensive. Therefore, a more cost-effective technique for lapping, grinding, honing, and polishing seal surfaces on the seat pockets of a valve is desired.
In an embodiment of the present technique, a tool assembly comprising a cylindrical member, wheels of varying diameter and abrasive surface, and a rod for applying torque, are provided. A tool assembly allows for lapping, grinding, honing and polishing seal surfaces on inner diameters of semi-blind cavities in valve bodies. The tool can bring seat surfaces up to specification with the abrasive wheels having varying grit sizes. The wheels are provided in an array of sizes to form a set of tools for a range of diameters, abrasion and surface finish capacity. This design allows the first (i.e., smallest) tool to enter a cavity in a valve body to begin cutting. The wheel is attached to an end of the cylindrical member and rotated by applying torque through the rod that may traverse the opposite end of the cylindrical member. Once the small diameter wheel has completed its cutting operation, it can be replaced with the larger size wheels to increase the diameter of the cavity, or valve seat, being machined until the desired size is achieved. Wheels with finer abrasive can then used to improve the surface finish of the cavity while minimizing the material removal. When the desired diameter and/or surface finish has been achieved, a felt wheel may be used with a fine abrasive paste to provide the cavity with the final surface finish specification.
The use of the tool assembly to obtain a desired diameter and finish for valve seat sealing surfaces is cost-effective. In the past, expensive and specialized machining tools were required to obtain the desired diameter and finish.
So that the manner in which the features and advantages of the present invention are attained and can be understood in more detail, a more particular description of the invention briefly summarized above may be had by reference to the embodiments thereof that are illustrated in the appended drawings. However, the drawings illustrate only some embodiments of the invention and therefore are not to be considered limiting of its scope as the invention may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
In the illustrated embodiment, the gate valve assembly 20 comprises a valve body 22 having a bore 24 extending though the valve body 22. The bore 24 has a first opening 26 and a second opening 28. In this embodiment, the gate valve 20 is a bi-directional valve. Therefore, the first opening 26 may be used as an inlet to the bore 24 in one configuration and as an outlet in another configuration, as can the second opening 28.
In addition, this embodiment of the valve 20 has a valve cavity 30 that is covered by a bonnet 32. A pair of seats 34 extends into the cavity 30 from seat pockets 36 formed on opposite sides of the cavity 30 in the bore 24 through the valve body 22. A gate 38 is housed in the cavity 30 between the seats 34. The gate 38 has an opening 40 and a solid portion 42 that are positioned to control flow through the gate valve 20. When the gate 38 is positioned with the opening 40 aligned with the bore 24, the valve 20 is open and fluids are able to pass through the bore 24 via the opening 40 in the gate 38. When the gate 38 is positioned with the solid portion 42 aligned with the bore 24, the valve 20 is closed and fluids are blocked from flowing through the bore 24 by the solid portion 42 of the gate 38.
The valve 20 also has a valve stem 44 that extends through the bonnet 32 to enable a user to position the gate 38 in either the open or closed configuration. A hand wheel (not shown) or some other actuator may be used to position the valve stem 44. For example, a hydraulic actuator may be used to control the position of the gate 38. An electrical or pneumatic actuator may be used, as well.
Referring generally to
The correspondence between the seat seal 46 and the seat pocket 36 enables a seal to be maintained without the use of grease. However, if the surface profile of the seat pocket 36 is rough or is not round, the sealing surfaces 50 of the seat seal 46 may not maintain a seal. Therefore, leakage from the bore 24 may occur. The surface profile of the seat pocket 36 may be too rough for a proper seal due to chatter from the machining operations used to form the seat pocket 36, incidental damage to the surface finish, or some other cause. Similarly, the surface profile of the seat pocket 36 may have been machined somewhat oval rather than round. The surface profile of the seat pocket 36 may be repaired if it is not sufficiently smooth and/or round. For example, the seat pocket 36 may be machined to re-bore the seat pocket 36.
Referring now to
The shaft 65 is inserted into the bore 24 (
The assembled tooling 61 may be rotated by hand or machine-driven. For example, in
After sufficient lapping, grinding, honing and/or polishing has occurred with a selected one of the wheels, the smaller diameter wheel is replaced by a next larger diameter wheel, and the process is repeated as needed. When the diameter of the cavity has been enlarged to the lower end of the desired range of diameters, the wheels with finer abrasive are then used to improve the surface finish of the cavity while minimizing the material removal. When the desired diameter and/or surface finish has been achieved, a felt wheel may be used with a fine abrasive paste to provide the cavity with the final surface finish specification.
Form errors and surface finish errors contributing to leakage in high pressure valves were corrected to achieve superior sealing in extreme subsea applications. In the machining of super alloys and super alloy coated parts, there is difficulty in the machining of the super alloy. Special tooling and expensive machinery are required to perform these processes. The invention machines the surfaces to allow an existing machining process to be used to rough machine a part at a low cost and with precision. The part is then finished machined using hand operated tooling that requires no high cost equipment. The valves operate with better sealing and without the need of new equipment to perform the operation. The industry standard is a machining practice and the new method had not been applied to this application.
While the invention has been shown or described in only some of its forms, it should be apparent to those skilled in the art that it is not so limited, but is susceptible to various changes without departing from the scope of the invention.
This application claims priority to provisional application 61/113,326, filed Nov. 11, 2008.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61113326 | Nov 2008 | US |