The present invention relates to a method for machining a glass pane, wherein the edge of the glass pane is machined using at least one grinding tool, in that the glass pane and the grinding tool are moved relative to one another.
Such a method is known, for example, from patent application EP 0 255 476 A1 by the present applicant. In the production of glass panes, which are to have a predetermined shape, grinding of the edge is used to obtain the exact desired final dimensions and/or to give the edge the desired profile (angular or rounded, for example). To allow precise grinding so that the edge is machined uniformly all the way around, correspondingly accurate information is required concerning the position of the glass pane or of the edge with respect to the position of the grinding tool. This information may be too imprecise when, for example, the device is to be used for grinding a new pane shape and therefore must be reconfigured. It is also possible that changes in length of the device may occur after the configuration, for example due to temperature fluctuations, so that during the machining a glass pane is no longer exactly in the position assumed by the device.
The patent application JP 2007 136632 A describes a method, in which the parallel longitudinal sides of a glass sheet are ground by means of two grinding wheels. The currents flowing in the driving motors are shown on a display device in form of two waveforms. There are no measures provided to rectify the problem mentioned above of inaccurate machining due to inaccurate information on the position of the glass pane.
An object of the present invention is to provide a method that allows precise machining of the edge of a glass pane.
A method that achieves this object is defined in claim 1. The further claims set forth preferred embodiments of the method, a device with which the method can be carried out, a computer program, and a data carrier.
The offset of the glass pane with respect to a target position, i.e. desired position, can be determined by detecting and evaluating a variable that is a function of the power consumption of the motor used to drive the grinding tool. This allows correction of a possible offset and precise grinding of the glass panes. For example, the current of the motor may be used as such a variable. In addition, configuring the device for machining a new glass pane shape is simplified, and series production may be monitored to ensure that the ground edges have the desired quality.
The method according to the invention allows a precise machining of any shape of the glass pane, not only a rectangular shape, but any shape, i.e. a shape having a contour composed of straight and/or curved sections.
The glass pane to be machined may be e.g. placed on a support to define the actual position. The latter may deviate from the target position by an offset. The offset may be considered as a displacement in the plane P defined by the backside of the glass pane. The displacement may be a linear and/or rotational one. During machining the glass pane and at least one grinding tool may be moved relative to one another in the plane P.
The offset of the glass pane may be defined by one or more of the following parameters:
Preferably, at least one of the following conditions is met:
Preferably, at least one of the three parameters mentioned above (shift along first/second linear axis, rotation around a rotation axis) is determined in the method by detecting and evaluating the variable being a function of the power consumption of the motor used to drive the grinding tool. To improve the precision in machining the glass panes, it is not necessary to determine all of said parameters. This may be e.g. the case when one or more parameters is/are less dominant than another one. For instance, the rotation between the actual and target position may be small and therefore negligible and/or the shift between the actual and target position may tend to be greater along a particular axis than along another axis.
Preferably, the offset is determined in units of length and/or in angular units. This may be achieved e.g. by calibration measurements.
Preferably, the offset is determined by calculations performed by means of a controller. The latter may be provided with a program configured to calculate the offset. The calculations may include fitting a mathematical model to the detected curves values of the variable, averaging at least some of the detected values of the variable, taking into account values obtained from calibration measurements, etc.
Preferably, the determined offset is taken into account in a subsequent cycle of machining. In such a subsequent cycle the same glass pane may be machined at least once more and/or another glass pane may be machined.
Preferably, based on the determined offset a correction is determined which adjusts the actual position of the glass pane to the target position. The correction may be taken into account in a subsequent cycle of machining.
Preferably, the complete circumferential edge of the glass pane is machined using one or more grinding tools.
The invention is explained below based on exemplary embodiments, with reference to the figures, which show the following:
The support 9 and the grinding tool 10 are movable relative to one another so that an edge of the glass pane may be ground. This is achievable in various ways, for example as follows:
In order to move the support 9 and/or the grinding tool 10, a corresponding suitable drive and optionally a guide are provided. The grinding tool 10 is delivered by means of the drive, for example by path control. The grinding tool 10 then follows a fixed, predefined path. It is also conceivable for the grinding tool to be delivered in some other way, for example by force control or by path control and force control.
Returning to
In the ideal case, i.e., when the actual position and the target position are the same, the electrical power consumption of the electric motor 11 while driving the grinding tool 10 is a function only of predefined process parameters, for example the pane shape, grinding speed, delivery, etc. During grinding along an essentially straight path, for example, the power consumption is essentially constant. The inventors have now found that an offset results in a corresponding variation in the power consumption. Conclusions concerning the offset may thus be drawn by detecting and evaluating a variable that corresponds to the power consumption. For example, the current required by the electric motor 11 for driving the grinding tool 10 may be used as a variable that reflects the power consumption. The controller 15 is used to control the movement of the support 9 and/or the grinding tool 10, as well as the electric motor 11. The controller 15 is provided with a suitable program for evaluating the detected variable. During operation, for the particular position of the support 9 and/or of the grinding tool 10, the current value of the electric motor 11 and/or some other variable is detected which is a function of the power consumption. In the variant according to
In the following description, as an example the current is used as the variable to be detected. It is conceivable to use some other electrical variable, for example the voltage or a combination of current and voltage.
For evaluating the current curve I, the measured values are processed in a first step. Current dips may occur, as is apparent in
The further four current dips, visible in
The program uses, for example, the ratio of the spindle current I to the grinding speed v for filtering out the mentioned further current dips. As is apparent in
The offset may be determined after the current measured values are processed. As mentioned above with respect to
For the device according to
The current measured values I are reduced by the current value averaged over the entire measurement and multiplied by the weighting function for the x and y directions. For the example from
To prevent a skewed calculation of the angular offset, the current measured values, reduced by the average value, are corrected according to the determined x and y offsets, and are then multiplied by the weighting function for the angle. For the example from
Conversion of the values of the offset into units of length or into angular units is possible by calibration measurements, for example, in which the current of the electric motor 11 is detected at predefined glass thicknesses and grinding speeds as well as predefined values for the offset. The calibration measurements may take place by grinding a single glass pane multiple times, or by grinding multiple glass panes. The glass pane is optionally disposed of, and the determined values for the offset are used for the subsequent glass panes to be machined.
In one embodiment, a glass pane 1′ is ground twice: In a first run the pane 1′ is ground not to the final dimensions, but, rather, with a residual edge having a predefined width b, for example b=0.25 mm or some other suitable value. The residual edge is removed in the second run. Based on the second run, the current that is consumed in order to remove a width b is thus known. A calibration value (for example, in amperes per mm for the linear offset) is determinable by averaging the current values of the second run, subtracting the current value in idle mode, and dividing the result by two, since according to
Based on the current curve of the first run, the offset is determinable in units of amperes, and by use of the calibration value may be converted into units of mm or degrees.
The procedure described here with two grinding operations has the advantage, among others, that the program is able to calibrate itself for any given pane shapes, without the need for information concerning the pane thickness or grinding speed.
Furthermore, the inventors have found that the current curve of the second run may be used to decide whether or not the glass pane has been completely ground, i.e., is free of unmachined and/or only partially machined locations. The current value for the offset is relatively large for a pane that is not completely ground. If a predefined threshold value is exceeded, the glass pane is not recognized as completely ground, and is remachined or disposed of.
Step 100: The grinding is started in order to configure the device in such a way that glass panes may be ground in series without offset.
Step 101: A glass pane is ground up to a residual edge in a first run.
Step 102: The residual edge having a predefined width is removed in a second run.
Step 103: The program determines the offset in the physical units and the corresponding correction values in order to compensate for the displacement and/or rotation between the x′-y′ coordinate system and the x-y coordinate system in
Step 104: The program checks as to whether the glass pane is completely ground. If not, this is followed by:
Step 105, in which the glass pane is disposed of and a new glass pane is ground to the final dimensions according to step 102, using the determined correction values.
Step 106: A user additionally checks as to whether the glass pane is completely ground. This step is optional and may be omitted.
Step 107: The device is now configured and the series production is started, in which a plurality of glass panes is ground.
The detection and evaluation of the current I may be used not only for configuring the device, but also for monitoring and/or continuously adjusting the series production. In the series production, the offset may be determined, for example, for each glass pane, and for example one-half the offset may be used as a correction value for the next glass pane.
It is also conceivable to monitor the variation of the current I over time. This should essentially correspond to the variation over time that results after the device is configured, and thus, when an offset is not present. If this is no longer the case during grinding of a glass pane, the facility is no longer correctly calibrated, and may be reconfigured, for example, via the sequence according to
The measures described here are usable in many ways to grind the edge of a glass pane, in particular automotive window glass and glass panes for monitors and/or displays. Any given edge profiles to be ground are conceivable: rectangular, beveled, C-shaped, rounded edge, stepped cut, etc. The detection and evaluation of a variable that is a function of the power consumption of the motor has the advantage, among others, that it is not absolutely necessary to provide additional sensors to determine the offset.
The device may be configured in such a way that information concerning the detected values of the variable, for example the detected current, the determined offset, the calculated correction, and/or other parameters, is displayed on a monitor.
It is not necessary to detect and/or evaluate all values of the variable along the edge of the glass pane in order to determine the offset. In addition, values of the variable on only a portion of the grinding path represent sufficient measuring points to determine the offset having a maximum of three parameters.
The method is also applicable for a device in which more than one grinding tool is used for the grinding, for example two or more grinding tools with motors that are offset relative to one another. Each grinding tool may optionally machine only a section of the edge. By use of the methods described here, for example the correction values for each grinding tool may be determined, and an average correction value may then be set.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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17200843.5 | Nov 2017 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2018/079626 | 10/30/2018 | WO | 00 |