1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a method of honing bores, in particular, cylinder bores in crankcases of internal combustion engines.
2. Description of the Related Art
In truck engines, cylinder linings that are made by spin casting are often employed as piston bearing surfaces because this material is more wear resistant than the material of the engine block. Such cylinder liners however result in relatively high costs with regard to manufacture as well as assembly of the engine block. Therefore, it has already been proposed to partially harden the piston bearing surface of the engine block within the upper reversing area of the piston movement in order to achieve in this way a higher wear resistance. In this way, a separate cylinder liner is not needed. For example, hardening can be achieved by using a method employing a laser; however, the more economical and cost efficient alternative is induction hardening. When using induction hardening, non-concentric bore constrictions result; this prevents the use of conventional honing processes.
For processing partially hardened cylinder bores in crankcases, the method of coaxial honing has been developed; it is described, for example, in European patent 0 535 201 B1 or in VDI-Z, volume 6 (2001), pp. 49ff, in the article “Honen—Fortschritte durch optimierte Werkzeuge und Prozesse” (Translation: Honing—Advances through Optimized Tools and Processes) authored by U. Klink and G. Flores. The tool described in this article contains two sets of tool members that can be radially advanced or fed independently from one another. The lower set of tool members consists of hard metal guides that rest against the bore wall that has been pre-machined. In this way, the tool is oriented with regard to direction and central position relative to the bore axis. The diamond honing stones of the upper tool member set are subsequently expanded and machine the hardened bore section with the constrictions. The feed of both sets of tool members and thus their expansion is carried out separately. In this connection, feeding of guides can be realized hydraulically while the diamond honing stones are advanced electro-mechanically.
It is an object of the present invention to optimize honing of bores that have a hardened section. It is therefore the object of the present invention to further develop a method for honing bores, in particular, cylinder bores in crankcases of internal combustion engines, such that honing is more efficient and performed with greater dimensional precision.
In accordance with the present invention, this is achieved for two sections of the surface to be machined in the bores that have different hardness and are sequentially arranged in the axial direction of the bore, which sections are first subjected to a pre-machining step and subsequently partially hardened, in that in one of the sections the honing tool is radially supported by means of guides arranged on the honing tool while honing stones arranged on the honing tool machine the hardened section so that material is removed, wherein feeding of the guides is realized independent of feeding of the honing stones, and wherein feeding of the honing stones is realized as a force-guided electro-mechanical advancement and the working stroke of the honing tool is adjusted continuously at least towards the end of the honing process and the honing tool is expanded according to a defined feeding mode.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the method, the adjustment of the working stroke of the honing tool can be carried out toward the adjoining section of reduced hardness of the bore. By this measure, a gradual transition between the honed and the unhoned section is achieved, i.e., between the soft section and the hardened section of the bore. In another embodiment of the method according to the invention, the adjustment of the working stroke of the honing tool is carried out in the direction toward the open end of the hardened section. In this way, a slight alteration of the bore opening can result or a burr that is present can be removed.
Inasmuch as a particularly smooth transition from the hardened section to the softer section is to be achieved and additionally the bore opening is to be machined, it is advantageous to carry out the adjustment of the working stroke of the honing tool in the direction of the adjoining section of the bore as well as in the direction of the open end of the hardened section.
In the case of certain bores, it can be advantageous that the end of the bore has a counterbore so that the honing process in this area can be designed accordingly. The term counterbore is used in fine machining to define an outwardly widening contour near the end of a bore. In this connection, the shape of the bore deviates from the ideal shape of a cylinder. This means an increase of the bore diameter at the respective end of the bore. The counterbore produced accordingly relieves the subsequent honing operation in that at the upper end of the bore less material must be removed.
In the case of inductive hardening, no homogenous hardening occurs in the upper area of the bore; instead, corresponding to the hardening tool, hardened longitudinal strips with soft intermediate spaces are formed. As a result of these areas with different hardness in the hardened section of the bore, different removal rates during honing must be expected. In order to be able to maintain a constant protrusion of grains relative to the binding layer of the honing stones, an alternating change of the rotary direction of the honing tool can be carried out in different ways. One possibility resides in that the direction change of the honing tool is carried out after every machining cycle. However, it may also be expedient to carry out the rotary direction change of the honing tool once during each machining cycle, for example, upon reaching half the thickness of the material layer to be removed. Another possibility resides in that the rotary direction change is carried out at least twice during a machining cycle.
Moreover, it is advantageous to measure the advancing (feeding) force of the honing stones continuously and to maintain the advancing force within a pre-determined bandwidth of an upper limit and a lower limit and to perform the expansion of the honing stones in steps when reaching the lower limit of the advancing force, respectively. In this way, during the entire honing operation the advancing force is maintained constant within narrow limits so that undesirably high pressing forces of the honing stones on the bore wall can be prevented.
The constructive configuration of the advancing chain, as illustrated in
The honing operation is terminated when the expansion travel or stroke s that is preset or computed by the honing program is reached with the predetermined advancing force F. In this way, not only the expansion stroke is decisive for the process termination but also the contacting force that is acting on the working surface of the honing stone at the time of termination. In this way, a high dimensional stability of +/−0.2 μm is possible in individual cases. In this way, under certain circumstances, gear wheels, connecting rod eyes, or cylinder bores can be machined within a range of a few micrometers by means of the first honing operation without requiring additional on-line measuring devices or after process measuring devices.
The machining operation of coaxial honing is realized in the range of shape deviations of the bores that in the present example have been caused by hardening and the resulting distortions. They are represented by eccentric constrictions of the bore as is illustrated, for example, in
As already mentioned, the honing tool illustrated in
While specific embodiments of the invention have been shown and described in detail to illustrate the inventive principles, it will be understood that the invention may be embodied otherwise without departing from such principles.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 58 150 | Dec 2003 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3998011 | Corley | Dec 1976 | A |
5601476 | Maier et al. | Feb 1997 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 535 210 | Apr 1993 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050130560 A1 | Jun 2005 | US |