The invention relates to the field of punches and dies, and more particularly to a multiple punch and multiple die apparatus suitable for use in a punch press for punching or forming sheet materials.
Multiple punch apparatus of the type that is used in automatic, computer-driven high-speed punching presses, are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,032,812; 6,675,688; 6,279,445; 6,074,330; 5,848,563; 5,062,337; 5,048,385; 3,527,130; as well as Ser. No. 11/583,530, filed on 19 Oct. 2006.
In a multiple punch apparatus of this type, a common stripping spring or spring assembly is typically provided, which acts upon a single punch carrier that supports and raises all the punches together.
In operation, the hammer strikes on a selected punch (referred to as active punch) to guide it through a work-piece, such as a section of a metal sheet.
Then, the punch is pulled out of the material sheet, whereupon the other inactive pinches are raised and lowered.
Anyway, in the above mentioned punches, the inactive punches may be often lowered to such an extent as to hit the work-piece with enough force to damage the work-piece surface.
If the work-piece is relatively thin, delicate or highly polished, or otherwise easily subjected or exhibiting scratches, dents or other imperfections, it will be desirable to find a way to prevent inactive punches from contacting the work-piece, and from damaging a delicate or highly polished surface.
An undesired damage to the work-piece may be caused by the weight or inertia of one or more of the inactive punches and may be aggravated by the impact force distributed throughout the unit by the fracture caused in the material sheet during punching.
Many attempts have been made, in the development of the invention, to find a feasible way to avoid such damages by inactive punches.
Nevertheless, no thoroughly effective method has been found.
For example, there has been an attempt to provide a horizontal plate to keep the inactive punches raised.
A friction element has also been provided, for preventing them to slide on the work-piece.
In order to ensure effectiveness, the device must prevent any undesired contact between the inactive punches and the work-piece, while avoiding any interference with the action of the active punch during the punching steps.
The prior art solutions suffer from a number of defects, insufficient reliability and accuracy, and involve the use of mechanically complex mechanisms and unacceptably weak components.
Furthermore, the inactive punches are required to be supported at a definite distance from the work-piece.
This is a complex requirement, as the space between the tip of the punch and the metal sheet may be very small, e.g. a fraction of a millimeter, and shall be sufficiently reliable for proper, positive operation after millions of punching cycles, and for sufficiently safe support of the punches at the top, to avoid release thereof during the violent punching load of a strong fracture.
The highly disruptive load required in these friction retention methods is inadequate and a single punch retention mechanism is often unusable due to space and cost limitations.
Magnets have been used for supporting flat die platforms. For example, according to U.S. Pat. No. 3,517,597, many magnets are provided in the die platform, but the platform is not movable aside to a non-operating position while another platform is shifted into place nor is damage caused by an inactive punch.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,211,035 discloses a single punch, which is rigidly supported in a cavity of a punch carrier by a screw arrangement.
The lower end of an annular magnet contacts the punch carrier but the magnet does not act upon the punch.
Also, with the single punch as disclosed, there are no inactive punches, no damage is thus caused by inactive punches, and no punches are moved between active or inactive positions.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,138,919 shows another single punch, in which a rubber stripper is provided, having an annular magnetic disk bonded to its upper end for supporting the stripper in its position above the punch carrier.
Since a single punch is disclosed, no need arises for preventing inactive punches from damaging the work-piece, for avoiding actuation of the magnet on the punch instead of the punch carrier.
In the light of these and other drawbacks of the prior art, one object of the present invention is to provide a reliable means for preventing undesired contact between inactive punches and a work-piece susceptible of being damaged.
Another object of the invention is to prevent damages caused to a work-piece by an inactive punch in a punch unit under jolts, vibrations and impacts that occur when the punch unit is operated and quickly indexed between successive punching operations.
Yet another object of the invention is to prevent any inactive punch in a multiple punch unit from slipping, incising or otherwise damaging or spoiling a work-piece, without interfering with the punching operations performed by the active punch, as it is driven through the work-piece.
In one aspect, the present invention relates to a multiple punch unit for punch presses that is configured to prevent unintended damage to a work-piece and that includes a housing having a plurality of separate punches, which include at least an inactive punch and at least an active punch. Each inactive punch is supported in an elevated position by retention magnet means that have flux lines positioned to extend into each inactive punch when the active punch is positioned for being driven into engagement with a work-piece.
In another aspect, the present invention relates to multiple punch units that may have six or more punches arranged in a circle, which are not rigidly fixed to the punch carriers by screw arrangements. Each punch is allowed to be horizontally indexed below a punch striker where it is free to be driven to contact with the work-piece.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will be more apparent from the detailed description of one preferred, non-exclusive embodiment of a multiple punch unit for punch presses, which is described by way of illustration and without limitation with the help of the annexed drawings, in which:
Multiple punch units are known per se, as shown in the above patents.
While the invention finds application in multiple punch units in general, such as those listed herein, it will be exemplarily described in the multiple punch units as shown in the figures, i.e.
A striking head 12c, whose diameter is larger than that of its shaft, is provided at the upper end of each punch 12, and rests on the punch carrier 14, except during the punching steps, when the punch carrier 14 is raised with the punch striker 22, thereby leaving a gap “G”.
Therefore, the punch carrier 14 raises the punches 12 by engaging the head 12c with a sufficient force, possibly of some tons, to remove the punch tip 12b from the work-piece.
A laterally extending circular flange 16b is provided at the upper end of the guide seat, and is supported on raising springs, two of which are shown in
The guide seat 16 is locked against axial rotation, for instance, by a pin 20a (
A punch striker 22 is slidably mounted in the unit 10 above the punches 12 and is quickly rotated, i.e. indexed, about the axis 23, for sequentially driving downwards each of the punches 12, which is selected through the apertures 14a and the punch carrier 14 and projects out of the bottom of the guide seat 16, in contact with a work-piece 24, i.e. typically a metal sheet work-piece, as shown in
The punch carrier 14 comprises a centrally positioned, axially aligned shaft 14b whose upper end extends upwards through an axial hole, into the punch striker 22 and is held in its seat by a spacer 15 and a bolt 17 which is accessible through the hole 32a of the cover 32 of the striker.
The metal sheet work-piece 24 is conventionally supported by dies 26, each of the latter being supported in aligned relation with one of the punches 12 by a die support 28 of known construction.
An annular stripper 13, as provided in prior art construction, surrounds the tip 12b of each of the punches, and is supported in its position in any known manner, such as by means of a stripper retainer 11, which is attached to the bottom of the punch carrier 14 by means of external bolts, not shown.
During operation, the punch striker 22 is driven downwards by a hammer 30 of a punch press, which is shown in its return position in
The multiple punch apparatus 10, shortly referred to hereinafter as apparatus 10 or multiple punch unit 10, as described above is substantially similar, in terms of operation, to general, commercially available multiple punch units as disclosed in the above mentioned patents and in pending patent application Ser. No. 11/573,439, by the owner hereof.
However, a magnet carousel 36 is held within the apparatus 10 (
The magnet carousel 36 has a central passage 42 open at the top and the bottom, as clearly shown in
A diastema 47 can be seen on the right side of
As better explained below, the magnets 48 are spaced at regular intervals, but a position is occupied at the center of the diastema 47 by the face 22a of the punch striker 22, which contacts a top surface 12a of the punch that has to be driven through the work-piece from time to time, as shown in
The retracted or “up” position of the punch striker 22 and the cover 32 of the punch striker and the punch carrier 14 is restricted by the head of a flanged screw 8.
The upper ends of the springs 50 extend into the spring-holder 49.
A lower spring holder 55 supports the lower end of each spring 50.
As better shown in
It should be noted, in FIGS. 3 and 6-8, that the upper half of the unit 10 designated by “A” (
Anyway, the guide seat 16 as shown under B in
A comparison of
The flange 40 at the top of the magnet carousel 36 has two purposes.
It acts as a retention member for the stripping springs 50 and is lubricated to provide an annular support to the top surface of the flange 16b at the top of the guide seat 16.
Therefore, the magnet carousel 36 with the magnet assembly 48 rotates through the various punch heads and sequentially applies a retention force to all inactive punches, when the multiple punch unit 10 is operating.
While the magnets may touch the punches, a small gap of at least a few hundredths of an inch is preferably provided between the punch head and the surface of the magnet in which one of the pole pieces is located.
A preferred magnet is a cylindrical permanent magnet made of neodymium-iron-boron alloy.
Referring to
Epoxy resin and non-ferrous metals, such as brass, have been deemed to be adequate.
The housing is joined to the carousel by a bolt 49.
The magnet and the spacer 48d may be press-fit into the housing.
The permanent magnet is preferably a samarium-cobalt magnet, or a neodymium-iron-boron magnetic alloy, with the pole pieces at the top and the bottom, so that the flux lines have a cylindrical symmetry about a vertical axis, and extend into the punch 12 as shown in
This provides a complete magnetic circuit, which exerts a very strong attraction on the impact surface 12a of each punch 12, except the one of the punch that is located below the operating face 22a of the punch striker 22.
The punches may actually touch the set of magnets 48a-48d or, if needed, they may be spaced a few hundredths of a millimeter from the surface, so that no physical contact occurs therebetween.
It was found that, with the flux lines perpendicular to the interface between the magnet and the punch, the magnetic force that attracts the punch upwards toward the magnets is stronger than the force required to laterally rotate the set of magnets 48 relative to the stationary punches.
As a result, the automatic rotary indexing motion of the magnets and the punch striker is not adversely affected thereby.
It was also found that, during operation, the set of magnets 48 also acts somewhat as a rotation preventing key, in the form of a stop that aligns the magnets with the inactive punches 12.
For operation of the multiple punch unit 10, the latter was installed in the upper turret 20 of a turret of a punch press of commercial type, and is aligned with a multiple die unit 28 in the lower turret of the punch press.
During operation, it will be seen that the sets of magnets 48 and the inactive punches 12 will be supported by the magnets 48 in a raised position, as shown in
Tests conducted with the invention by simulating the current operating conditions show that the set of magnets 48 reliably support the inactive punches in position and prevent them from spoiling the work-piece 24, whether the punches physically contact the set of magnets or not.
The invention was also found to be reliably effective in spite of the presence of steel particles which are often found inside and around punch press systems.
Those tests also prove that the invention is highly effective with the thousands of existing commercially available punches, and that the magnets may be easily indexed from one punch to the other, assuming that the magnets move laterally from one punch to the next whereas the upper part A of the set 10 rotates between strokes of the punch striker 22.
In addition, the punches 12 are reliably supported even when the punch carrier 14 is lowered, as shown in
On the other hand, the magnets are reliably supported by the carousel 36 which, as shown, unlike the punch carrier 14, does not move axially in the multiple punch unit 10, and hence consistently protects the work-piece against damages caused by the punch tip.
In another alternative embodiment of the invention (not shown), the set of magnets 48 is joined to a non-rotatable element, such as the guide seat 16, designated by numeral 16B, whereby each magnet is located within a magnetic circuit to support each punch, regardless of which punch is selected for use as a punching element.
In this case, as the punch striker is lowered, it overcomes the upward retention force provided by the magnet 16B.
Otherwise, the magnetic punches may move downwards when the punch carrier is lowered, e.g. by being connected with the punch carrier 14, but still prevent the inactive punches from being lowered, by applying a magnetic flux to a non-descending portion of the unit such as the carousel 36, in this example with no magnet mounted therein.
In a third, less preferred, embodiment of the invention, the magnets are not mounted to the carousel 36 but to the heads of the punches 12, as shown in 12c (
In this example, the carousel 36 and its magnets might be replaced by a ferromagnetic material.
Magnets of other shapes may be also used, such as cylindrical magnets, toroidal magnets, multipole magnets or electromagnets.
The invention was found to fulfill the intended objects.
The invention so conceived is susceptible to a number of changes and variants within the inventive concept.
Furthermore, all the details may be replaced by other technically equivalent parts.
In practice, any materials, shapes and sizes may be used as needed, without departing from the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MO2010A000163 | Jun 2010 | IT | national |