The present invention relates to a multiple-spindle turning machine, including workpiece machining assemblies both on the front and on the rear sides thereof.
Prior multiple-spindle turning machines of the above mentioned type conventionally comprise a large-size drum which can be controllably rotatively driven to bring the individual spindles to a workpiece machining angular position, said rotary drum is is supporting a plurality of built-in spindles rotatively driving the workpieces for machining them by machining tools supported by cross slides mounted on the rotary drum supporting machine structure.
Prior cross slides, supporting the machining tools at said spindles, may be driven both along an X axis radially extending of the drum and along a Z axis longitudinally extending of said rotary drum.
To perform on the workpieces additional machining operations, in the direction of their tangential Y axes, it was necessary in the past to provide on the multiple-spindle turning machine with further mechanical assemblies of a comparatively large size, thereby greatly reducing the machine tool working region, and rendering the machine adjusting operations very long and complex; thus the turning machine will have an insufficient operating flexibility.
A typical further technical drawback of prior multiple-spindle machine tools is that only the workpiece cutting position is available thereon for machining the workpiece rear portion thereby the machining operations must be necessarily very simple and quick, to fit the machine operating time cycle.
For solving the above problems, prior methods greatly modified the machine tool structure to include therein a plurality of working places for machining the workpiece rear parts; alternatively a working platform including two series-coupled machine tools and a handling robot arrangement for monitoring the transfer of half-finished workpieces from a machine to the other has been also prepared.
Another drawback of prior multiple-spindle machines is that the lengths of the workpieces made by said machines are necessarily very small because of damaging flexures the workpieces would be subjected to as they are machined, thereby preventing proper tolerances from being achieved on each finished workpiece. Moreover, because of the available very restricted working region, it is also very difficult to properly unload the machined workpieces.
Accordingly, the main object of the present invention is to overcome the above mentioned drawbacks of the prior art, and provide a multiple-spindle machine tool in which the space encompassing the rotary drum near the spindles is not occupied by additional fittings, thereby allowing, in a single multiple-spindle machine tool, to machine workpieces both on the front and on the rear sides and through a comparatively large length thereof, even if said workpieces are very slender. According to the present invention, the above mentioned object is achieved by a multiple-spindle turning machine having a upright machine supporting structure, rotatably supporting a drum bearing a plurality of workpiece supporting spindles, wherein the machine upright supports, at said spindles, cross slides supporting a plurality of machining tools for machining front end portions of the workpieces, and wherein, in the front of a rotary drum supporting platform, parallel guides arranged transversely of the machine bed are provided, said parallel guides supporting cross slides each including a workpiece spindle, and wherein to each of said workpiece spindle is operatively coupled a tool supporting element installed on a vertically movable slide and including tools for machining a rear portion of the workpiece.
Further advantages will better appear from the dependent claims, the following disclosure and accompanying drawings.
The present invention will be disclosed in a more detailed manner hereinafter, with reference to a multiple-spindle machine tool, given only by way of an example.
In the accompanying drawings:
As shown in
The drum 3 supports a plurality of workpiece spindles 4 and 5, which will be discussed in a more detailed manner hereinafter.
Advantageously, said machining tools 7 can be driven either along a radial axis X and along a tangential axis Y (see
Such an arrangement allows to use machining tools 7 suitably chosen and arranged to perform machining operations on the front sides or portions of the workpieces, indicated by the reference number 8.
The guides 10 support driving carriages 11 which are controllably driven independently, from one another, along said sliding parallel guides 10, and which can be driven by per se known driving systems such as ball recirculating screws and controllable motors or linear motors.
Each carriage 11 supports a slide 12 which is controllably driven along the longitudinal axis Z of the drum 3, each slide 12 supporting individually controllable motors 13 and including grippers for gripping the workpieces 8 from the drum 3 supported spindles 4 and 5.
The multiple-spindle machine 1 further supports machining tool holders 15 and 16 each mounted on corresponding vertically movable slides (A) and (B) which will be disclosed in a more detailed manner hereinafter.
The front portion of the drum 3 is integral with the structure 18 supporting, for each workpiece supporting rotary spindle, the parallel guides 19 thereon are slidably mounted skids 20 allowing the workpiece holder spindle 21 to be driven in a longitudinal direction Z of the rotary drum 3 axis.
The workpiece supporting spindle 21, through the gripper 22, rotatively drives the workpiece 8.
The figures show moreover a double configuration of the tool machine.
At the position 5 the machine tool has its basis configuration, in which the spindle rotatively drives the workpiece and displaces the latter in the Z direction, to cause said workpiece to directly project, from a required projection distance, from the front portion of the drum 3, which does not comprise supports. In this case, the workpiece has a small size and is not subjected to bending or flexural movements during its machining operations.
At the position 4, on the contrary, a rotary bush (C) is provided for supporting the great length slender workpiece 8, which a support is necessary for limiting the flexure of the slender workpiece inevitably occurring during the machining operations on the slides 6 of
The rotary bush can be driven by per se known driving units, such as a mechanical driving unit including a drive shaft, or by a dependent auxiliary motor.
Thus, the two above machine configurations can be achieved from a same basic machine.
In this figure it is possible to see the platform or structure 2 supporting the spindles 4 and 5, and the workpieces 8 to be machined.
Furthermore,
Thus, it is possible to carry out, on the same tool machine 1, a machining on the rear sides of the workpieces 8, by using, to that end, the machining tools of the assemblies 15 and 16.
As shown in
The spindles 13, driven by the slides 12, remove the workpiece 8 from the rotary drum 3 spindles 4 and 5. Upon having machined the rear sides by the tool holders 15 and 16, a driven arm (not shown in the drawing) disengages from the rear part of the spindles 13 the long workpiece 8 by the gripper element (D), see
The spindle 13 is herein used for machining the rear side or portion of the workpiece 8 just taken from the mandrel 5, by the tool holder 15 mounted on the vertical slide (B).
The slide 12 further supports a motor (E) for rotatively driving the tool (F) for machining the workpiece 8 in the spindle 4.
In such a configuration, the multiple-spindle assembly will have a single position for machining the workpiece rear side, and another position for machining, by a rotary tool, the workpiece front side.
This arrangement is herein called a “double cycle” arrangement, in which, in particular, said machine tool is programmed to simultaneously make two simple workpieces; the workpiece 8 being made by using three of the six available positions on the rotary drum 3, performing a two-snap displacement rotary movements at a time.
In the last position of the drum 3, the two workpieces 8, with the front machining portion finished thereon, are arranged in the spindles 4 and 5; at this time, the slides 12 will bring the spindles 13 to the workpiece gripping position, and then will be withdrawn up to the tool holders 15 and 16, to machine the rear side of the workpieces 8. At the end of the rear machining operations, the two machined workpieces being simultaneously unloaded.
This pattern is herein called a “double recovery” pattern, since, in particular, the machine tool makes in this configuration a workpiece by long processing time rear machining operations.
In particular, the two spindles 13 make the same rear machining operations on the respective tool holders 15 and 16, which machining operations are offset of such a time as to allow the rotary drum 3 to bring the workpiece 8 to its end position 5.
Accordingly, said workpiece 8 is gripped by the two spindles 13, for the rear machining operations. in an alternated manner.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2008A-001622 | Sep 2008 | IT | national |