This application is a 371 National Stage Application of PCT/DE2014/200252, filed on Jun. 10, 2014, which claims priority to German Application No. 102013213928.4, filed on Jul. 16, 2013, both of which are expressly incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
The invention relates to an outer ring for a roller bearing with a raceway made from a roller bearing steel.
Conventional roller bearings, in particular, so-called solid roller bearings, are formed of through-hardened or case-hardened outer rings that are produced from tubular sections, rod sections, or forging blanks through metal-cutting processes, in order to produce the raceway, rim, and recesses. Such roller bearings with thick-wall outer rings are used, e.g., in motor vehicles. Due to the large number of parts, the design of the outer ring is optimized with respect to the load and the production costs.
For high-temperature applications, bearings are used whose rolling bodies are produced by the rolling of a strip on a spindle. The rolled roller bodies compensate for the thermal elongation at high temperatures. Such a bearing is known from DE 38 09 906 A1. In that document, a bearing is proposed that has several rows of rolling bodies of which one row consists of spring rollers. The spring rollers are produced from steel strips that are wound in a helical shape on pins.
The prior art also includes bearing rings that are wound from spring strip steel and can be used as a bearing inner ring or as a bearing outer ring. Such spring sleeves are held in a shaft or in a hole through internal pretensioning and the spring sleeve expands with the adjacent components when subjected to elevated temperatures. These spring sleeves are produced, e.g., by the company Eich Rollenlager GmbH, Hattingen (www.eich-waelzlager.de).
Conventional solid roller bearings have an outer ring that is produced from a material that is suitable for the roller bearing raceway. For the required metal-cutting rough processing, a relatively large percentage of the material is left over as cutting waste that first is complicated to produce and then must be disposed of or recycled in complicated procedures.
The mentioned wound bearing rings are suitable only for high-temperature applications and therefore only have sufficient accuracy for those ranges.
The invention is based on the object of providing an outer ring for a roller bearing whose production causes less waste and can be produced economically.
To achieve this abject, it is provided according to the invention for an outer ring of the type mentioned above that it is formed of a metal strip that is wound to form a raceway tube and a cladding tube that is connected to this strip and surrounds the raceway tube on the outside.
The invention touches upon the knowledge that an outer ring can be produced in an especially material and resource saving way in that the roller bearing steel needed for the raceway is used only for a raceway tube that is wound around a metal strip, wherein the part of the outer ring not needed for the bearing contact is formed of a cladding tube that is made from a different, more economical material. The raceway tube and the cladding tube are connected to form an integral, one-piece component. Because the raceway tube is wound out of the metal strip, practically no waste is produced by a cutting process, so that the relatively expensive roller bearing steel can be utilized to the best possible degree. The outer ring according to the invention, on the other hand, fulfills all of the requirements that are set for a conventional solid roller bearing, so that a conventional outer ring can be replaced by the outer ring according to the invention.
According to the invention it is especially preferred that the metal strip from which the raceway tube is wound is produced from a roller bearing steel that can be hardened. Advantageously, the metal strip is wound in a spiral shape on a spindle. Suitable materials can be, in particular, C45M or C80M or other suitable roller bearing steels in a strip shape.
With respect to the cladding tube, it is preferred that this is made from a steel that can be welded, in particular, from DC03. Advantageously, the cladding tube is made from a steel strip.
According to a preferred construction of the invention, the cladding tube of the outer ring can be produced by winding the steel strip. Accordingly, both the raceway tube and also the cladding tube can be produced through winding. Accordingly, no cutting processes are required.
For a sufficient steel strip, the cladding tube can be wound around the raceway tube or a raceway tubular section and the ends of the cladding tube are then closed by welding or clinching (joining by shearing and upsetting). Either only the raceway tube or also the cladding tube connected to the raceway tube can be hardened, if necessary, a fine processing step is performed by grinding and/or honing. If only the raceway tube is hardened, the production can be realized with lower energy consumption.
One refinement of the outer ring according to the invention provides that, between the raceway tube and the cladding tube, there is an intermediate layer made from a plastic material, a lacquer, an adhesive, a coating, or a film. Alternatively, an intermediate layer produced by a cladding process can also be provided.
To produce a mechanically stable raceway tube, it can be provided that the metal strip wound to form the raceway tube has parallel side chamfers that contact each other in the wound state with a friction-fit and positive-fit connection. Thus, when wound, a left side chamfer touches the right chamfer after one revolution, whereby the required stability is obtained. Other profile shapes are also usable that connect the windings of the metal strip wound to form the raceway tube to each other and guarantee a sufficient radial support of the metal strip sides.
According to the invention, constructions of the outer ring are also possible in which the cladding tube has rims or rim rings that surround the raceway tube in the radial direction.
In addition, the invention concerns a roller bearing with an outer ring, an inner ring, and rolling bodies that are formed as rollers and are held in-between.
Embodiments of the invention are shown in the accompanying drawings and are described in more detail below. Shown are:
Through the two-sided inclined sides 2, 3 of the metal strip 1, for the raceway tube 4, a friction-fit connection is produced in the axial direction and a positive-fit connection is produced in the circumferential direction and radial direction. Accordingly, the raceway tube 4 has a large stability. For all of the different production variants, initially the metal strip 1 shown in
In the simplest case, the raceway tube 4 can be clad with a three-dimensional body sleeve. This three-dimensional body sleeve could also be made from a metal strip or metal strip sections that is or are narrower or wider than the metal strip 1 used for producing the raceway tube.
The different variants of production will be explained below.
Between the raceway tube 4 and the cladding tube 9 there can be temperature-resistant intermediate layers. An intermediate layer can be made from a plastic material, a lacquer, an adhesive, a coating, or an intermediate layer could be produced by a cladding process. It is also conceivable that a surface structure is produced on the contact surface between the raceway tube 4 and the cladding tube 9. By providing an intermediate layer, different advantages are produced, for example, an intermediate layer allows a creep-free connection. In addition, the transmission of vibrations is reduced, so that noise insulation is also produced. Electrical insulation could also be achieved depending on the material that is used for the intermediate layer.
The cladding tube 9 can also be provided with recesses, cut-outs, holes, pockets, or notches. In this way, additional functions, such as fixing a bearing, the provision of lubricant, or the provision of a space for sensors, are possible. Another advantage is the reduction of the component mass.
As an alternative or addition to welding the cladding tube, the cladding tube and raceway tube could also be connected to each other by clinching (joining by shearing and upsetting).
Initially a raceway tube 12 is wound onto a winding core made as tube 11. Then a cladding tube 13 is wound on the raceway tube 12 in the opposite direction while generating a pre-tensioned state. The cladding tube 13 is thus wound in the opposite winding direction than the raceway tube 12. In the next step, the cladding tube 13 is welded, that is, the spiral-shaped windings are partially welded to each other. Because the cladding tube 13 has the tapered corner, the welding is performed without a projection relative to the outer diameter of the cladding tube 13. Then a heat treatment is performed, in turn, to reduce any existing weld stress. Then the further processing of the composite tube consisting of the cladding tube 13 and the raceway tube 12 is performed. Through the counter-winding of the cladding tube 13, an advantageous additional axial tensioning is realized.
In another variant of the production of an outer ring, initially a raceway tube is wound onto a winding core. Then a heat treatment of the raceway tube and the winding core (spindle) is performed. Then an intermediate layer is applied. Then the cladding tube is wound on the raceway tube either in the same direction or in the opposite direction while generating a pre-tensioned state. After the welding of the cladding tube, the resulting composite part is removed from the winding core (spindle) and cut to length. Then a hard machining process is performed for the raceway. The advantage of this production plan is that the heat treatment is performed only for the raceway tube, but not for the cladding tube. Accordingly, the production is less intensive in terms of energy. On the other hand, in this production variant, hardened components, namely the hardened raceway tube or its cut-to-length pieces, must be separated.
Another alternative production method provides that a raceway tube is wound on the raceway width. Then an inductive heat treatment of this wound raceway tube that is shown in
After producing a composite part formed of the cladding tube and raceway tube, the further processing is performed, e.g., on a bar turning machine. The composite tubes including the two components are here fed via bar magazines. The production of the outer rings is realized in this way with practically no waste.
To prevent cuttings during the soft machining process and to achieve economical production without rims, axial guide surfaces for a roller bearing cage are offset outward or into open positions. In this way, a smooth, rim-free raceway is produced. This also produces the advantage that the high purity of the metal strip at the strip surface is used. All of the described production steps can also be performed in different combinations.
Then the outer ring is installed with an inner ring and rolling bodies to form a roller bearing.
List of Reference Numbers
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2013 213 928 | Jul 2013 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/DE2014/200252 | 6/10/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/007279 | 1/22/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1454682 | Layne | May 1923 | A |
1967821 | Hess | Jul 1934 | A |
2532327 | Parks | Dec 1950 | A |
2667689 | Parks | Feb 1954 | A |
2852322 | Reuen | Sep 1958 | A |
3304138 | Sampatacos | Feb 1967 | A |
3366427 | Silver | Jan 1968 | A |
3750249 | Brandon | Aug 1973 | A |
3881791 | Hentschel | May 1975 | A |
4043567 | Kaiser | Aug 1977 | A |
4509871 | Herzog | Apr 1985 | A |
4728088 | Smith | Mar 1988 | A |
5315892 | Gabas | May 1994 | A |
5477717 | Skrebergene et al. | Dec 1995 | A |
6524010 | Derman | Feb 2003 | B1 |
7401981 | Matheny | Jul 2008 | B2 |
20110311362 | Corts | Dec 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2075128 | Aug 1996 | CA |
86248 | May 1919 | CH |
1602446 | May 1973 | DE |
3248634 | Jul 1984 | DE |
3809906 | Oct 1989 | DE |
4127213 | Feb 1993 | DE |
69314118 | Sep 1997 | DE |
102008024055 | Nov 2009 | DE |
202010004482 | Nov 2010 | DE |
102009052350 | May 2011 | DE |
417774 | Oct 1934 | GB |
2012116735 | Sep 2012 | WO |
Entry |
---|
Eich Rollenlager GmbH, Hattingen, www.eich-waelzlager.de/index—eich.htm, Basic Bearing Types (Jan. 2012). |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20160169283 A1 | Jun 2016 | US |