The present application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 to Patent Application Serial No. 0402026-9 filed in Sweden on Aug. 17, 2004.
The present invention relates to a rock drill bit intended for percussive rock drilling. The invention also relates to a thread joint for percussive rock drilling.
Thread joints in drill strings are exposed to great strains during percussive top hammer drilling where the drill string has the task to transfer impact energy from a top hammer to a drill bit at the free end of the drill string provided with cemented carbide cutting elements. Usually the individual drill rod has a female thread formed at one end intended to receive a male thread at an opposed end of another drill rod. Usually water, possibly with some additions for example for improving the lubrication, is used as a flushing medium in connection with drilling for partly removing cuttings from the bore and partly for lubricating and cooling the drill bit. The drill steel, i.e. the material in bits, rods, tubes, sleeves and shank adapters, is exposed during drilling to abrasive and corrosive attacks. This applies in particular to drilling underground where water is used as flush medium and where the environment generally is moist. Attacks are especially serious at parts of relatively small diameters, i.e. at thread ends or thread clearances.
WO-A1-03042493 has tried to come to terms with the effect of cavitation at percussive drilling. This has been done by covering the slender portions of the drill rod by means of a skirt of the drill bit. Thereby cavitation does not reach said slender portions but is guided towards coarser dimensions of the joint. Although the prior solution has improved the performance of these products, drifter rods sometimes have suffered from damage on the rod surface just behind the skirt on a rod that has been drilled far, such as 10,000 m. Damage is very local and has the form of a cut substantially around the whole rod circumference. The damage then functions as crack initiation point when the rod is subjected to violent bendings.
The present invention aims to alleviate the above-captioned problem and to create an improved thread joint for percussive rock drilling, which further improves efficiency at modern mining.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a drill bit which reduces the formation of cavitation at percussive drilling.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a drill bit at which blasting effects and corrosion from exterior flush medium are reduced.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide a drill bit which extends the life-span at rock drill rods of slender dimensions.
According to the invention these objects are achieved by a drill bit for percussive rock drilling including an integral skirt which defines an axial center line. The bit includes an axial front face having rock crushing elements, at least one channel for conducting a flush medium, a recess extending forwardly by an axial distance L0 from a rear end face of the skirt, a female thread formed in the recess, and an external surface comprising a conical portion which extends rearwardly from a larger diameter end thereof to a smaller diameter end thereof. The larger diameter end is spaced from the rear end face by an axial distance which is greater than one-eighth of the distance L0 and is less than the distance L0, i.e., ⅛ LO<axial distance<LO.
Another aspect of the invention pertains to a percussive rock drill which comprises a drill bit attached to a drill rod by a thread joint. The drill bit includes an integral skirt and defines a longitudinal center line. The bit includes an axial front face having rock crushing elements, at least one channel for conducting a flush medium, a recess extending forwardly by an axial distance L0 from a rear end face of the skirt. A female thread formed in the recess, and an external surface comprising a conical portion which extends rearwardly from a larger diameter end thereof to a smaller diameter end thereof. The larger diameter end is spaced by an axial distance which is greater than one-eighth of the distance L0 and less than the distance L0.
The objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment thereof in connection with the accompanying drawing in which like numerals designate like elements, and in which:
The present invention relates to a drill bit 10 for percussive rock drilling. A first drill rod 11 is shown in
The drill rod 11 and thereby the thread joint include at least one central channel 14 for transport of flush medium, such as water (see
As mentioned above, damage in the form of erosion or cavitation corrosion sometimes arises on the rod surface, e.g., at the exposed surface 16 in
The dimensions of the drill bit are chosen according to the following equation foremost with reference to FIGS. 1-4:
1<A3/A2<1.6
where A2 is an imaginary area seen in a radial plane (i.e., a plane oriented perpendicular to the axial center line CL of the joint), the area A2 being bordered on the outside by the largest diameter D0 of the drill bit (corresponding to the diameter of the hole being drilled) and bordered on the inside by the outer diameter D2 of the skirt 13 taken at an axial distance L2 from the end face 26 (L2 to be described below). That area A2 is represented by cross-hatching on the right-hand side of
The area A3 is an imaginary area seen in a radial plane, the area A3 being bordered on the inside by the smallest diameter D3 of the recess 23 (corresponding to the outer diameter of the non-threaded cylindrical portion 16 of the drill rod 11) and bordered on the outside by the largest diameter D0. The area A3 is shown cross-hatched on the left side of
The reason for using the skirt diameter D2 at a distance L2 from the end face 26 in order to make the above calculations is to ensure that the diameter measurement is not influenced by the chamfer C that is commonly formed at the rear end of the skirt (see
The axial distance L2 is measured parallel with the center line CL from the end face 26 to a point P defined by a point of intersection between the external surface 28 of the skirt and an imaginary line L. The line L extends at a 45° angle (β) from the intersection P1 of the second end face 26 of the skirt 13 and the internal diameter D3, as illustrated in
The length L1 of the conical portion 15 of the skirt is greater than one-eighth of the depth L0 of the recess but smaller than the distance L0 of the depth of the recess, i.e., ⅛ L0<L1<L0. An imaginary apex of the conical portion 15 is located on the center line CL at an axial distance from the end face 26, which distance being greater than a quarter of the depth L0 of the recess. The greatest diameter DO of the drill bit lies within the interval of 30 to 50 mm. Drill bits of this magnitude are connected to relatively slender drill rods, which can break due to the circumferential cavitation notch discussed earlier.
The dimensions of the drill bit also fulfill the condition:
More preferably, the drill bit dimensions fulfill the condition:
At the end face 26 the amenable flow area where flushing water passes between the bore wall and the skirt is up to 60% greater than the corresponding area at the greatest diameter D0, according to the invention.
The external surface 28 of the skirt 13 comprises, in the shown embodiment of a cylindrical external surface 12 and the conical portion 15. By making the forward portion 12 of the external surface 28 of cylindrical shape, rather than conical, the wall thickness of the drill bit in the region of the abutment surfaces 21 and 25 will be relatively large, which provides a more load-resistant drill bit. The conical portion 15 forms an angle α with the center line CL of the drill bit. The angle α is greater than zero and maximum 15°, i.e. 0<α≦15°, preferably between 2 and 5°. The condition for the angle α is as follows:
tan α=(D1−D2)/2/(L1−L2), (note: tan 0°=0 and tan 15°≈0.27)
where L1 is the length of the conical portion 15, preferably about half of the depth L0 of the recess, and where L2=h=(D2−D3)/2, so as not to take the bevel C at the end face 26 into consideration.
D3 corresponds to the internal diameter that is limited by the thread tops in the drill bit. L2 can be determined from the line L extending 45° from the point of intersection between the end face 26 of the skirt and the internal diameter D3, as illustrated in
The chosen dimensions give relatively small geometrical transitions between parts 11 and 10 to diminish the extent of cavitation, such that the influence on the extension joint from cuttings and aggressive water is reduced. The flush medium may alternatively consist of a mixture of air and water.
The present invention consequently relates to a drill bit intended only for percussive rock drilling, preferably top hammer drilling. The drill bit 10 is formed such to reduce origin of cavitation at percussive drilling by guiding the flush medium in direction towards the rod 11.
Although the present invention has been described in connection with preferred embodiments thereof, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that additions, deletions, modifications, and substitutions not specifically described may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0402026 | Aug 2004 | SE | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060060388 A1 | Mar 2006 | US |