The present invention relates to a rotary indexing table having a plate and at least two motors for driving the plate to make a rotational movement.
Rotary indexing tables are widely used, inter alia in assembly technology and automation technology. They usually have a turntable which is arranged vertically or also horizontally and on which a workpiece can be spanned to carry out machining work/assembly steps at the workpiece in different positions or at the rotating workpiece. Since larger and larger workpieces are today machined in an automated manner, there is a need for reliable rotary indexing tables which can cope with the strains which occur in so doing.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a rotary indexing table which can also reliably cope with large loads and can position them precisely. In addition, the rotary indexing table should be able to be used flexibly.
This object is satisfied by a rotary indexing table having the features of claim 1.
As already initially mentioned, the rotary indexing table in accordance with the invention has a plate and at least two motors for driving the plate to make a rotational movement. The motors are drive-operatively connected to the plate via at least one barrel cam. The barrel cam has a driving groove into which drivers engage which are associated with the plate. The driving groove has a constant gradient.
In other words, the rotary indexing table in accordance with the invention utilizes at least two motors in order also to ensure a reliable rotational movement of the turntable under large strains. Any desired number of motors can generally be provided to take account of the respective application profile present. The drive can take place directly or indirectly. An indirect drive is to be understood as the interposition of a transmission between the respective motor and the barrel cam.
The transmission of the driving torque of the at least two motors to the plate takes place in a generally known manner via at least one barrel cam, i.e. the plate has drivers which engage into the driving groove of the barrel cam so that, on a rotation of the barrel cam, a rotational movement of the plate is generated (driving groove/driver coupling). As already stated above with respect to the motors, the number of barrel cams can likewise be selected in accordance with the respective conditions present.
To be able to use the rotary indexing table as flexibly as possible, i.e. to be able to adapt the rotational movement of the turntable to the respective demands, the driving groove has a constant gradient. A stepped operation of the plate is thus not generated by a latching step—a section of the driving groove without gradient—but rather by a corresponding control of the drive power of the motors. A barrel cam having a driving groove with a constant gradient can as a rule be manufactured less expensively than barrel cams having a varying gradient in which the movement of the turntable is “coded” by the shape of the driving groove and the driving torque provided to the barrel cam is substantially constant in time.
The rotary indexing table in accordance with the invention having any desired number of motors (at least two) and any desired number of barrel cams (at least one) can be used with high performance and flexibly. The motors and/or barrel cams can in particular be designed as modular components to lower the costs. No replacement of mechanical parts (barrel cams) is necessary on a change of the demand profile on the movement of the turntable due to the provision of a driving groove with a constant gradient. Only the control of the motors has to be matched.
Further advantageous embodiments of the invention are described in the description, in the drawings and in the dependent claims.
In accordance with an advantageous embodiment of the rotary indexing table in accordance with the invention, it has at least one further barrel cam having a driving groove into which the drivers of the plate engage, wherein a motor is drive-operatively associated with the barrel cam and the further barrel cam. In other words, in this embodiment, at least two barrel cams are provided which are each driven by at least one motor.
The described embodiment reduces the forces acting on the respective driving groove or drivers—compared with embodiments having only one barrel cam—and thus allows a more efficient torque transmission. In addition, the wear of the named components of the drive of the plate is reduced.
The most varied combinations of motors and barrel cams can generally be realized. Provision can, for example, also be made to associate two motors with at least one of the barrel cams, but in particular with each barrel cam.
A variant of the rotary indexing table in accordance with the invention of particularly simple design provides that the barrel cam and the motor respectively associated with it are arranged coaxially. If two motors are associated with a barrel cam, both motors can also be arranged coaxially to the barrel cam.
The motors are preferably asynchronous motors which are in particular connected to one another such that performance differences or performance fluctuations of the asynchronous motors are automatically compensated. Such an automatic compensation can be realized in a simple manner in that the asynchronous motors are connected in parallel and can be controlled by a common control device. The control device is in particular a single amplifier which supplies the motors with electric energy.
The above-described embodiments allow a simpler synchronization of the motors to avoid an unwanted tensioning of the drive components of the rotary indexing table.
It is of advantage for specific uses of the rotary indexing table in accordance with the invention if at least one of the motors is a torque motor which directly drives the barrel cam. A torque motor is—in simplified terms—a direct drive without a transmission with a relatively high driving torque and a relatively small driving speed in comparison with usual electric motors. Since transmissions, which can only be built with small clearance at high cost, are omitted, the manufacturing costs for such a rotary indexing table fall. In addition, inter alia, higher dynamics of the rotary indexing table and a higher precision of the turntable positioning are achieved.
The barrel cam can preferably be driven by two torque motors which are each arranged at a respective one of the end faces of the barrel cam coaxially to the barrel cam.
In accordance with a further development of the embodiments of the rotary indexing table, the barrel cam has a prolongation which substantially has the diameter of the barrel cam and which has the functional components of the torque motor. The drive of the barrel cam thus does not take place via a drive shaft of the barrel cam, but the barrel cam itself is driven. Functional components of the torque motor are those elements which are required for an operation of the motor, such as coils and magnets. In other words, this embodiment provides that the barrel cam with a section—which is preferably designed without a driving groove—itself forms an element of the motor, whereby the motor is particularly efficient and generates a high torque. The named barrel cam section is thus the rotor of the torque motor which is integrally connected to the section of the barrel cam provided with the driving groove.
The above-described embodiments do not preclude that different types of motors (synchronous motors, asynchronous motors, torque motors) are combined with one another to allow a drive of the rotary indexing table adapted to the respective situation. The number of motors and of barrel cams is generally arbitrary to the extent that at least two motors and one barrel cam are provided. Any desired number of motors can respectively be associated with the barrel cam or with the barrel cams.
The invention furthermore relates to a method of operating a rotary indexing table having at least two motors.
The problem occurs with such rotary indexing tables that the motors have to be synchronized with one another to avoid tensions of the components of the drive of the rotary indexing table.
It is thus a further object of the invention to provide a method which allows a reliable operation of a rotary indexing table of the aforesaid kind.
This object is satisfied by a method having the features of claim 11 or of claim 12.
The first approach variant relates to rotary indexing tables which have two or more asynchronous motors. In accordance with the invention, the asynchronous motors have a common working current applied by a common control device, in particular an amplifier, so that an equal power output of the asynchronous motors is automatically adopted.
The fact is made use of in this respect that with asynchronous motors which are connected in parallel and which are associated with a single amplifier, an automatic compensation of the power output takes place between the motors. A complex control circuit is therefore not required.
The second approach variant is not restricted to specific types of motors. In accordance with the invention, a respective separate motor is associated with the motors, with data being transmitted from one of the control devices to the other control device in order to adapt a control of the motor associated with the other control device using the data. This variant thus provides a master/slave configuration in which a control device takes over a master function. It controls a primary motor which is responsible for the positioning of the turntable. The primary control device transmits data to a secondary control unit which is associated with a secondary motor. The secondary control unit reacts on the basis of these data and controls the secondary motor such that it applies assisting driving torque. In figurative terms, the primary motor “pulls”, while the secondary motor additionally “pushes”. It is understood that a plurality of secondary control units/secondary motors can be provided. A plurality of secondary motors can also be controlled by a common secondary control unit.
The invention will be described in the following purely by way of example with reference to advantageous embodiments and to the drawings. There are shown:
a to 1c an embodiment of the rotary indexing table in accordance with the invention;
a and 2b a further embodiment of the rotary indexing table in accordance with the invention;
b substantially shows the embodiment of
As can be seen from
The motors 14 and the barrel cams 22 are generally arranged coaxially. In the present embodiment, however, a transmission (not shown) is interposed to step down a drive speed of the motors 14 (indirect drive).
Any kind of motors can generally be used. The use of asynchronous motors is associated with the advantage that their synchronization can be realized comparatively simply. The two motors 14 are for this purpose connected in parallel and supplied with current by a common amplifier (not shown). An equal power output of the two motors is automatically adopted in this arrangement due to the properties inherent to asynchronous motors which thus contribute “with equal priority” and to an equal extent to the drive of the turntable 12.
a shows a further embodiment 10′ of the rotary indexing table in a plan view. The turntable 12 in this embodiment has a smaller central opening 16 than in the embodiment shown in
The rotary indexing table 10′ is also driven by two motors 14. They are, however, not arranged at different sides of the rotary indexing table 10′ (anti-parallel arrangement, see
The rotary indexing table 10′ substantially has a similar structure to the rotary indexing table 10 of
b shows the rotary indexing table 10′ in a vertical section. The sectional view shows that the axes of rotation RM of the motors 14 are admittedly arranged at the same level in the rotary indexing table 10, but lie beneath the plane spanned by the axes of rotation RK of the barrel cams 22.
A further special feature of the rotary indexing table 10 is a plate 32 which is present in addition to the turntable 12 and which is fixedly fastened to a central element 34 which is in turn fixedly connected to a housing 36 of the rotary indexing table 10′. The plate 32 thus does not move on operation of the rotary indexing table 10′. Assembly devices or machining tools can, for example, be arranged on it to manipulate or machine the workpieces arranged on the turntable 12.
A further embodiment 10′ of the rotary indexing table is shown in
The extension sections A and the section B substantially have the same diameter. A large driving torque can thereby be provided in a simple manner. It moreover simplifies the manufacture of the barrel cam 22′. The above-described type of drive represents the “most direct” form of a direct drive of the barrel cam 22′. Drive losses and positioning inaccuracies are minimized in an advantageous manner by the omission of interposed components.
A synchronized control of the motors 14 can in particular be effected by a master/slave configuration in variants of the rotary indexing table 10, 10′. 10″, 10′″ in which no asynchronous motors connected in parallel are used for the automatic synchronization. This provides that a separate control device (not shown) is associated with each motor 14. One of the control devices takes over the master function, i.e. it controls a primary motor 14 which is responsible for the movement profile of the turntable 12. The further motor or motors 14 (slave(s)) serve for the assistance of the primary motor 14. To synchronize their assisting power with the drive power of the primary motor, the control devices associated with the secondary motors 14 are supplied with data which the primary control device outputs. The secondary drive units (slaves) are thus dependent on the instructions of the primary unit (master). This hierarchical structure facilitates the control and ensures a precise control of the turntable 12.
As already stated, the rotary indexing table 10, 10′, 10″, 10′″ can be operated by at least two asynchronous motors 14′.
The parallel connection of the motors 14′ results in an automatic adaptation of their power output. The motors 14′ are thus coupled in a compulsory manner. Complex apparatus and special adaptations for the synchronization of the motors 14′ are therefore omitted.
To monitor the status of the system, a position encoder G is provided which monitors the location of a drive shaft of one of the motors 14′ and transmits the measured data to the amplifier 44. The data are used there to control and optionally adapt the drive power of the motors 14′. As already explained above, only the monitoring of one of the motors 14′ is necessary to obtain reliable information on the drive of the rotary indexing table 10, 10′, 10″, 10′″ due to the automatic synchronization of the motors 14′ inherent to the parallel connection of the motors 14′.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 049 618.1 | Oct 2009 | DE | national |
20 2009 014 041.5 | Oct 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/006321 | 10/15/2010 | WO | 00 | 6/25/2012 |