The present invention claims the benefit of priority to German Patent Application No. 102018113966.7 filed Jun. 12, 2018. The entire contents of the foregoing patent application is incorporated by reference herein.
This invention relates to a bending machine with a variable roller or shaft geometry, particularly a roller sheet metal bending machine with at least three rollers.
The invention relates to a bending machine, particularly a round bending machine, according to the preamble of claim 1.
The bending of large sheet metals into molding parts is typically carried out with sheet metal bending machines, to which a sheet metal is supplied from one side, and which brings the sheet metal as exactly as possible into the desired shape by applying a force. The degree of deformation is determined both, by the applied force, and by the parameters of the sheet metal.
Typically, but not necessarily, the temperature of a supplied sheet metal is essentially the ambient temperature, i.e., the sheet bending process is cold molding. Even if the following embodiments of the invention are based on thus a cold sheet metal, the described method and the corresponding control system should not be limited to this. The described method can also be used for heated or hot sheet metal.
From the prior art, various presses are known for bending sheet metal, for example, press brakes, as well as embossing machines and so-called round bending machines, and are used for forming sheet metal into cylindrical or conical tubes, or corresponding tube segments.
The round bending machines described here work according to the known round-rolling method, and have at least three rollers. The sheet metal to be bent can be clamped between two rollers, an upper roller and a lower roller, one of which is motor-driven, so that a clamped sheet between these rollers can be moved by rotating the rollers. To bend the sheet metal, a bending force is applied to the sheet metal by another roller, a side roller. Depending on the geometrical arrangement of the rollers and the properties of the sheet metal, the sheet metal can be moved between the rollers of the bending machine and over the side roller, using at least one driven roller, so that the sheet metal is bent.
In an alternative embodiment, the machine can only comprise the upper roller and a first and second side roller. A sheet to be bent is then guided through the first side roller, which can also be called the auxiliary roller, below the upper roller and then over the second side roller, wherein the second side roller is positioned so that the sheet metal is bent. The propulsion of the sheet metal can be designed as needed. The invention described below is independent of whether the bending machine comprises an upper and/or lower roller of the machine. It can be used both, in a bending machine comprising an upper and lower roller, or in a machine comprising either one upper or lower roller.
Without limiting the generality, the invention is described below, based on an embodiment of a bending machine comprising an upper and a lower roller.
The degree of deformation during a bending process depends on the plurality of parameters. First, the properties of the sheet metal to be bent, such as sheet metal thickness, deformability, and viscosity, have a significant influence on the radius of the bent sheet metal. Second, the geometry of the rollers, including the geometric dimensions of the rollers arranged in the bending direction determine even the smallest possible bending radius during the bending process. The theoretically smallest possible bending radius is typically the diameter of the upper roller or the roller around whose radius the sheet metal is bent. In order to achieve this, the sheet to be bent must be positioned in such a way that it is guided as closely as possible to the corresponding roller, for example, when the sheet is bent around the radius of the upper roller. Consequently, the geometry of the rollers must be adapted to each other according to the desired bending radius and the thickness of the sheet metal.
The geometry of the rollers on such a bending machine, particularly the relative arrangement of the rollers in relation to each other, is determined by the holder of the rollers. In conventional roller arrangements, a side roller can be held by a rocker arm, one end fixed in the girder of a bending machine, and the other end supported by a hydraulic cylinder. The position of the rocker arm and thus the position of the side roller held by it can be changed using the position of the hydraulic cylinder. Instead of a hydraulic cylinder, another actuator, for example, a threaded rod can be used. Such rolling machines have the disadvantage, however, that the movable side roller can only be moved within strict limits since one end of the rocker arm is fixed. Replacing the side roller, or changing the position of the fixed rocker arm, requires considerable effort.
This problem is solved by a bending machine, according to claim 1; preferable designs are indicated in the dependent claims.
The following is a description of such a bending machine based on the figures, in which:
The figures show a bending machine or parts of it in a schematic representation. Therefore, the figures are not fully scaled, nor do they show all the details of a typical bending machine. Particularly, only the fundamental machine members are shown for illustration purposes.
The bending machine is typically set up so that the distance between the upper and lower rollers is variable in order to adapt the distance between these two rollers to the thickness of the sheet, i.e., at least one roller can be moved, so that the sheet metal can be clamped between these two rollers and moved by rotating the rollers.
The three points necessary for bending the sheet metal are realized in the embodiment described here, by the upper and lower roller (2, 3), and the side roller. The bending lever adjusts itself when the side roller (4) is adjusted, depending on the lower roller pressure set between the upper and lower rollers. In the alternative embodiment mentioned above, the three necessary points for bending are realized with the first and second side roller and the upper roller
The side roller (4) is held by least one of its two ends of the rocker arm (5). This holder of the side roller (4) in the rocker arm (5) can be a bearing, which allows the rotation of the side roller (4), i.e., the side roller is mounted in a corresponding bearing, i.e., a sliding, a ball or a roller bearing.
The rocker arm 5 is held at its first end 5a to a supporting member and fixed at its second end 5b pivotable and releasable in relation to the position of the upper roller, as described below and with reference to
The supporting member (6) supports the rocker arm (5) at its first ending. In this embodiment, the supporting member (6) is rotatably attached to the rocker arm (5) and at its other end is also pivotably mounted, for example, with a bolt connection, wherein the bolt simultaneously forms the axis of rotation. The supporting member is designed to be movable in its length so that the supporting member (6) can rotate or pivot the rocker arm (5) around the (working) bolt to the second end of the rocker. In one embodiment, the supporting member can be a hydraulic cylinder or similar, for example, a threaded rod, so that the position of the rocker arm (5) can be adjusted with the supporting member (6). In this way, the position of the rocker arm (5) and therefore the position of the side roller (4), held by the rocker arm (5), can be pivoted in such a way that the position of the side roller (4) can be adjusted relative to the upper and lower rollers.
The geometrical arrangement of the rollers can be changed in this way, i.e., the side roller (4) can be moved closer to the upper and lower rollers (2, 3) so that a small bending radius can be set. Alternatively, the rocker arm (5) can be pivoted, so that the side roller is positioned further away from the upper and lower rollers to allow a larger bending radius.
The enlargement (A) in
The rocker arm (5) can be pivoted by adjusting the length of the supporting member (6), wherein the rocker arm rotates around the bolt (7) at the other end (5b). The bolt (7) is guided through a bore in the rocker arm (5) and engages in a girder of the bending machine (1), which absorbs the force transmitted by the bolt (7) and therefore carries the rocker arm (5), and the side roller (4).
The rocker arm (5) has a bore (8a) to receive an exchange bolt (10), not shown here, and the girder of the bending machine (1) has a corresponding bore (8b). These two bores are designed so that an exchange bolt is guided through bore (8a) into the bore (8b) to absorb the force of the rocker arm (5). The force to be absorbed is essentially the weight force, which is to be temporarily absorbed during the pivoting process described below, wherein during the pivoting process the bending machine is not operated in a productive sense. The exchange bolt (10) does not, therefore, have to absorb the forces that occur during the bending process, but only the weight forces, and can, therefore, be smaller scaled.
Furthermore, the girder of the bending machine, which absorbs the forces of the (working) bolt (7), and the exchange bolt, has a further bore (9) which is intended to receive the (working) bolt (7).
In the following, the pivoting of the rocker arm (5) is described, which means that the rocker arm (5) is finally held by the (working) bolt (7) in the bore (9).
In the next pivoting step, see
As soon as the exchange bolt (10) has been placed, the bolt (7) can be removed, so that only the exchange bolt (5) bears the rocker arm (10), which can be rotatably or pivotably mounted. In an advantageous embodiment, the exchange bolt can be smaller, especially with a smaller diameter, since it only has to carry the weight of the rocker arm (5) together with the side roller (4) mounted in it.
As shown in
The exchange bolt (10) can be removed as soon as the bolt (7) is placed. Then the rocker arm (5) can be rotated or pivoted around the bolt (7). The rocker arm (5) is therefore pivoted from the second to a third position and can be rotated or pivoted.
In the case shown, the rocker arm (5) is located closer to the upper and lower rollers of the bending machine because the bore (9) in the girder is located closer to the upper and lower rollers of the bending machine.
If the rocker arm (5) is now pivoted further by suitably adjusting the supporting member (6) when the (working) bolt (7) is placed in the bore (9), see
In this way, the position of the rocker arm (5) and the side roller (4) held in it can be changed, so that the arrangement of the side roller in relation to the upper and lower roller can be changed and adjusted according to the requirements. The force for pivoting and supporting the rocker arm (5) and the side roller (4) is applied via the supporting member (6) and the exchange bolt (10), so that during the pivoting of the side roller (4) it does not have to be held or lifted by means of a crane or similar. When pivoting, only the (working) bolt (7) and the exchange bolt (10) have to be placed at the respective end of the side roller, which can be done manually or at least with considerably less effort.
In this way, the rocker arm (5) is pivoted from the first position, see
The figures show a design in which the side roller (4) can be arranged in two positions by means of the (working) bolt. In further designs, the girder of the bending machine can comprise further bores (8b, 9) to receive the exchange bolt as well as the (working) bolt (7), so that the rocker arm (5) can be pivoted into further positions.
In the designs described above, in order to change the geometrical arrangement of the side roller (4), the rocker arm is pivoted by means of the supporting member into an intermediate position, in which the rocker arm is held by means of an exchange bolt (10), and from there it is pivoted again by means of the supporting member into the second position, in which the rocker arm is then positioned again with the working bolt (7). In this way, the rocker arm (5) can be positioned in a first, or alternatively, in a second position. In further alternative embodiments, the rocker arm can be moved to the second position by other suitable means, so that it can be positioned there. In alternative embodiments, the rocker arm can also be lifted into the second position by means of a crane. Likewise, not only the girder of the bending machine but also the rocker arm itself can comprise more than one receiver for a working bolt with which the rocker arm can be positioned.
This bending machine (1) has an upper roller (2), which is positioned like the ones described before. Furthermore, the machine comprises two further rollers (3, 4), which are symmetrically arranged here and held in a respective rocker arm (5). One end (5a) of each rocker arm is fixed by a movable supporting member (6), which is shown in the figure as a hydraulic cylinder. With the other end (5b), the rocker arm (5) can be positioned in the first position and second position, wherein a rocker arm with the working bolt (7) is positioned in the first position, but can be released, i.e., fixed in the first bore.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2018 113 966.7 | Jun 2018 | DE | national |