The present invention relates generally to the manufacture of crankshafts and more particularly to systems and methods for hardening crankshaft bearings using induction heating equipment.
The following United States patents are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties as background information: Sorensen U.S. Pat. No. 4,123,644; Griebel U.S. Pat. No. 5,451,749; Storm U.S. Pat. No. 6,013,904; Loveless U.S. Pat. No. 6,274,857; Zahn U.S. Pat. No. 6,555,800; and Schulte U.S. Pat. No. 6,638,379.
In the manufacture of crankshafts for internal combustion engines, the various bearing surfaces of the crankshaft are hardened using controlled thermal processing. This hardening typically involves precise heating using induction heating equipment in conjunction with quenching, where the process parameters are fine tuned according to the crankshaft dimensions and material to provide a controlled, repeatable, time-temperature treatment profile to harden the critical contact surfaces of the pin and main bearings. This thermal processing, however, may cause bending or other dimensional distortion, in which case the hardened crankshafts must undergo straightening in order to meet manufacturing specifications. This post-hardening straightening is undesirable, as it adds to production costs. In addition, straightening reduces the fatigue limit of the crankshafts. Lowered fatigue limits, in turn, cause engine designers to sacrifice power and/or weight in a given design. Thus, improved crankshaft bearing hardening techniques and systems are desired by which the need for post-hardening straightening can be reduced or eliminated.
One or more aspects of the invention are now summarized to facilitate a basic understanding of the invention, wherein this summary is not an extensive overview of the invention, and is intended neither to identify certain elements of the invention, nor to delineate the scope thereof. The primary purpose of the summary, rather, is to present some concepts of the invention in a simplified form prior to the more detailed description that is presented hereinafter. The present invention relates to methods and apparatus for thermal treatment of crankshaft bearings to harden the surfaces thereof while mitigating the distortion caused by the hardening process. The various aspects of the invention may find particular utility in the manufacture of automotive or other crankshafts for use in internal combustion engines by which the need for post-hardening straightening may be mitigated, thereby facilitating the production of lighter crankshafts and/or crankshafts with higher power ratings, while reducing the amount of manufacturing processing and cost compared with conventional crankshaft hardening techniques.
In accordance with one or more aspects of the invention, a system is provided for controlling the TIR (total indicated reading or total indicator run out) of an internal combustion engine crankshaft, which is comprised of first and second bearing hardening stations and a TIR measurement station with one or more probes and associated transducers for measuring the crankshaft TIR after processing in the first hardening station. The individual hardening stations include an induction heating and quenching system for hardening one or more selected bearings of a crankshaft, where the first hardening station operates to inductively harden a first bearing using a first power profile or a first group of bearings using a first set of power profiles. The first station also controls quench flow rate and inductor counter balancing according to corresponding quench flow and counter balance profiles or sets thereof. Following hardening of the first bearing(s), the TIR is measured at the TIR station and a second bearing or a second group of bearings is then hardened according to a second power profile or set of profiles, as well as to quench flow and counter balance profiles or profile sets. The system may be thus used for hardening pin and/or main bearings where the second hardening process adapts according to the TIR measurements so as to improve final crankshaft TIR.
The system, moreover, includes a feedback control element to selectively adjust the second power profile, the second quench flow profile, and/or the second counter balance profile based on the measured TIR. In one embodiment, the nominal power, quench, and/or counter balance profiles used in the induction hardening process are diagnostically generated, with selective modification or adjustment of the second profile(s) based on the measured TIR. In one preferred implementation, the measured TIR is compared with a threshold or acceptance value, for example, a maximum manufacturing specification for acceptable finished crankshaft TIR. If the measured TIR exceeds this threshold, the profile(s) for the second group of bearings is increased by an amount related to the measured TIR value so as to counteract the bending effects of the first hardening process. In this manner, the invention may be advantageously employed to bring the crankshaft TIR back within the allowed TIR range by operation of the second bearing hardening process to reduce the likelihood that post-bearing hardening straightening processing will be needed. In this regard, the bearings processed in the first and second hardening operations may be preferably selected from any number of pin bearings and/or main bearings of a particular crankshaft design according to predetermined trends with respect to the affect of the hardening on the crankshaft TIR such that hardening of the first bearing(s) tends to cause bending of the crankshaft in a first general direction and hardening of the second bearing(s) tends to bend the crankshaft in a generally opposite direction. Through this controlled processing using selective adaptation of the second hardening process, the system generally operates to control the crankshaft TIR and thereby reduce or eliminate the need for additional post-hardening straightening operations and the costs and performance degradation associated therewith. Furthermore, the system may be fully automated including robotic transfer apparatus or other means by which the crankshafts are automatically transferred from the first bearing hardening station to the TIR station after processing at the first bearing hardening station, and then to the second bearing hardening station after the crankshaft TIR is measured.
Further aspects of the invention provide an induction hardening system that includes a first bearing hardening station with an induction heating and quench system for hardening a first bearing or group of bearings of a crankshaft using first power, quench flow, and counter balance profiles or groups of profiles. The system also includes a TIR station that operates to measure the crankshaft TIR after the first hardening processing, as well as a second bearing hardening station with an induction heating and quench system for hardening a second bearing or group of bearings. The second station uses second power, quench, and counter balance profiles (or a second group of such profiles) and includes a controller that receives the measured TIR and selectively adjusts one or more of the second profile(s) in accordance therewith. In one implementation, the controller adjusts the second profile(s) if the measured TIR is greater than a predetermined acceptance value, and otherwise uses the unmodified second profile(s). The induction hardening system may further comprise an operator tunnel or corridor structure proximate at least one of the bearing hardening stations and a wall separating the corridor from the bearing hardening operations with one or more windows allowing an operator to view processing of crankshafts within the at least one bearing hardening station from a short distance, such as about four feet or less.
Still further aspects of the invention involve methods for induction hardening at least two centrifugal bearing surfaces of a crankshaft, whether pin bearings and/or main bearings. The methods comprise induction hardening at least a first bearing of a crankshaft, measuring a crankshaft TIR after induction hardening the first bearing, determining a second power, quench flow, and/or counter balance profile at least partially according to the measured crankshaft TIR, and induction hardening at least a second bearing of the crankshaft using the second profile. In one possible embodiment, the determination of the second profile includes selecting a second predefined profile if the measured crankshaft TIR is less than or equal to a predetermined acceptance value, and adjusting the second predefined profile if the measured crankshaft TIR is greater than the predetermined acceptance value. In this case, the adjustment of the second profile may comprise increasing a power, quench flow, or counter balance level associated with the second predefined profile based at least in part on the measured crankshaft TIR value if the measured crankshaft TIR is greater than the predetermined acceptance value. The methods, moreover, may include automatically transferring the crankshaft from the first bearing hardening station to the TIR station after induction hardening the first bearing, and automatically transferring the crankshaft from the TIR station to the second bearing hardening station after measuring the crankshaft TIR.
The following description and drawings set forth certain illustrative implementations of the invention in detail, which are indicative of several exemplary ways in which the principles of the invention may be carried out. The illustrated examples, however, are not exhaustive of the many possible embodiments of the invention. Other objects, advantages and novel features of the invention will be appreciated from the following detailed description of the invention when considered in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
Referring now to the figures, several embodiments or implementations of the present invention are hereinafter described in conjunction with the drawings, wherein like reference numerals are used to refer to like elements throughout. The invention provides methods and systems for selectively adjusting induction hardening power, quench flow, and/or counter balance profiles for a second bearing or group of bearings based upon a crankshaft TIR measured after hardening of a first bearing or bearings, and may be successfully implemented in the manufacture of crankshafts for automotive or other internal combustion engines having any number of centrifugal or orbiting pin bearings and any number of axial main bearings. Thus while illustrated and described hereinafter in the context of manufacturing an exemplary crankshaft with five axial main bearings and four off-axis pin bearings, the invention is generally applicable to production and processing of any number of different crankshaft designs. Furthermore, the invention finds utility in association with any form of inductive bearing hardening systems having induction heating components and quenching components, and may easily be automated to facilitate highly repeatable TIR results with reduced overall crankshaft distortion to reduce or eliminate straightening operations and production costs and to allow greater design flexibility with respect to crankshaft fatigue limits and weight.
Referring initially to
Referring now to
As shown in
In one possible example, a first group is selected to include the inner-most pin bearings P2 and P3, wherein the induction hardening thereof tends to cause crankshaft distortion in a first direction. In this example, the remaining two pin bearings P1 and P4 (the outer pins) are hardened as a second group in the second station 30, where the hardening of this exemplary second group of bearings tends to distort the crankshaft 12 in a second generally opposite direction. Consequently, the hardening of the second group will tend to counteract the distortion effects caused by hardening the first group, whereby the overall pin hardening process is less likely to yield distorted crankshafts 12 that require extra straightening steps. Furthermore, the intervening TIR measurement at station 40 allows selective adjustment of the power, quench flow rate, and/or counter balance levels of the profile(s) used in the second station 30 so as to controllably affect the counter bending, whereby the invention can be used to tailor the final TIR to be within allowable tolerance limits while providing the desired tempering of the crankshaft bearing surfaces. Moreover, this concept can be extended to processing in more than two groups, with one or more intervening TIR measurements and correlated adjustment of post-measurement power, quench flow rate, and/or counter balance profiles.
Referring also to
Referring now to
The nominal or default power, quench, and counter balance profiles used for the individual bearing hardening processes are preferably generated diagnostically to tailor the desired tempered metallurgical characteristics around the total circumference of each of the hardened bearing surfaces. As shown in
The corresponding hardening station controls 24, 34 provide the necessary control signaling and/or messaging to coordinate and control the rotation of the shaft 12 and the corresponding lateral and vertical translation of the inductor structure 84, along with controlling the operation of the power source 80 and hence the inductive heating of the bearing, quench valve controls 82 for controlling the quench hardening of the treated bearing, and counter balance controls 83 to control counter balance force provided to the inductor structure 84. Quenching liquid is directed into the inductor assembly via liquid supply lines 96a and 96b under control of quench valve controls 82 and appropriate valves, supply lines, and nozzles (not shown) to propel the quench fluid against the bearing after the conductor 90 has inductively heated the surface thereof. In addition, the structure provides inlet and outlet fluid couplings 88a and 88b, respectively, to allow coolant liquid to flow through the hollow conductor 90, whereby both coolant and electrical power are directed to the inductor 90. Because the treated pin bearing P is off-axis with respect to the main bearing axis 12a in the illustrated example, the treatment system is operably mounted for controlled movement of the structure 84 in the X and Y directions by suitable means (not shown), such that as the pin bearing P orbits in the path direction indicated by arrow 94, the structure 84 follows the orbital pin bearing movement in concert with the support mechanism that rotates the crankshaft 12 about the main bearing axis 12a. In addition, the movable mounting structure supporting the inductor structure 84 preferably includes counter balancing apparatus operated according to the controls 83 to maintain the gapped relationship of the pin bearing P and the structure 84 via the shoes 92 without exerting undue force on the surface of the treated bearing P. Treatment apparatus for the axial main bearings M, of course, does not require such moving mounting structures, wherein a hardening station may be equipped with one or more moving inductor mountings for hardening pin bearings and/or one or more non-moving inductor mounts for treatment of main bearings.
The electrical power is provided to the conductor 90 for inductively heating the illustrated pin bearing P from the power source 80 to implement a power profile, such as a waveform current profile tailored to the desired thermal treatment, which in combination with the quenching, achieves the desired tempering of the treated bearing. In this regard, the power profile, quenching, and timing of the process are preferably controlled to provide automatic tempering of the treated bearing. In the first station 20, the heating and quench system 22 hardens at least a first bearing using a given first power profile, wherein multiple profiles can be used to harden multiple corresponding bearings if the first set includes more than one bearing.
The profiles, moreover, may be diagnostically generated prepatory to the full-scale manufacturing process into which the invention may be incorporated. One suitable diagnostic profiling technique is illustrated in co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/555,789, filed on Nov. 2, 2006, owned by the assignee of the present invention, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein. In this example, a profile is created for the power level, quench fluid flow level, and counter balance force level at each 10° arcuate increment over the entire 3600 span of the pin bearing P, and a separate set of such profiles is created for each treated bearing of the crankshaft 12. The profiles may be stored and used by the corresponding station controls 24, 34 in any suitable form or location, such as a look up table stored in memory internal to, or otherwise accessible by, the controls 24, 34, wherein the power source 80, quench valve controls 82, and counter balance controls 83 operate to set the levels of the applied power signals, the amount of quench fluid flow, and counter balance force based on the lookup table profile entries in concert with the rotation of the processed shaft 12. In this manner, the power, quench, and counter balance levels are set to the profiled values corresponding to the specific angular segments of the treated pin bearing P as the crankshaft 12 is rotated about axis 12a.
For diagnostically determining the nominal power, quench, and counter balance profiles, prior to a production run, a particular bearing surface is heated and quenched according to a default set of profiles, and the resulting hardened surface of the test shaft 12 is analyzed metallurgically in a laboratory to determine the metallurgical characteristics around the bearing surface. To the extent that the treated surface does not have the desired characteristics at all locations, one or more of the profiles are modified or adjusted. This process may be iterated one or more times for each bearing surface to derive a nominal set of profiles for production, which are thus diagnostically determined, and which are stored in or otherwise accessible by the controls 24, 34. In the illustrated example, therefore, the first station controls 24 will store diagnostically generated profiles for the inner pin bearings P2 and P3 of the first set, and the second station controls 34 will employ diagnostically generated profiles (selectively adjusted) for the set of outer pins P1 and P4.
Referring now to
The above examples are merely illustrative of several possible embodiments of various aspects of the present invention, wherein equivalent alterations and/or modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon reading and understanding this specification and the annexed drawings. In particular regard to the various functions performed by the above described components (assemblies, devices, systems, circuits, and the like), the terms (including a reference to a “means”) used to describe such components are intended to correspond, unless otherwise indicated, to any component, such as hardware, software, or combinations thereof, which performs the specified function of the described component (i.e., that is functionally equivalent), even though not structurally equivalent to the disclosed structure which performs the function in the illustrated implementations of the invention. In addition, although a particular feature of the invention may have been disclosed with respect to only one of several implementations, such feature may be combined with one or more other features of the other implementations as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application. Also, to the extent that the terms “including”, “includes”, “having”, “has”, “with”, or variants thereof are used in the detailed description and/or in the claims, such terms are intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term “comprising”.
This application claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/821,412, filed Aug. 4, 2006, entitled APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR HARDENING BEARING SURFACES OF A CRANKSHAFT, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080041845 A1 | Feb 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60821412 | Aug 2006 | US |