1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to grinding machine components, and especially relates to grinding components made of superhard materials. More particularly, the invention relates to tension rods, transfer ways, and spindles and spindle housings made of wear resistant superhard materials.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Conventional grinding machine components made of steel are well known in the art, including one of the most common types of stainless steel that includes machine grade tool steel. However, as grinding machines have become more and more complex, and are now more capable of extremely high precision grinding, the tolerances on those steel components have become increasingly closer and closer. In addition, it is increasingly important for a centerless grinding unit machine to be extremely accurate as well as simple to learn and set up for a grinding operation. For grinding unit machines that are highly accurate work holding devices, with 0.000030″ standard repeatabillty, as well as for those optional machines with 0.000005″ to 0.000010″ repeatability, it is important for the grinding machine components themselves to be very rigid and true to the shape. If the various components can have dimensions that are held to true, there is no need for an operator to indicate a work piece, which can save a lot of time on the job.
With regards to the spindles of centerless grinding machines, the conventional steel components become worn after continuous use. Grinding machine components that are in a wear-induced state will have lowered tolerances, and the tolerances of the resulting work pieces will become lower and lower until the work pieces will become unusable. At that time, the grinding machine must be overhauled, and the originally specified tolerances will be once again achieved. However, in the very recent past, higher and higher tolerances are being required in order to maintain quality control standards for manufacturing processes under ISO 9001 procedures. Manufacturing capabilities also require less down time for manufacturing processes in order to maintain profits and jobs for the shop where the machine resides.
In an effort to maintain high tolerances for such grinding machines, it is important that wear-resistant machine tool components be utilized. It would therefore an advantage for the usage of wear-resistant grinding machine tool components which will not wear, and thereby keep the extremely high tolerance of the grinding machine even after the manufacture of large numbers of machine parts.
Others have tried in the past to make more wear resistant grinding components, but none have been able to make such highly precise and wear resistant components for this application, especially of the materials being proposed in the present invention. Practitioners of those prior art inventions have become aware of certain problems which are presented. One particular problem that has plagued operators has been that utilizing harder materials that will resist wear is more difficult to grind, especially to the desired tolerances sought by the present inventors. There are complexities which give rise to warpage and having a component that is out of true due to expansion and contraction.
Therefore, it would be of a great advantage to the grinding machine industry if there was provided various wear resistant grinding machine components made of superhard ceramic materials for holding close tolerances for a long time during operation, thereby reducing downtime, and saving costs.
In accordance with the above-noted advantages and desires of the industry, the present invention provides various grinding machine components made of superhard materials, including certain machine grade ceramics, including such materials as carbides, nitrides, borides, oxides, oxynitrides, or any other ceramic component. The component may either be a solid piece of ceramic or wear resistant material, or may have an insert or a piece of the wear resistant material adhered to a metallic substrate base for use within the machine. In that same regard, it is also envisioned by the present inventors that cermets, materials which have a gradient from a 100% concentration of ceramic at one surface, and gradually changing into a 100% metal at the other surface, would be advantageous. Other cermets include ceramic infrastructures, infiltrated by molten metals, yielding a combination of ceramic and metal in the same piece of material. Furthermore, coatings of carbides, nitrides and the like, as described above, may be utilized to effectively coat a metal substrate, thereby giving a wear resistant coating. These superhard materials overcome some of the aforementioned problems with the prior art because they will hold closer tolerances and resist wear better than other materials.
The invention is particularly useful for applications of wear resistant transfer ways, tension rods, spindles and spindle housings, among other applications. Although the invention will be described by way of examples hereinbelow for specific embodiments having certain features, it must also be realized that minor modifications that do not require undo experimentation on the part of the practitioner are covered within the scope and breadth of this invention. Additional advantages and other novel features of the present invention will be set forth in the description that follows and in particular will be apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination or may be learned within the practice of the invention. Therefore, the invention is capable of many other different embodiments and its details are capable of modifications of various aspects which will be obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art all without departing from the spirit of the present invention. Accordingly, the rest of the description will be regarded as illustrative rather than restrictive.
For a further understanding of the nature and advantages of the expected scope and various embodiments of the present invention, reference shall be made to the following detailed description, and when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like parts are given the same reference numerals, and wherein;
In accordance with the present invention, and in meeting and exceeding the objects and advantages being sought herewith, we now look to the appended drawings as illustrated in
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Looking now to the materials suitable and advantageous in accordance with the present invention, the inventor contemplates useful rigid grinding machine components made of any super hard material, including, but not limited to, carbides, nitrides, oxides, borides, ceramics, cermets, carbonitrides, carbon diffused materials, including steel, nitrides, borides, oxides, other metals and surface treated ferrous compounds. All the preferred compositions listed herein are useful for the present invention, although some are more preferred than others. It is also envisioned by the present inventor that carburized steel is useful, and that rigidity enhancing treatments prove useful. Such rigidity enhancing treatments can include quenching (to produce a martensitic or bainitic case around a carburized steel part), reheating (for controlling and reducing the surface carbon content below the saturation level), cold treating, and tempering.
Especially suitable materials for all the above-described grinding machine components include all rigid ceramics made of carbides, nitrides, borides, oxides, carbonitrides, borocarbides, boronitrides, nitroborides, and especially tungsten carbide (WC), titanium carbide (TiC), combinations of WC and TiC and all other carbides, as well as other nitrides including carbonitrides (CN), silicon nitride (Si3N4), silicon carbide (SiC), and all other nitrides and nitro-carbides. Super hard materials also useful for the present invention include borides, such as boron carbide and other borides and boron nitride compositions. Of particular interest, and encompassing the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the grinding machine components are preferably made of tungsten carbide and/or tungsten carbide alloys with other ceramic materials. The most preferred material for the present application is basic high-grade tungsten carbide, although the other materials listed are equally useful. They may not be as advantageous as they will be more difficult to machine into the grinding machine component, or the material may be more expensive than the tungsten carbide. Those factors aside, their rigidity will all pass the necessities for the present invention.
Superior grinding machine components made then from a group of super hard, extremely rigid materials that will ultimately increase the repeatability of the grinding machine because all the components will be held in position so rigidly, thereby keeping the tolerances of the grinding machine during operation. In addition, these components will be virtually wear proof for longer life of the grinding machine, and they will allow for fast and high stock removal in the bargain. Increased productivity and keeping higher tolerances is the desired result in the grinding industry, and the present invention will help achieve those goals.
Therefore, the present invention discloses superior grinding machine components made from a group of super hard, extremely rigid materials that will ultimately increase the repeatability of the grinding machine because all the components will be held in position so rigidly, thereby keeping the tolerances of the grinding machine during operation. In addition, these components will be virtually wear proof for longer life of the grinding machine, and they will allow for fast and high stock removal in the bargain. Increased productivity and keeping higher tolerances is the desired result in the grinding industry, and the present invention will help achieve those goals. While the description of the suitable materials may appear to be directed toward only some of the components, the following description relates to all grinding machine components.
The present invention is preferably made of a bulk carbide, Grade 2 material, although it may be made of any other known ceramic. The ceramic may be of a commercial grade of purity, and may be machined utilizing some of the equipment further invented by the present inventors earlier, known as the Tru-Tech Grinding Machine. Further in an attempt to achieve the objective of the present invention, a production steel center tension rod can be coated with a ceramic material, or there may be an insert or sleeve placed around the tube of the tension rod. Clearly, because the objective of the present invention is to provide a wear resistant surface for the tension rod, any means of having the wear resistant material on the surface which is subject to the wear is of importance, including surface treatments such as carburizing or carbonitriding.
The present invention discloses the use of wear resistant materials for the use of tension rods, and may include such things as carbides, nitrides, borides, oxides, oxynitrides, or any other ceramic component. The component may either be a solid piece of ceramic or wear resistant material, or may have an insert or a piece of the wear resistant material adhered to a metallic substrate base for use within the machine. In that same regard, it is also envisioned by the present inventors that cermets, materials which have a gradient from a 100% concentration of ceramic at one surface, and gradually changing into a 100% metal at the other surface, would be advantageous. Other cermets include ceramic infrastructures, infiltrated by molten metals, yielding a combination of ceramic and metal in the same piece of material. Furthermore, coatings of carbides, nitrides and the like, as described above, may be utilized to effectively coat a metal substrate, thereby giving a wear resistant coating.
These ceramics may come in varying grades, such as the preferred carbide material, and especially of Grade 2 carbide. It would also be advantageous to incorporate cobalt or any other metallic component into the overall composition of the ceramic in percentages of from about 1 percent up to about 50 percent, both by weight. For example, the addition of cobalt metal into a carbide bulk material prior to grinding into a desired shape, such as the tension rod of the present invention, will help to prevent breakage in the event that the piece is ever dropped on the floor. Preferable amounts of cobalt are from about 1 to about 20 weight percent. Other metals may be desirable, including vanadium, chromium, manganese, nickel, copper, zinc, molybdenum, cadmium, indium or tin. Furthermore, magnetic components such as powdered iron, nibium, yttrium or other conventional permanent magnets may also be advantageously employed. These components would be most useful in the percent weight ranges of between about 1 and about 25 percent of the resulting weight.
Grades 1 through 5 of carbide are especially useful, although any other commercial or ultra pure grade of ceramic or carbide may be utilized within the scope of this invention. Of the carbides, the most preferred include tungsten carbide (WC), titanium carbide (TiC), or combinations thereof, or a boron carbide (BC). It is also envisioned that nitrides, including silicon nitride (Si3N4) or other carbonitrides may be useful in particular situations due to their lubricious characteristics. Self-lubricating ceramics may also be of a special help, and of those materials silicon nitride is especially preferred. In addition, various oxides, including alumina (Al2O3), or other oxides, or other oxynitrides, are useful.
In addition to the use of ceramics on the wear resistant surfaces of the tension rod, the present invention further envisions carburizing and carbonitriding for developing hard surfaces of steel parts, such as the tension rod. Although the basic principle of carburizing and carbonitriding have remained relatively unchanged through the years, there are many changes in the technology of metals which have made for changes in metallic structures, as well as their processing equipment, in order to achieve carburizing and carbonitriding. Generally, carburizing is effected by gas carburizing and hardening which will produce a hard surface layer on a ferrous alloy. When using carburizing, a hardening agent is introduced into the surface of the alloy steel, thereby modifying the composition of the surface layer material itself. Thereafter, appropriate heat treatment provides for a case hardened surface layer with a core interior. This is especially useful for austenitized ferrous material components which are brought into contact with an environment of sufficient carbon to cause absorption of the carbon at the surface and by heat diffusion creating a carbon concentration gradient between the surface and the interior or core of the metal component itself. Carburizing may be done in a gaseous atmosphere (gas carburizing), a salt bath (liquid carburizing), or pack carburized by placing all of the surfaces of the work piece in contact with a solid compound. Carbonitriding is done in a modified gas carburizing atmosphere, where the modification includes the introduction of ammonia into a standard gas carburizing atmosphere, thereby providing the appropriate nitrogen.
Within the carburizing procedure, free carbon is then absorbed into the surface layer of the work piece, which generally has a relatively low carbon content to begin with. The free carbon is derived either from its gaseous or liquid source which comes into intimate contact with the metal surface. Absorption of the carbon into the surface layer may set up a concentration gradient, and carbon atoms may move by diffusion away from the surface. Theoretically, then, the surface layer can attain a carbon content determined by the carbon potential, while the core will stay at a constant concentration of ferrous and other components. In most instances, the amount of carbon in the environment is controlled to achieve a desired carbon content at the surface of the metal.
With regards to carbonitriding, however, the requisite ammonia added to the gas carburizing atmosphere dissociates to produce hydrogen and monoatomic nitrogen. The nitrogen is then absorbed into the surface of the work piece, along with carbon from the carburizing gas. Generally, carbonitriding is most advantageous as it is used in making a shallow carbonitrided surface because the nitrogen inhibits the diffusion of carbon throughout the steel, although it enhances hardenability, which favors the attainment of a very hard case that is easily polished and highly wear resistant. In addition, nitrides are formed and the particular hardness of those nitrides leads to even more wear resistant than is attributable to a maximum matrix hardness alone.
However, it must be realized that the preferred material for the present invention is a carbide, which is a Grade 2 material. A stock piece will be machined into a desired shape to be used as a tension rod in a grinding machine application. Furthermore, in an attempt to provide a wear resistant surface as desired by the present invention, there are many heat treatments, quenching treatments and other surface effects which can be implemented in order to provide a more wear resistant surface for the tension rod. All of these treatments, or inclusions of ceramics and the like, are designed to do one thing . . . . to provide wear resistance for the tension rod so that it will hold its extremely high tolerances. The treatments that we are discussing do not add to the dimension of the particular grinding machine component, rather they are atomically absorbed into the bulk of the material and can be used interchangeably with production steel components for the grinding machine.
In addition to the above description of the use of ceramics and the use of surface treatments such as carburizing, carbonitriding and heat annealing or quenching, there are also various procedures for increasing the adhesion on the surface of a metal substrate to any of the above-mentioned wear resistant materials and/or treatments. In particular, pre-oxidation prior to any adhesion or to the subjection of gas carburizing provides a maximum carbon and nitrogen absorption and diffusion, based on thermodynamic and kinetic considerations. Furthermore, there may be additional layers of metal, such as nickel or tin, which can be plasma sprayed, sputtered, plasma discharged, or any other method of applying a very thin coating of an adhesion layer onto the steel core component prior to receiving the ceramic, or a gas treatment such as carburizing. Gas treatments, such as sulfonation, may also be employed to help adhesion of subsequent layers. In addition, ionic chemical treatments may also add to the adhesion factor, or may be utilized for surface hardened components. All of these hardened layers will provide a superior contact performance for rolling and sliding operations, and will provide better specifications and equipment considerations which are essential for reproducible process executions, including grinding of work pieces.
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Therefore, in accordance with the present invention, there is disclosed a complete wear-resistant spindle assembly having a concentric collar press fit thereon along with a threaded shaft and threaded shaft collar which achieves the objectives and advantages of the present invention. Whether the wear-resistant feature is achieved via a bulk material which is generally wear-resistant, or whether a high strength steel core is utilized with a wear-resistant coating thereon, the prescribed spindle assembly as shown in FIGS. 11 thru 19 will achieve those objectives and maintain the tolerance of the grinding machine after many hours of operation.
Even though a particular embodiment of the spindle assembly has been shown in FIGS. 11 thru 19, it must be understood that the scope of the invention is not be limited by the exact configuration of the spindle assembly, rather conventional spindle assemblies utilized in traditional grinding machines may employ the present concept of this invention in order to maintain their tolerances and achieve better workability, more high tolerance work pieces resulting therefrom, and less down time in the machine itself.
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In summary, numerous benefits have been described which result from employing any or all of the concepts and the features of the various specific embodiments of the present invention, or those that are within the scope of the invention. The superhard materials act perfectly to resist wear and to provide a more repeatable grinding operation.
The foregoing description of a preferred embodiment of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Obvious modifications or variations are possible in light of the above teachings with regards to the specific embodiments. The embodiment was chosen and described in order to best illustrate the principles of the invention and its practical applications to thereby enable one of ordinary skill in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims which are appended hereto.
The present invention finds industrial applicability in the grinding machine industry.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/400,090 filed on Aug. 1, 2002; No. 60/447,059 filed on Feb. 13, 2003; No. 60/447,061 filed on Feb. 13, 2003; and No. 60/452,032 filed on Mar. 4, 2003.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US03/24165 | 8/1/2003 | WO | 1/27/2005 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60400090 | Aug 2002 | US | |
60447059 | Feb 2003 | US | |
60447061 | Feb 2003 | US | |
60452032 | Mar 2003 | US |