The invention relates generally to welding systems, and, more particularly, to a welding wire guide for use in a welding system.
Welding is a process that has increasingly become ubiquitous in various industries and applications. While such processes may be automated in certain contexts, a large number of applications continue to exist for manual welding operations. Such welding operations rely on a variety of types of equipment to ensure the supply of welding consumables (e.g., wire feed, shielding gas, etc.) is provided to the weld in an appropriate amount at the desired time. For example, metal inert gas (MIG) welding typically relies on a wire feeder to ensure a proper wire feed reaches a welding torch.
Such wire feeders facilitate the feeding of welding wire from a wire spool, through a pair of wire feed rolls, to the welding torch at the desired wire feed rate. Typically the wire is guided into the feed rolls with a tapered cylindrical tube fixed adjacent to the feed rolls. As the stack diameter of the wire wound on the spool changes due to wire use, the angle in the vertical plane at which the wire enters the cylindrical guide changes. In addition, the angle at which the wire enters the guide changes in the horizontal plane due to the helical unwind of the wire spool. Unfortunately, such an arrangement forces the wire into a fixed entry angle by sharply redirecting the wire as it enters the cylindrical guide. This leads to deformation of the wire surface and causes shavings from the wire to detach, which can ultimately clog welding torch liners and tips. Accordingly, there exists a need for a wire guide that overcomes these drawbacks.
In an exemplary embodiment, a welding system includes a welding wire feeder including a wire spool, a pair of wire feed rolls configured to supply wire at a desired feed rate to a welding torch, and a wire guide configured to guide welding wire from the spool to the feed rolls. The wire guide is adapted to guide wire from whatever angle the wire comes off the spool in the horizontal and vertical planes without damaging the outer surface of the wire. The wire guide may consist of two vertical pins attached to the wire feeder between the spool and the feed rolls, positioned to form a slit through which welding wire is guided before entering the feed rolls.
In another embodiment, a welding system includes a welding wire feeder including a wire spool, a pair of wire feed rolls configured to supply wire to a welding torch, and a wire guide adapted to guide wire from whatever angle the wire comes off the spool in the horizontal and vertical planes without damaging the outer surface of the wire. The wire guide may have a generally conical shape and include an oblong entrance end and an oblong exit end and a tapered inner wall. The wire guide funnels the wire from an angle tangent to the spool to the fixed angle required by the feed rolls without damaging the wire.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood when the following detailed description is read with reference to the accompanying drawings in which like characters represent like parts throughout the drawings, wherein:
As described in detail below, embodiments of an improved wire guide for use in a welding wire feeder are provided. The wire guide is adapted to direct welding wire from a spool to the feed rolls of a wire drive assembly without causing damage to the outer surface of the wire. The wire guide may comprise an elongated slit, such as formed between two pins that direct wire coming off the spool at a range of angles in the vertical plane and in the horizontal plane. The two pins are attached vertically to the wire drive assembly, between the spool and the feed rolls. Welding wire may pass between the pins or make contact with the pins without damaging the outer surface of the wire because the angle of the wire is not sharply redirected. Still further, in certain embodiments, the wire guide may consist of a generally conical piece with an entrance end, an exit end, and a tapered inner wall. Welding wire is funneled through the conical guide to the feed rolls with a gradual redirection of the angle from which it exits the spool without causing damage to its outer surface.
Turning now to the drawings,
The welding system 10 also includes a wire feeder 30 that provides welding wire to the welding gun 16 for use in the welding operation. The wire feeder 30 may include a control panel 32 that allows the user to set one or more wire feed parameters, such as wire feed speed. In presently contemplated embodiments, the wire feeder 30 houses a variety of internal components, such as a wire spool, a wire feed drive system, a wire guide, and so forth.
A variety of cables couple the components of the welding system 10 together and facilitate the supply of welding materials to the welding gun 16. A first cable 34 couples the welding gun 16 to the wire feeder 30. A second cable 36 couples the welder 12 to a work clamp 38 that connects to a workpiece 40 to complete the circuit between the welder 12 and the welding gun 16 during a welding operation. A bundle 42 of cables couples the welder 12 to the wire feeder 30 and provides weld materials for use in the welding operation. The bundle 42 includes a feeder power lead 44, a weld cable 46, a gas hose 48, and a control cable 50. Depending on the polarity of the welding process, the feeder power lead 44 connects to the same weld terminal as the cable 36. It should be noted that the bundle 42 of cables may not be bundled together in some embodiments. Conversely, in some systems some reduction in wiring may be realized, such as by communicating control and feedback signals over the welding power cable.
It should be noted that although the illustrated embodiments are described in the context of a constant voltage MIG welding process, the features of the invention may be utilized with a variety of other suitable welding systems and processes that utilize continuously fed wires.
A number of circuitry systems inside the wire feeder 30 facilitate the movement of wire 52 toward a welding operation at the desired wire feed rate. The motor drive circuit 70 causes the drive roller 64 to turn at the desired rate. Processing circuitry 72 communicates this turn rate to the motor drive circuit 70. Interface circuitry 74 connects directly to the feeder power lead 44 and supplies power to the processing circuitry 72. Memory circuitry 76 is connected to the processing circuitry 72, and operator interface circuitry 78 supplies the desired feed rate, which is input by the welding operator via the control panel, to the processing circuitry 72.
The wire feeder 30 features an elongated slit 80, which in the embodiment illustrated here is formed by two pins threaded into the upper mounting surface 62. The pins on either side of the elongated slit 80 guide the wire 52 from the spool 54 to the wire drive assembly 58 by defining a path the wire takes to become generally tangent to both the idle roller 60 and the drive roller 64.
It should be noted that the pins 82 and 84 are displaced some distance away from the drive roller 64 in the direction of the spool 54, and that, in a presently contemplated embodiment, pin 82 is displaced further in this direction than pin 84. In this way, the wire travels a greater distance through this elongated guide than if the two pins were placed exactly side by side. Various arrangements of such elements may, however, be envisaged. There is also a displacement between both pins and the wire when the wire is perfectly aligned from the spool to the drive roller. This displacement allows wire to be guided gradually from the angle at which it exits the spool to proper alignment with the drive roller. Guiding the wire in this way avoids damaging the wire outer surface. Additionally, bearings (not shown) may be placed over the outside of the pins 82 and 84. Such bearings may rotate about the stationary pins, further reducing friction between the wire and pins. Similarly, the pins may be allowed to rotate themselves, as in the form of rollers.
As shown in
The height of the conical guide 100 may be greater than the width of the guide, from the entrance end 102 to the exit end 106. A greater height allows for the range of angles from which wire exits the spool 54 in the vertical plane. Although wire exits the spool at a range of angles in the horizontal plane, as shown in
The conical guide 100 creates an oblong slit with rounded corners through which the welding wire 52 passes. The generally oblong shape accounts for the difference in range of angles in the vertical and horizontal plane from which the wire will be guided. The rounded, elliptical edges eliminate sharp corners so that the wire will not become pinned in an inside corner of the guide or rub against a sharp corner upon entering or exiting the guide, thereby avoiding damage to the wire. The conical guide 100 may also feature rounded outside edges at its entrance end 102 and exit end 106 to facilitate smoother entry and exit of the wire. Where desired, the guide may be allowed to pivot so as to better align with the entering wire.
While only certain features of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, many modifications and changes will occur to those skilled in the art. It is, therefore, to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within the true spirit of the invention.
This application is a Non-Provisional patent application of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/423,837, entitled “Obround/Elliptical Guide”, filed Dec. 16, 2010 and of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/423,843, entitled “Inlet Guide Pins”, filed Dec. 16, 2010, which are herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61423837 | Dec 2010 | US | |
61423843 | Dec 2010 | US |