PLANAR GRINDER
20200284700 ยท 2020-09-10
Inventors
- Kurt G. Adair (Highland Park, IL, US)
- Charles E. Shewey (Salem, WI, US)
- Michael F. Hart (Mundelein, IL, US)
- Douglas A. Ceckowski (Gurnee, IL, US)
- James A. Haberstroh (Vernon Hills, IL, US)
Cpc classification
B24B55/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B37/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B51/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B53/017
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B37/105
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B55/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B45/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B49/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01N1/286
PHYSICS
B24B55/045
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B37/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
G01N1/28
PHYSICS
B24B55/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B53/017
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B37/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B53/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B49/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B45/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B37/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B51/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A sample grinder includes a base having a bowl and a rotatable drive plate to operably support a grinding wheel. A head is configured to support a specimen holder and has a first drive for rotational drive of the specimen holder and a second drive for moving the head and specimen holder toward and away from the drive plate. The head has a sleeve that is larger than the specimen holder. A cover is disposed over the bowl and has an opening larger than the sleeve so that the sleeve fits through the opening when the specimen holder is moved toward the rotatable drive plate. The grinding wheel is mountable to the plate in a single radial orientation only. A dressing system is operably connected to a controller to monitor the current of the drive plate motor and/or the head first drive actuates the dressing system based upon the current drawn by the drive plate motor and/or the head first drive motor falling below a predetermined value.
Claims
1-20. (canceled)
21. A sample grinder, comprising: a base having a bowl and a rotatable drive plate to operably support a grinding wheel; a head configured to support a specimen holder and having a first drive for rotational drive of the specimen holder, the head having a second drive for moving the head and the specimen holder toward and away from the rotatable drive plate, the head having a depending sleeve having inner and outer peripheries, the inner periphery being larger than an outer periphery of the specimen holder; and a cover disposed over the bowl and the rotatable drive plate, the cover having an opening having an inner periphery greater than the outer periphery of the sleeve, wherein the sleeve traverses through the cover opening when the specimen holder is moved toward the rotatable drive plate.
22. The sample grinder of claim 21, wherein the cover has a top, the top being non-planar and sloping away toward a front-side corner thereof.
23. The sample grinder of claim 21 wherein the sleeve is formed, at least in part, from a transparent or semi-transparent material.
24. The sample grinder of claim 21 wherein the cover includes a fluid delivery manifold and a plurality of fluid dispensing nozzles in fluid communication with the fluid delivery manifold.
25. The sample grinder of claim 24 wherein the fluid delivery manifold is formed as part of the cover and wherein the fluid dispensing nozzles are mounted to the cover over the fluid delivery manifold.
26. The sample grinder of claim 25 wherein the fluid dispensing nozzles are formed as openings in a plate and wherein the plate is mounted to an inside surface of the cover.
27. The sample grinder of claim 26 wherein the openings in the plate are asymmetrically disposed generally along a line of the plate.
28. The sample grinder of claim 25 including a fluid delivery conduit in the base in fluid communication with the fluid delivery manifold.
29. The sample grinder of claim 21 wherein the cover is removable from the base.
30. The sample grinder of claim 29 including a securing device to secure the cover to the base, the securing device movable between a secured position and an unsecured position, and wherein when the securing device is in the unsecured position, the cover is removable from the base without the use of tools.
31. A method for using a grinder, comprising: holding a specimen by a specimen holder supported by a head; rotating a grinding wheel supported by a base having a bowl and a rotatable drive plate; rotating the specimen holder; and moving the head and the specimen holder toward the rotatable drive plate to grind the specimen and moving the head and the specimen holder away from the rotatable drive plate to cease grinding the specimen, the head having a depending sleeve having inner and outer peripheries, the inner periphery being larger than an outer periphery of the specimen holder, wherein a cover is disposed over the bowl and the rotatable drive plate, the cover having an opening having an inner periphery greater than the outer periphery of the sleeve, and wherein the sleeve traverses through the cover opening when the specimen holder is moved toward the rotatable drive plate.
32. The method of claim 31, wherein the sleeve comprises a transparent or semi-transparent material.
33. The method of claim 31, comprising delivering fluid via a fluid delivery manifold and a plurality of fluid dispensing nozzles in fluid communication with the fluid delivery manifold, wherein the cover comprises the fluid delivery manifold.
34. The method of claim 33, wherein the fluid delivery manifold is part of the cover and wherein the fluid dispensing nozzles are mounted to the cover over the fluid delivery manifold.
35. The method of claim 34, wherein the fluid dispensing nozzles are openings in a plate and wherein the plate is mounted to an inside surface of the cover.
36. The method of claim 35, wherein the openings in the plate are asymmetrically disposed generally along a line of the plate.
37. The method of claim 31, wherein the cover is removable from the base.
38. The method of claim 37, comprising securing the cover to the base.
39. The method of claim 38, comprising moving a securing device to a secured position to secure the cover to the base, and to an unsecured position to unsecure the cover from the base.
40. The method of claim 39, comprising, when the securing device is in the unsecured position, removing the cover from the base without the use of tools.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
[0021] The benefits and advantages of the present invention will become more readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the relevant art after reviewing the following detailed description and accompanying and drawings, wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0037] While the present device is susceptible of embodiment in various forms, there is shown in the drawings and will hereinafter be described a presently preferred embodiment with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered an exemplification and is not intended to be limited to the specific embodiment illustrated.
[0038] Referring now to the figures and in particular, to
[0039] The base 12 defines an upper lip 30 that forms the top edge of a bowl 32. The platen 22 is positioned in the bowl 32, above the bottom of the bowl, but below the lip 30. The bowl 32 has a generally D-shaped profile to allow access to the platen 22 for maintenance, removal and the like. A grinding wheel 34 is positioned on the platen 22. The D-shaped profile of the bowl 32 also allows ready access to the grinding wheel 34 for maintenance, removal and the like.
[0040] Referring to
[0041] In a present embodiment the single orientation mounting system is provided by a plurality of locating pins 36A-D, one of which 36D is asymmetrically located and which are received in cooperating locating bores 38A-D in the wheel 34, one of which 38D is asymmetrically located to receive the asymmetrically located pin 36D. For example, the wheel 34 can include three pins 36A-C located 120 degrees from one another spaced an equal distance from a center axis A of the wheel 34 and a fourth pin 36D located at any location on the wheel 34 (such as in the illustrated embodiment, along a radial line of one of the three pins), and cooperating bores 38A-D in the platen 22 for receiving the pins. Essentially, the asymmetric fourth pin 36D provides an interfering mounting arrangement to prevent installing the wheel 34 at any orientation other than the one orientation in which all four pins 36A-D will be accommodated in their respective, cooperating bores 38A-D. A single fastener 40, such as a countersunk threaded bolt can be used to secure the wheel 34 to the platen 22.
[0042] There are a number of advantages to such a single-orientation mounting arrangement. For example, as noted above, once a wheel 34 is dressed, it can be removed from the platen 22 and reinstalled without further dressing or redressing, unless it is needed to resurface the wheel 34. Moreover, the wheel 34 is readily and quickly installed, removed and reinstalled on the platen 22 with, for example, a single fastener 40.
[0043] As illustrated in
[0044] The sleeve 48 has an inner diameter that is slightly larger than the diameter of the specimen holder 46 and an outer diameter configured to allow the sleeve 48 to move through the cover opening 44 with the specimen holder 46 (the outer diameter of the sleeve 48 is just smaller than the diameter of the cover opening 44). In this manner, a gap 52 between the sleeve 48 and the cover opening 44 is sufficiently small so as to reduce or eliminate splashing that may occur. As seen in
[0045] In order to access the wheel 34 and platen 22, the cover 42 is configured for easy removal from the base 12. In a present embodiment, the cover 42 includes a slotted opening 58 in a rear of the cover that is positioned over the dressing arm housing 60. The edges of the slotted opening 58 slide into a recess 62 in the dressing arm housing 60 to secure the cover 42 in place. The cover 42 can include clamps 64 that secure and lock the cover 42 to the base 12 and permit removing and installing the cover 42 without the use of tools.
[0046] When the cover 42 is in place on the base 12, an opening 66 in the cover 42 is in communication with a fluid supply conduit 68. The conduit 68 extends upwardly from the base 12 into the opening 66. A seal 70 is positioned between the conduit 68 and the opening 66. A fluid, such as water is provided from a supply, through the base 12 and into the opening 66 in the cover 42.
[0047] As noted above, a cooling/lubricating fluid is needed for proper grinder 10 operation. The fluid supply conduit 68, via a fluid delivery manifold 72 in the cover 42, supplies the cooling/lubricating fluid to the wheel 34. In an embodiment, the fluid delivery manifold 72 includes a plurality of openings or nozzles 74 that spray the fluid onto the wheel 34. The nozzles 74 are positioned to provide a desired spray pattern of fluid onto the wheel 34. In an embodiment, nine (9) nozzles 74a-74i are arranged to spray fluid from the manifold 72, with a first nozzle 74a near to the fluid entrance (from the conduit 68), a set of five adjacent nozzles 74b-74f spaced from the first nozzle, a seventh nozzle 74g spaced from the set of five nozzles, and a set of two nozzles 74h, 74i at about the end of the manifold 72, nearest to the center of the wheel 34. The nozzles 74 can be formed in a plate 76 that is positioned over and forms part of the manifold 72.
[0048] Referring to
[0049] Referring to
[0050] Referring to
[0051] A further enhancement to the grinder 10 is an automated dressing system 100. As noted above, dressing is carried out to resurface or recondition the wheel 34 as the wheel 34 becomes worn, that is when the peaks on the abrasive are worn and the valleys between the peaks become filled with the specimen material (referred to as wheel loading). The dressing system 100 includes a head 102 mounted to an arm 104 that moves in an arc and contacts the wheel 34 to remove the loaded area (e.g., the worn and dulled areas or abrasive) and expose fresh surfaces of abrasive that more efficiently effect the grind. Dressing is carried out during the grinding operation by moving the arm 104 to swing over an opposite side of the wheel 34 from the location at which the grinding operation is carried out.
[0052] The dressing system head 102 has a hardened face 106 that contacts and removes the worn or dulled areas of the wheel 34. One hardened face is a sacrificial diamond dressing face 106. In the operation of known grinding systems, dressing is carried out at preset times, regardless of whether dressing is actually required or dressing is overdue. In the former instance, it will be appreciated that dressing too often removes portions of the wheel surface that are still effective for grinding. In the latter, overdue dressing can result in too much time spent grinding a sample or failure to properly grind. Moreover, the required dressing period is a function of many variables, such as specimen material, wheel composition, wheel speed, sample holder speed and the like.
[0053] In an embodiment of the present grinder 10, dressing is carried out based upon measured operating conditions and comparing those operating conditions to a preset value. One such way in which to dress the wheel 34 based on operating conditions is to measure the resistance between the specimen S and the grinding wheel 34 and to dress the grinding wheel 34 when the resistance drops below a certain preset value.
[0054] The resistance can be monitored in a variety of ways. In one embodiment, resistance is related to the amount of power required to operate either the platen motor 26 or the head motor 84 (the two concurrently rotating elements). The power is related to the current drawn by the motors 26, 84. So, in application, one way in which to measure the resistance is to monitor the current drawn by with the platen motor 26 or the head motor 84. When the current drops below a certain predetermined level, it is indicative of lowered resistance and dressing will automatically commence.
[0055] A flow chart of the automated dressing operation 1000 is illustrated in
[0056] If a dressing operation is in progress, then at step 1008, the (electrical) current data points (work load on the motor) are captured and stored in the controller and the operation returns to between steps 1004 and 1006.
[0057] If a dressing operation is not in progress, then at step 1010, the controller determines the optimal current trigger point to initiate the next dressing operation. The controller monitors whether the current load has reached a load trigger point at step 1012. And, if the trigger point has been reached, the controller initiates a dressing operation at step 1004. If the trigger point has not been reached, the controller continues to monitor whether the current load reaches the load trigger point at step 1012.
[0058] In this manner, the dressing operation is initiated only when needed based on actual operating data (data as captured through monitoring the current load on the platen or the head motor), rather than on an arbitrary, time-based measurement. This feature provides an optimal work load with a minimized cycle time.
[0059] All patents referred to herein, are hereby incorporated herein by reference, whether or not specifically done so within the text of this disclosure.
[0060] In the present disclosure, the words a or an are to be taken to include both the singular and the plural. Conversely, any reference to plural items shall, where appropriate, include the singular.
[0061] From the foregoing it will be observed that numerous modifications and variations can be effectuated without departing from the true spirit and scope of the novel concepts of the present disclosure. It is to be understood that no limitation with respect to the specific embodiments illustrated is intended or should be inferred. The disclosure is intended to cover all such modifications as fall within the scope of the invention.