BEARING CAGE SEGMENT INCLUDING JOINT EDGE FOR WELDING

Abstract

A sheet metal bearing cage segment includes a first ring section, at least one second ring section and a plurality of bridges connecting the first and second ring sections and forming pockets for receiving at least one rolling element. The first ring section and/or the at least one second ring section includes a circumferentially facing joint edge configured to be connected to another circumferentially facing joint edge to form a to-be-formed pocket. The joint is spaced from the plurality of bridges, and the joint edge is formed by laser cutting. The joint edge may include a chamfer on a radially outer side and/or on a radially inner side.

Claims

1. A bearing cage segment comprising: a first sheet metal ring section, at least one second sheet metal ring section, and a plurality of sheet metal bridges connecting the first ring section to the at least one second ring section, circumferentially adjacent pairs of the bridges forming pockets for receiving at least one rolling element, wherein the first ring section and/or the at least one second ring section includes a circumferentially facing joint edge configured to be connected to another circumferentially facing joint edge to form a to-be-formed pocket, wherein the joint edge is spaced from the plurality of bridges, and wherein the joint edge is formed by laser cutting.

2. The bearing cage segment according to claim 1, wherein the joint edge includes a chamfer on a radially outer side and/or on a radially inner side.

3. The bearing cage segment according to claim 2, wherein the chamfer comprises a rolled or milled portion of the first and/or second ring section.

4. The bearing cage segment according to claim 1, wherein the entire to-be-formed pocket is laser-cut, and the other pockets are punched.

5. The bearing cage segment according to claim 1, wherein the joint edge is disposed midway between the one of the adjacent pairs of the plurality of bridges.

6. The bearing cage segment according to claim 1, wherein the first and second ring sections each include the joint edge.

7. A sheet metal bearing cage including: at least one bearing cage segment according to claim 1, wherein the at least one bearing cage segment or the plurality of bearing cage segments are connected at their joint edges via a material-bonded connection.

8. The sheet metal bearing cage according to claim 7, wherein the material-bonded connection is a weld.

9. The sheet metal bearing cage according to claim 8, wherein the weld is an electric resistance weld or a laser weld.

10. The bearing cage segment according to claim 1, wherein the joint edge has a radial width less than a radial thickness of the bearing cage segment at a location between one pair of the adjacent pairs of bridges.

11. The bearing cage segment according to claim 10, wherein the first ring section has a radial outer surface and a radial inner surface and including a radially inwardly sloped wall connecting the radial outer surface to the joint edge.

12. The bearing cage segment according to claim 10, wherein the first ring section has a radial outer surface and a radial inner surface and including a radially outwardly sloped wall connecting the radial inner surface to the joint edge.

13. The bearing cage segment according to claim 10, wherein the first ring section has a radial outer surface and a radial inner surface and including a radially inwardly sloped wall connecting the radial outer surface to the joint edge and a radially outwardly sloped wall connecting the radially inner surface to the joint edge.

14. The bearing cage segment according to claim 10, wherein the bearing cage segment is configured as a needle-roller bearing cage segment.

15. A bearing cage segment comprising: a first sheet metal ring section, at least one second sheet metal ring section, and a plurality of sheet metal bridges connecting the first ring section to the second ring section, adjacent pairs of the bridges forming pockets for receiving at least one rolling element, wherein the first ring section and the second ring section each include a ring section portion having a free end configured to be welded to a free end of another ring section portion of the bearing cage segment or to a ring section portion of another bearing cage segment, wherein the free ends are formed by laser cutting, and wherein a radial width of each of the free ends is less than a radial thickness of the first sheet metal ring section at a location between one adjacent pair of the bridges.

16. The bearing cage segment according to claim 15, wherein the first ring section has a radial outer surface and a radial inner surface and including a radially inwardly sloped wall connecting the radial outer surface to the free end.

17. The bearing cage segment according to claim 15, wherein the first ring section has a radial outer surface and a radial inner surface and including a radially outwardly sloped wall connecting the radial inner surface to the free end.

18. The bearing cage segment according to claim 15, wherein the first ring section has a radial outer surface and a radial inner surface and including a radially inwardly sloped wall connecting the radial outer surface to the free end and a radially outwardly sloped wall connecting the radially inner surface to the free end.

19. The bearing cage segment according to claim 18 configured as a needle-roller bearing cage segment.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0021] FIG. 1 is a perspective representation of a connecting region of a bearing cage segment according to an embodiment of the disclosure.

[0022] FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional representation of two mutually contacting joint-edge regions of a bearing cage segment before being welded.

[0023] FIG. 3 is the bearing cage region of FIG. 2 after being welded.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

[0024] In the following, identical or functionally equivalent elements are designated by the same reference numbers. The direction designations used in the followingaxial, radial, circumferentialalways refer to the finished bearing cage.

[0025] FIG. 1 shows an exemplary embodiment of at least one inventive bearing cage segment 1 of a sheet metal cage in the joint region between a first bearing cage segment end 6 and a second bearing cage segment end 9. Here the sheet metal cage is can be formed from a single bearing cage segment 1, so that the bearing cage-segment ends 6, 9, also referred to here in the following simply as ends 6, 9, are two circumferential ends of only one bearing cage segment 1. Alternatively the sheet metal cage can include a plurality of bearing cage segments, wherein the first end 6 is one end of a first bearing cage segment 1, and the second end 9 is one end of a second bearing cage segment 1.

[0026] For the sake of simplicity it is assumed in the following that two bearing cage segments 1, 1 abut against each other by their ends 6, 9. The case that the first end 6 and the second end 9 are formed by the same bearing cage segment 1 obviously arises in an analogous manner.

[0027] Each bearing cage segment 1, 1 includes a first ring section 2 and a second ring section 3, and a plurality of bridges 4 connecting the first ring section 2 and the second ring section 3 to each other. In FIG. 1 only the final bridge 4 of the first end 6 and the final bridge 4 of the second end 9 are shown. Instead of the single-row design of the bearing cage segment 1 depicted here, the bearing cage segment 1 can also be configured multi-row, and would then include a first, a second, and further ring sections that are each connected to each other by bridges.

[0028] A pocket 5 for receiving at least one rolling element is respectively formed between the bridges 4. In the example shown the sheet metal cage is a needle-roller-bearing cage, and the pockets 5 are each configured for receiving a needle-shaped rolling element.

[0029] On its first end 6 on the first ring section 2 the bearing cage segment 1 includes a joint edge 7 directed in the circumferential direction, which joint edge 7 is configured to be connected to another joint edge 8 of the second bearing cage segment 1, which joint edge 8 is formed here in an analogous manner on the second end 9 on the first ring section 2.

[0030] The joint edges 7, 8 are preferably connected to each other via a connection, in particular a material-bonded connection, here a weld connection. Here a laser welding or an electrical resistance welding is particularly suitable for producing the connection.

[0031] As can be seen from the perspective representation of FIG. 1, the joint edge 7 is disposed in the region of a pocket 14 to be formed by the connection, here also referred to as welding pocket 14. Accordingly a first partial pocket is formed by the first end 6, and a corresponding second partial pocket by the second end 9, wherein due to the connection of the joint edges 7, 8 these partial pockets form the to-be-formed pocket 14 or are assembled into the to-be-formed pocket 14.

[0032] Here, viewed in the circumferential direction, the joint edges 7, 8 are disposed approximately centrally with respect to the welding pocket 14. In particular the design can be such that the joint edges 7, 8 lie in a plane that represents a plane of symmetry for the to-be-formed pocket 14. However, the joint edges 7, 8 can of course also be disposed non-centrally and/or offset from each other.

[0033] The joint edges 7, 8 are formed by laser cutting. The entire partial pocket of the first end 6 of the first bearing cage segment 1, or of the second end 9 of the second bearing cage segment 1, is preferably formed by laser cutting. In this way the joint edges 7, 8 can be shaped so precisely that a post-processing for suitability as a welding surface is no longer required. Here the surface is directly cleaned by the laser cutting process.

[0034] On the second ring section 3 the design in the region of the connection is preferably analogous to the design on the first ring section 1.

[0035] The pockets 5 (without the welding pocket 14) can all be formed by punching.

[0036] As can be seen from FIG. 1, guide surfaces 15 of the pockets 5 for guiding the rolling elements can be formed on the bridges 4 and on the ring sections 2, 3. These guide surfaces 15 can be formed, for example, by the punching of the pockets 5. The welding pocket 14 can also include corresponding guide surfaces 15 that can preferably be directly formed here by the above-mentioned laser cutting of the respective partial pockets.

[0037] FIG. 2 shows a cross-sectional representation through the first ring section 2 in the region of the connection of the joint edges 7, 8, wherein a state is shown wherein the joint edges 7, 8 contact each other but are not yet welded.

[0038] As can be seen from FIG. 2, the joint edges 7, 8 also include a first chamfer 10 on the radially outer side, and a second chamfer 11 on the radially inner side. The chamfers 10, 11 serve to receive a radial or axial material accumulation, for example, an upper bead, as could arise due to the welding process. In FIG. 3 the state is shown after the welding. The weld seam 12 formed by the welding can be seen here. Due to the chamfers 10, 11 no projections are formed.

[0039] The chamfers 10, 11 are preferably produced by a reshaping process, for example, a rolling or milling. The laser cutting and the reshaping preferably occur with the aid of one and the same machine so that in particular the bearing cage segment 1 need not be transported to a further tool to form the chamfers 10, 11.

[0040] In summary a bearing cage segment is provided that includes a laser-cut joint edge that is directly suitable for a weld connection. Here the joint edge includes a chamfer, whereby the formation of a projection is avoided in the course of the welding.

[0041] Representative, non-limiting examples of the present invention were described above in detail with reference to the attached drawings. This detailed description is merely intended to teach a person of skill in the art further details for practicing preferred aspects of the present teachings and is not intended to limit the scope of the invention. Furthermore, each of the additional features and teachings disclosed above may be utilized separately or in conjunction with other features and teachings to provide improved bearing cage segments.

[0042] Moreover, combinations of features and steps disclosed in the above detailed description may not be necessary to practice the invention in the broadest sense, and are instead taught merely to particularly describe representative examples of the invention. Furthermore, various features of the above-described representative examples, as well as the various independent and dependent claims below, may be combined in ways that are not specifically and explicitly enumerated in order to provide additional useful embodiments of the present teachings.

[0043] All features disclosed in the description and/or the claims are intended to be disclosed separately and independently from each other for the purpose of original written disclosure, as well as for the purpose of restricting the claimed subject matter, independent of the compositions of the features in the embodiments and/or the claims. In addition, all value ranges or indications of groups of entities are intended to disclose every possible intermediate value or intermediate entity for the purpose of original written disclosure, as well as for the purpose of restricting the claimed subject matter.

REFERENCE NUMBER LIST

[0044] 1, 1 Bearing cage segment [0045] 2 First ring section [0046] 3 Second ring section [0047] 4 Bridge [0048] 5 Pockets [0049] 6 First end [0050] 7, 8 Joint edges [0051] 9 Second end [0052] 10 First chamfer [0053] 11 Second chamfer [0054] 12 Weld seam [0055] 14 Welding pocket [0056] 15 Guide surfaces