Wire drawing device
10406575 · 2019-09-10
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B21C1/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21F99/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21C1/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B21C1/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21C9/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21C1/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The invention relates to a device (1) for drawing wire (5), comprising a plurality of cone pairs (2, 3, 4) arranged in a row and drawing dies (23, 33, 43) arranged between cones (21, 22, 31, 32, 41, 42) of a cone pair (2, 3, 4), wherein wire (5) being drawn extends from one cone pair (2, 3, 4) to the next cone pair (2, 3, 4). According to the invention, a motor (6, 7, 8) is provided for each cone pair (2, 3, 4) in order to drive said cone pair (2, 3, 4).
Claims
1. A device for drawing wire, comprising: multiple cone pairs arranged in a row; drawing dies arranged between cones of the cone pairs, wherein wire that is to be drawn runs from one cone pair to a next cone pair; a motor provided for each of the cone pairs in order to drive respective cone pairs, wherein the cones of the cone pairs are arranged above one another; a drawing-out disc is arranged, with respect to a process direction, downstream of a last cone pair of the cone pairs; and a testing disc is arranged, with respect to the process direction, downstream of the drawing-out disc to apply a defined test load to the wire, wherein the test load is variable and depends on a rotational speed of the drawing-out disc; and wherein the drawing-out disc and the testing disc are arranged in separate closeable chambers, wherein a first of the separate closeable chambers comprises a first closeable door having a first opening in a region of the drawing-out disc and a second of the separate closeable chambers comprises a second closeable door having a second opening in a region of the testing disc.
2. The device according to claim 1, wherein individual cones of the cone pairs are embodied in one piece or in multiple pieces.
3. The device according to claim 1, wherein the cone pairs are offset from one another so that the wire travels on a plane lying perpendicular to rotation axes of the cones during a transition from one cone pair to the next cone pair.
4. The device according to claim 1, wherein the cone pairs are arranged in multiple chambers, wherein the chambers can be flooded with a liquid separately from one another.
5. The device according to claim 1, wherein at least one end drawing die is provided after the last cone pair.
6. The device according to claim 5, wherein two end drawing dies are provided, wherein the end drawing dies are spaced from one another.
7. The device according to claim 5, wherein a last end drawing die of the at least one end drawing die performing a deformation is rotatably positioned via a holder.
8. The device according to claim 1, wherein the drawing-out disc and the last cone pair are connected to and driven by a same motor.
9. The device according to claim 1, wherein a regulation is provided with which a rotational speed regulation of the motors occurs as a function of a rotational speed of the drawing-out disc.
10. The device according to claim 1, wherein the applied test load is maintainable by the testing disc as a function of the rotational speed of the drawing-out disc.
11. The device according to claim 1, wherein at least one of the drawing-out disc and the testing disc is equipped on a front face with a co-rotating disc which comprises disc openings through which a suctioning of air occurs when the co-rotating disc rotates.
12. The device according to claim 1, wherein the drawing-out disc and the testing disc are each equipped on a front face with a co-rotating disc having disc openings through which a suctioning of air occurs when the co-rotating disc rotates.
13. The device according to claim 1, wherein the motors are servomotors.
14. The device according to claim 1, wherein the testing disc additionally applies a stretching load to the wire.
15. The device according to claim 1, wherein the drawing-out disc and the testing disc are each equipped with a respective co-rotating disc having disc openings through which a suctioning of air occurs when the respective co-rotating discs rotate, the respective co-rotating discs being arranged in the closeable chambers.
Description
(1) Additional features, benefits and effects of the invention are derived from the following exemplary embodiment of the same. The drawings which are thereby referenced show the following:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9) In
(10) Between the individual cones 21, 22, 31, 32, 41, 42 of a cone pair 2, 3, 4, drawing die holders with drawing dies 23, 33, 43 are arranged, through which wire 5 is drawn which is drawn off from a spool and fed to the device 1 and drawn by this device. By means of the drawing die holders with drawing dies 23, 33, 43, the diameter of the wire which is fed through, typically a steel wire, is reduced continuously, wherein deformation heat is produced. The cross-sectional decreases at the first two cone pairs 2, 3 typically lie within the range of 13% to 18% and are approximately 1% to 3% less at the third cone pair 4. Each drawing die holder holds at least one drawing die 23, 33, 43, but usually multiple drawing dies.
(11) In a manner to be explained below, each individual cone pair 2, 3, 4 is driven by a motor 6, 7, 8 which is located respectively behind the cone pair 2, 3, 4. A drawing-out disc 11 is arranged downstream from the last cone pair 4, with which disc the wire 5 is drawn off from the last cone pair 4 with an additional cross-sectional reduction of approx. 8% to 12% and is fed to a testing disc 12 following another coiling revolution. The wire 5 is guided on the drawing-out disc 11 without slip. At the testing disc 12, a test load is applied in order to test the wire for suitability for use. The applied test load is variable and depends on the rotational speed of the drawing-out disc 11 or is regulated according to the rotational speed thereof. From the testing disc 12, which is also operated without slip, the wire 5 is ultimately fed via a placer 17 onto a winder 18, where a finished wire roll 19 can be removed upon completion. A dedicated motor is provided for the testing disc 12.
(12) In
(13) As can be seen in the perspective representation in
(14) A drawing-out disc 11 is arranged downstream of the actual wet drawing device or at the cone pairs 2, 3, 4, which disc is arranged in a separate section, as is a testing disc 12 which is arranged downstream of drawing-out disc 11. By means of the drawing-out disc 11, the wire 5 is drawn off from the last cone pair 4 without slip, wherein a further cross-sectional reduction of approximately 8% to 12% can occur. After the wire 5 is guided in a coiling manner until a complete frictional fit is achieved, but is guided at least once in a coiling manner, this wire is fed to the testing disc 12, with which a defined testing load is applied to the wire 5. It is thus ensured that the wire 5 exhibits a required strength. The testing load that is applied by the testing disc 12 is regulated as a function of the rotational speed at the drawing-out disc 11 in order to account for the respective current circumstances. Furthermore, a stretching load is also advantageously applied via this arrangement, by means of which load the wire 5 is straightened and residual tensions can be effectively eliminated, for which reason none of the roller straighteners used in current practice are required, which straighteners frequently exhibit bearing damage after a brief period of use and are exposed to significant wear. The drawing-out disc 11 is arranged such that, similar to between the cone pairs 2, 3, 4, a plane is again formed between the last cone pair 4 and the drawing-out disc 11, which plane lies perpendicular to the rotation axis of the driving disc 11 and in which the wire 5 travels during the transfer.
(15) The drive concept is illustrated in greater detail on the basis of
(16) A regulation of the device 1 occurs via the drawing-out disc 11. A load torque ratio between two adjacent drives must not exceed a critical limit value, which would inevitably lead to wire breakage. As a result of a drawing die wear or diameter increases in the individual drawing dies 22, 23, 43, however, torque changes occur which are measured, or are transmitted by the servomotors, and corrected if necessary by a re-adjustment of the rotational speeds. For this purpose, the rotational speed of the drawing-out disc 11 is calculated, which as a rule must be equal to a predefined setpoint value (a maximum production rotational speed, in the ideal case). In the event of corresponding deviations from the setpoint value, a regulation of the servomotors 6, 7, 8 respectively arranged upstream occurs so that, on the one hand, a slip minimization is achieved at the cones 2, 3, 4 and, on the other hand, a minimization of the wire loading is achieved.
(17) In
(18) Furthermore, the device 1 advantageously has a leakage indicator 300 for monitoring the leak-tightness of the cone shafts and for preventing the drawing agent from entering the bearings with subsequent bearing damage. For this purpose, an intermediate chamber is provided in the region of a sealing unit and a shaft bearing, via which chamber the leak flow of a drawing agent is drained in a collected manner and guided into indicator containers via lines which are each distinctly assigned to the sealing unit, whereby a leaking shaft bearing becomes clearly identifiable for a device operator and, if necessary, suitable measures can be taken in order to specifically counteract costly bearing damage subsequently occurring in the event of an unidentified leak flow. Lengthy downtimes can thus be effectively avoided.
(19) In
(20) As follows in particular from a review of both
(21) In
(22) To limit the disadvantageous case of a continuous slip accumulation across all stages of the deformation and to be able to autonomously perform all adjustments of the device 1 via the regulation thereof, wherein additional sensors can be completely omitted and the device 1 nevertheless produces in a manner adjusted to an optimal operating state, a regulation or control according to
(23) Unlike a frequency converter, a servo controller has vastly quicker intervention options, since along with the voltage amplitude and the frequency, a phasing of the current can also be modified. In particular, through the option of interfering with the phasing, very quick current modifications, and therefore torque modifications, are possible. This is also a prerequisite for a dynamic drive behavior, which is necessary if the overlaid rotational speeds or torques are supposed to be or need to be dynamically adjusted. The servo control concept used for the device 1 occurs by means of a storage of a motor model in the servo controller so that the magnetizing component and the active component of the motor current can be regulated independent of one another. The dynamic characteristics of the controller are thus significantly improved.
(24) Since, for functional reasons, the drawing process with a device 1 is always to be operated with a certain slip, it is expedient to provide a base slip on the order of approximately 2% across the individual geometries. The startup of the device 1 is therefore carried out using a pure rotational speed control. The regulation of the rotational speeds thereby occurs in a simple manner via the rotational speed of the drawing-out disc 11, which specifies a reference setpoint value or a maximum production speed. During the startup, the testing disc 12 can already be driven via the torque to achieve optimal wire qualities. Then, once stable production conditions have been achieved, it is expediently possible to change over into a torque-controlled operation of the motors 6, 7, 8. This transition can be performed manually or automatically. Although a complete frictional connection must not occur during a sliding drawing process, since otherwise a wire tear inevitably occurs in the device 1 and a slip measurement is also not possible, as no suitable systems are available on the market in this regard which can metrologically capture the wire speed at all drawing stages, an adjustment to changing conditions (process parameters and/or changes in tool condition), and therefore an optimized product speed, can be achieved using the speed information or torque information or the corresponding shafts without sensor systems while avoiding a wire tear.
(25) With a regulation diagram according to