Cutting tool
10195766 ยท 2019-02-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B28D1/186
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A cutting tool is provided. The cutting tool comprises a tip, a body and a shank. The tip has a tip radius and a tip length. The body has a body radius and a body length between the shank and a recess portion along a longitudinal axis of the body. The recess portion comprises a wall which forms a recess with a depth into the body for retaining a major part of the tip length within the recess. The body radius at half the depth of the recess does not exceed two tip radiuses. The tip is made of a hard metal alloy with a hardness of at least 1300 HV50 and the body is made of a steel alloy with a hardness of at least 450 HV30.
Claims
1. A cutting tool comprising a tip, a body and a shank for attaching the cutting tool to a tool holder, the tip having a tip radius and a tip length between a first end of the tip and a second end of the tip along a longitudinal axis of the tip, the body having a body radius and a body length between the shank and a recess portion along a longitudinal axis of the body, the recess portion comprising a wall which forms a recess with a depth into the body for retaining a major part of the tip length within the recess such that the longitudinal axis of the tip substantially coincides with the longitudinal axis of the body, wherein the body radius at half the depth of the recess is less than two times the tip radius, that the tip is made of a hard metal alloy with a hardness of at least 1300 HV50 and that the body is made of a steel alloy with a hardness of at least 450 HV30.
2. The cutting tool according to claim 1, wherein the body radius along the depth of the recess is less than two times the tip radius.
3. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein the body radius at half the depth of the recess is less than 1.7 times the tip radius.
4. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein the tip is made of a hard metal alloy with a hardness of at least 1350 HV50 and that the body is made of a steel alloy with a hardness of at least 465 HV30.
5. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein the tip is made of a hard metal alloy with a hardness of at least 1400 HV50 and that the body is made of a steel alloy with a hardness of at least 480 HV30.
6. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein the tip is made of a hard metal alloy with a hardness between 1400-1500 HV50 and that the body is made of a steel alloy with a hardness between 480-550 HV30.
7. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein the body radius increases continuously from the recess portion to the shank.
8. The cutting tool according to claim 7 wherein the body radius increases continuously from the recess portion to the shank along a smooth curve.
9. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein a periphery of the body comprises longitudinal grooves.
10. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein the recess comprises a wall portion and a bottom portion with a bottom-radius between the wall portion and the bottom portion.
11. The cutting tool according to claim 10 wherein the bottom radius is at least 1 mm.
12. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein the body comprises a ductile plate arranged in a bottom portion of the recess.
13. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein the tip is retained within the recess by shrink-fitting.
14. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein the first tip end is tapered with a first angle relatively the longitudinal axis of the tip, that the second tip end is tapered with a second angle relatively the longitudinal axis of the tip and that a cylindrical tip body extends between the first tip end and the second tip end.
15. The cutting tool according to claim 1 wherein the tip is made of diamond composite with a hardness of at least 1400 HV30.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The various aspects of embodiments herein, including its particular features and advantages, will be readily understood from the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) Embodiments herein will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout. Well-known functions or constructions will not necessarily be described in detail for brevity and/or clarity.
(9)
(10) The shank 50 can be attached e.g. to a complementary shaped attachment portion of a tool holder of a rotatable drum or the like. The shank 50 can comprise one or more notches, flanges 51, protrusions or similar which may be used for securely attaching the shank 50 to a tool holder of any kind, such as the aforementioned rotatable drum. In some embodiments the shank 50 is arranged to be attached to a sleeve or collar which in turn is attached to the tool holder. The shank 50 can be attached to the tool holder in a fixed or rotatable manner. The body 30 and the shank 50 can be integrally formed or may in some embodiments be separately formed and then attached to each other.
(11) In the embodiment of
(12) In
(13) The tip 20 is made of a hard metal, such as a carbide alloy. For example, the tip 20 is made of cemented carbide, tungsten cemented carbide, silicone carbide, cubic carbide, cermet, polycrystalline cubic boron nitride, silicone cemented diamond, diamond composite or any other material with a hardness of at least 1300 HV50. HV50 is hardness measured by Vickers hardness test and is commonly used for hard material-testing. Since hardness of a material can be measured by different kind of tests, it is understood that the tip 20 is made of a material with a hardness of at least 1300 HV50 or a corresponding hardness measured by other tests. The tip 20 can have a toughness of at least 11 K1c. The toughness, also referred to as fracture toughness, can e.g. be measured by the Palmqvist method as described in US20110000717A1.
(14) Preferable, the ISO standards ISO 3878:1983 (Vickers hardness test for Hard Metals) and ISO 6507:2005 (Vickers hardness test Metallic Materials) are be used for hardness measurements. If measurements have been done according to another established method conversion tables according to ISO 18265:2013 (Hardness conversion Metallic Materials) for metallic materials may be used. For toughness measurements the ISO standard ISO 28079:2009 (Palmqvist test for Hard Metals) is preferably used.
(15) The body 30 is made of a steel alloy with a hardness of at least 450 HV30 or a corresponding hardness measured by other tests. HV30 is hardness measured by Vickers hardness test and is commonly used for testing hardness of steel alloys etc. The body 30 can for example be made of steel, such as of steel comprising about, in weight-percent: 1% Cr, 0.2% Mo, 0.8% Mn, 0.4% C, 0.3% Si, 0.025% P and 0.035% S. The tip 20 can for example comprise 5-7% Co and 93-95 WC, such as about 6% Co and 94% WC. The hardness depends e.g. on the Cobalt content and the particle size of the material.
(16) The below charts illustrate test result from tests where different cutting tools with different tip hardness and body hardness have been tested. The hardness of the tip is measured with HV50 and the hardness for the steel body is measured with HV30. With reference to chart 1 below, cutting tool G is an example of a cutting tool 10 according to claimed embodiments herein. Cutting tools A, B, C, D, E and F are other tested cutting tools according to the state of the art. Cutting tools E and F are variants of the cutting tool G with corresponding geometrical shapes but different combinations of hardness. As illustrated below relative service life for cutting tool G is much larger than for cutting tools E and F.
(17) TABLE-US-00001 CHART 1 Cutting tool Tip-HV50 Body-HV30 A 1170 340-350 B 1170 484-515 C 1150 420-490 D 1150 580-590 E 1020 410-430 F 1460 410-430 G 1460 500
(18) Chart 2 below illustrates test results for the cutting tools A-G after the cutting tools have been tested. During this test the cutting tools were attached to a rotary drum and used for milling a distance of 2000 meters. During approximately 1000 m of the distance, the cutting tools were milling asphalt. Moreover, during approximately 1000 m of the distance, i.e. the remaining portion of the distance, the cutting tools were milling concrete. The milling depth was 3-5 cm and the ambient temperature was about 5 Celsius.
(19) TABLE-US-00002 CHART 2 Approximate wear Cutting tool (mm) Relative service life A 7.5 0.60 B 4.5 1.00 C 6.5 0.69 D 7.5 0.60 E 6.5 0.69 F 5.5 0.82 G 3.5 1.29
(20) Relative service life is defined as inverted wear compared with the best prior-art-cutting tool, i.e. in this test cutting tool B. As an example, relative service life for cutting tool A in Chart 2 is thus 4.5 mm/7.5 mm=0.6. Relative service life for cutting tool G in Chart 2 is thus 4.5 mm/3.5 mm=1.29.
(21) A second test with deeper depth of cut was also performed. Chart 3 below illustrates test results for the cutting tools A and G after the cutting tools have been tested. During the second test the cutting tools were attached to a rotary drum and used for milling a distance of 1300 meters. The cutting tools were milling asphalt. The milling depth was 5-10 cm and the ambient temperature about 8 Celsius. As above, relative service life is defined as inverted wear compared to best prior art cutting tool, in this case bit A.
(22) TABLE-US-00003 CHART 3 Approximate wear Cutting tool (mm) Relative service life A 3.6 1.00 G 1.7 2.12
(23) Several tests were performed. The above charts illustrate some examples of results achieved during the tests. The entire hardness ranges of the claimed embodiments performed very well and had longer relative service life, i.e. a longer amount of time before it was worn out, than cutting tools according to the state of the art. As indicated from the tests, cutting tools according to embodiments herein proved to be very durable and efficient throughout the tests as compared to cutting tools according to the state of the art.
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(25) A major part of the cutting tool 10 can have a shape that is substantially rotational symmetric with reference to the longitudinal axis A of the cutting tool 10. Thus, when the tip 20 is retained within the recess 33 a longitudinal axis of the tip 20 substantially coincides with the longitudinal axis of the body 30. The longitudinal axis A is then a longitudinal centre-axis for the entire cutting tool 10, i.e. for the tip 20, for the body 30 and for the shank 50.
(26) In some embodiments, the first tip end 21 comprises a chamfered or tapered portion 22. The shape of the first tip end 21 can then be seen as substantially frustoconical. A surface of such tapered portion can extend e.g. with an angle 20-60 degrees relatively the longitudinal axis A.
(27) As illustrated in
(28) In
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(31) In some embodiments, a first body radius 41, which is a radius of the body 30 adjacent to the first periphery radius 38, is between 1.1 and 1.8 times the recess radius 40, preferably about 1.3-1.6 times the recess radius 40. According to a first example, the recess radius 40 may be about 5.5 mm and the first body radius 41 may be about 8.5 mm. The first body radius 41 is then about 1.55 times the recess radius. According to a second example, the recess radius 40 may be about 5.5 mm and the first body radius 41 may be about 7.25 mm. The first body radius 41 is then about 1.32 times the recess radius.
(32) In some embodiments, a second body radius 42, which is a radius of the body 30 at approximately half the depth of the recess 33, is between 1.5 and 2 times the recess radius 40. According to some embodiments the second body radius 42 is 1.2-1.7 times the recess radius 40. The recess radius 40 is, when a tip is tightly mounted in the recess, also referred to as a tip radius. The tip radius is illustrated in
(33) According to some embodiments the third body radius 43, which is a radius of the body 30 at a bottom of a cylindrical portion of the recess 33, is 1.6-2.2 times the recess radius 40. In some embodiments a third body radius 43, is between 1.2 and 1.6 times the recess radius 40. According to an example embodiment the recess radius 40 can be about 5.5 mm and the third body radius 43 can be about 10 mm. The third body radius 43 is then about 1.82 times the recess radius.
(34) In some embodiments the bottom portion of the recess 33 is substantially flat. In the embodiment illustrated in
(35) In some embodiments a ductile plate (not shown) is arranged between a mounted tip and the bottom of the recess 33. Such a ductile plate may be made of cupper or other ductile material.
(36) In
(37) As mentioned above, the tip 20 is tightly fitted into the recess e.g. by shrink-fitting. A tip radius 23 is therefore substantially equal to the radius of the recess into which the tip 20 is fitted, i.e. the recess radius 40 discussed in conjunction with
(38) As illustrated in
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(40) As used herein, the term comprising or comprises is open-ended, and includes one or more stated features, elements, steps, components or functions but does not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, elements, steps, components, functions or groups thereof.