Dual tip cutter and method of hard turning
09592558 ยท 2017-03-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B23B27/145
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23B27/1659
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23B29/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23B2210/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23B2270/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T407/2208
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B23B27/1685
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23B2228/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T407/221
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T407/22
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B23B27/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23B27/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23B29/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A dual tip cutter (10) includes a body (12) defining a feed direction (F), a cutting direction (C) perpendicular to the feed direction, and a depth direction (D) perpendicular to both feed and cutting directions. A first cutting portion (35) is fixed relative to the body at a body first end. A second cutting portion (45) is fixed relative to the body at the body first end, adjacent the first cutting portion. The first and second cutting portions are stacked in the cutting direction so that the first cutting portion forms a leading cutting portion and the second cutting portion forms a trailing cutting portion for simultaneous cutting. The second cutting portion extends from the body further in the depth direction than the first cutting portion. A relative position between the first and second cutting portions is set such that a total chip load is shared between the first and second cutting portions in a predetermined ratio (K).
Claims
1. A dual tip cutter comprising: a body defining a feed direction, a cutting direction perpendicular to the feed direction, and a depth direction perpendicular to both the feed direction and the cutting direction; a first cutting portion fixed relative to the body at a first end of the body; and a second cutting portion fixed relative to the body at the first end of the body adjacent the first cutting portion, wherein the first and second cutting portions are stacked in the cutting direction so that the first cutting portion forms a leading cutting portion and the second cutting portion forms a trailing cutting portion for simultaneous cutting with the leading cutting portion, the second cutting portion extending from the body further in the depth direction than the first cutting portion, wherein a relative position between the first cutting portion and the second cutting portion is set such that a total chip load is shared between the first and second cutting portions, and wherein cutting edges of each of the first and second cutting portions that are forward in the feed direction are aligned in a plane parallel to the cutting direction.
2. The dual tip cutter of claim 1, wherein the first and second cutting portions are provided by separate cutting inserts coupled to the body, the dual tip cutter further comprising an adjusting device for adjusting a relative position between the respective cutting portions of the first and second cutting inserts.
3. The dual tip cutter of claim 2, wherein the adjusting device is configured to adjust the relative position between the first and second cutting portions in a continuously variable manner.
4. The dual tip cutter of claim 3, wherein the cutting insert having the first cutting portion is fixed relative to the body, and the adjusting device is operable on the cutting insert having the second cutting portion.
5. The dual tip cutter of claim 2, wherein the adjusting device includes a pair of set screws received in a corresponding pair of threaded apertures provided in adjacent side walls of an opening of the body receiving the first and second cutting inserts.
6. The dual tip cutter of claim 1, wherein the body is rotatable about an axis so that a relative alignment between the first and second cutting portions with respect to a work piece can be varied on demand.
7. The dual tip cutter of claim 1, wherein the first and second cutting portions are substantially identical.
8. The dual tip cutter of claim 1, wherein the first and second cutting portions are different in at least one of material type, shape, and radius.
9. The dual tip cutter of claim 1, wherein the first and second cutting portions are integrally-formed as parts of a single, multi-cutter insert so that a relative position between the first cutting portion and the second cutting portion is fixed.
10. A method of hard turning a work piece having a hardness value of at least HRC 58 to a smooth finished surface, the method comprising: providing a dual tip cutter having a body defining a feed direction, a cutting direction perpendicular to the feed direction, and a depth direction perpendicular to both the feed direction and the cutting direction; setting a relative positioning between a first cutting portion fixed relative to the body at a first end of the body and a second cutting portion fixed relative to the body at the first end of the body adjacent the first cutting portion; cutting the work piece with the first cutting portion; and cutting the work piece, simultaneously with the cutting of the first cutting portion, with the second cutting portion, with the first cutting portion leading the second cutting portion in the cutting direction, wherein the first cutting portion removes a first amount of material from the work piece, and the second cutting portion removes an additional amount of material from the work piece so that the total chip load is distributed between the first and second cutting portions according to a partition ratio, wherein cutting edges of each of the first and second cutting portions that are forward in the feed direction are aligned in a plane parallel to the cutting direction.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein setting the relative positioning between the first cutting portion and the second cutting portion includes adjusting a relative position between the first cutting portion and the second cutting portion.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein adjusting the relative position between the first cutting portion and the second cutting portion includes adjusting the position of the second cutting portion relative to the body.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein adjusting the position of the second cutting portion relative to the body includes rotating one or more set screws providing an adjustable abutment between the second cutting portion and the body.
14. The method of claim 10, further comprising rotating the body about an axis to alter the alignment between the first and second cutting portions.
15. The method of claim 10, wherein cutting the work piece with the first and second cutting portions includes making continuously overlapping helical cutting passes with the dual tip cutter as the work piece is rotated about a central axis, and the dual tip cutter is fed in the feed direction parallel to the central axis.
16. The method of claim 10, wherein the partition ratio for the first cutting portion relative to the total chip load is between 0.25 and 0.75.
17. The method of claim 10, wherein the partition ratio for the first cutting portion relative to the total chip load is 0.5.
18. The method of claim 10, wherein setting the relative positioning between the first cutting portion and the second cutting portion includes selecting a single, integral multi-cutter insert having a fixed relative position of the first and second cutting portions.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(12) Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways.
(13) The cutter has multiple cutting edges and/or tips aligned along the cutting path. The cutting edges, from front to back or from top to bottom, assume progressively increasing depths. This allows the cutter to share chip load among its multiple cutting edges/tips. The total cutting depth is the sum of individual cutting depths of the multiple cutting edges/tips, which is significantly deeper compared with conventional single edge/tip cutters.
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(15) The inserts 30, 40 are assembled into the opening 21 of the tool holder 20 with the second insert 40 at the bottom surface 25 of the opening 21, and the first insert 30 on top of the second insert 40. Thus, the first insert 30 faces the cutting direction C to form a leading cutter while the second insert 40 is generally behind the first insert 30 in the cutting direction C to form a trailing cutter. The spacer 50 is sandwiched between the first insert 30 and the second insert 40, with the pins 53 inserted inside of the locating holes 32, 42 of the respective inserts 30, 40. The side of first insert 30 is abutted firmly against the side walls 23A and 23B of the tool holder 20. Similarly, the side of the second insert 40 is abutted firmly against the side wall 22A and 22B of the tool holder 20. The ears 51 of the spacer 50 are slidably positioned inside of the groove 24, parallel to the cutting direction C. The inserts 30 and 40, and the spacer 50 therebetween are clamped down firmly against the bottom surface 25 of the tool holder 20.
(16) As shown in
(17) More inserts can also be adopted in the manner described above. In addition, the first and second inserts 30, 40 and the spacer 50 can be integrated as a single dual-tip insert.
(18) When the cutter 10 is brought to engagement with the work piece 60, as shown in
(19) Projecting the two cutting portions 35, 45 to a common plane viewing along the cutting direction C as shown in
(20) Although horizontally-stacked cutters (i.e., side-by-side in the feed direction F) might generally be considered to have separate leading and trailing cutting portions along a helical cutting path as a work piece is rotated and the cutting tool is fed in direction, the spacing distance along the helical cutting path in such circumstances is substantially equal to a circumference of the work piece. On the other hand, the cutting tool 10 described and illustrated herein has the cutting portions 35, 45 separated along the helical cutting path 62 by a distance substantially smaller than the circumference of the work piece 60. The spacing distance between the cutting portions 35, 45, as measured along the cutting path 62 may be less than about 10 percent of the circumference of the work piece 60. Thus, the two cutting portions 35, 45 make substantially one shared cut, with shared chip load, whereas cutters spaced in a feed direction make substantially separate cuts altogether. Despite the small spacing between the first and second cutting portions 35, 45 along the cutting path 62, an adequate chip escape route is provided. The optimal spacing distance may depend upon the conditions of a given cutting operation.
(21) The chip load that each of the cutting portions 35, 45 carries is in an approximate proportion to the cross-sectional area, perpendicular to the nominal cutting direction C, of cutting chip (
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where
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In above equations, y is the positive root of the following equation set
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(25) As can be appreciated, the chip load partition ratio K is a function of feed rate f.sub.d for a given set of cutter geometry parameters R.sub.1, R.sub.2 and cutting depth D.sub.2.
(26) For preferred chip load sharing, x and y may be set such that K is close to K=0.5. As a practical matter, any K value ranging from 0.25 to 0.75 may be acceptable (K=0.25 to 0.75).
(27) To maximize the total cutting depth while minimizing the chip load for both inserts 30, 40, the cutting tip radius R.sub.2 of the leading insert 30 may be equal to or smaller than the cutting tip radius R.sub.1 of the trailing insert 40.
(28) In order to have approximately the same cutting length for the cutting portions 35, 45 of the leading and trailing inserts 30, 40, the expression R.sub.1R.sub.2+.sub.y cos .sub.x sin may be set to zero. This aligns the cutting edges HI, GB (the forward edges in the feed direction F) of the leading and trailing inserts 30, 40 in a plane that is perpendicular to the plane defined by the depth direction D and the feeding direction F (see
(29) In accordance with the above equations, one can predetermine a desired ratio K of chip load sharing between the first and second cutting portions 35, 45 and set a relative position between the first and second cutting portions 35, 45 to achieve the predetermined ratio K. Additional flexibility for repeated reconfiguring of the relative positioning between first and second cutting portions 35, 45 is provided by a variant shown in
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(31) Aligning multiple cutting tips and edges along the cutting path 62 requires the inserts 30 and 40 to be offset slightly rather than vertically aligned in the nominal cutting direction C. The device shown in
(32) It is also possible to have the tool holder 20 statically or dynamically rotatable about an axis such that said offset of the inserts 30, 40 from the vertically-aligned position can be adjusted on demand in accordance with the desired feed rate and actual load sharing conditions. For example, at beginning, the inserts 30, 40 can be aligned vertically in the nominal cutting direction C, then the alignment angle may change slightly following the actual helical cutting path 62, and then finally the alignment angle may change back to its beginning position. This not only achieves desired chip load sharing but also leaves no transitional zone at beginning and end finished surface areas.
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(34) It should be understood that the cutter of the current invention can be used to cut any materials, hardened or unhardened, and for a host of products, including but not limited to bearings, without deviating from the spirit of current invention. Although not strictly required, the cutting tool 10 can be used by feeding the tool 10 along a substantial section of the work piece 60 (e.g., a majority section of the work piece 60 in the feed direction F) to remove material from the work piece 60, in continuously overlapping cutting passes, leaving a smooth finished surface.
(35) Those of skill in the art will appreciate other possible variants and/or embodiments. They shall be considered under the scope of the current invention.