MILLING BIT WITH SPHERICAL ENDING FOR CNC MILLING OF INDUSTRIAL CLAY
20260001149 ยท 2026-01-01
Inventors
Cpc classification
B23C2210/241
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
An example milling bit comprises a shank and a working sector comprising a cutting anterior part, which is a portion of a hollow sphere, a cutting posterior part fixed to the shank and located between the shank and the spherical anterior part, at least one cutting tooth extending along an entire length of the working sector with a cutting edge, and at least one flute to the cutting tooth extending along length of the working sector following the path of the cutting edge. The spherical anterior part of the working sector is hollow and at least one cutting tooth in the anterior cavity region has a shape of a spherical shell element.
Claims
1. A milling bit for industrial clays and similar materials comprising: a shank; and a working sector including: a cutting anterior part with an outer surface defined as part of a theoretical sphere, a cutting posterior part fixed to the shank and located between the shank and the cutting anterior part, at least one cutting tooth extending the entire length of the working sector, the cutting tooth including a cutting edge that is helicoidal about a central axis of the milling bit and extends to an intersection of the central axis and a front spherical surface of the cutting anterior part, the cutting edge including a helicoidal angle between 10 and 45, at least one helical flute extending along the length of the working sector proximate to the cutting edge, wherein an open anterior cavity is formed by an inner surface of the cutting anterior part such that, in a region of the anterior cavity, the at least one cutting tooth is in the form of a spherical shell element with a wall thickness between 0.3 mm to 5 mm and the cutting tooth includes a wedge angle between 3 and 40.
2. The milling bit according to claim 1, wherein the spherical shell element in the cutting anterior part includes a rake angle of between 45 and 87.
3. The milling bit according to claim 1, wherein a shape of a revolving surface described by the cutting edge of the at least one cutting tooth at the cutting posterior part is cylindrical.
4. The milling bit according to claim 1, wherein the anterior cavity in the cutting anterior part of the working sector partially extends to the cutting posterior part of the working sector such that at least part of the cutting posterior part is hollow.
5. The milling bit according to claim 1, wherein the anterior cavity has a spherical shape.
6. The milling bit according to claim 1, wherein a diameter of the cutting anterior part is the same as a diameter of the cutting posterior part, wherein the cutting anterior part is defined by a hemisphere.
7. The milling bit according to claim 1, wherein a diameter of the cutting anterior part is larger than a diameter of the cutting posterior part.
8. The milling bit according to claim 1, wherein the cutting anterior part of the working section has a single cutting tooth forming a spherical shell element, the spherical shell element including an angular arc width in the equatorial plane between 45 and 190.
9. The milling bit according to claim 8, wherein the angular width in the equatorial plane of the spherical shell element is between 90 and 180 and an additional through hole is provided in the spherical shell element.
10. The milling bit according to claim 1, including two diametrically opposite identical cutting teeth forming two spherical shell elements in the cutting anterior part, the two spherical shell elements including an angular arc width in the equatorial plane between 10 and 90.
11. The milling bit according to claim 1, including three identical cutting teeth symmetrically arranged with respect to the central axis of the milling bit and forming three spherical shell elements in the cutting anterior part, with the three spherical shell elements including an angular arc width in the equatorial plane between 10 and 45.
12. The milling bit according to claim 1, wherein the cutting edge of the at least one cutting tooth includes a helicoidal angle of between 20 and 35.
13. The milling bit according to claim 4, wherein the entire length of the cutting posterior part includes a hollow channel extending about the central axis of the milling bit, the hollow channel in communication with the anterior cavity.
14. The milling bit according to claim 13, wherein the helical flute forms a surface of the hollow channel such that a cross-section of the cutting posterior part is an arc segment of a circle.
15. The milling bit according to claim 13, wherein the spherical shell element includes an additional through hole in communication with the anterior cavity and hollow channel.
16. The milling bit according to claim 7, wherein the diameter of the cutting anterior part is less then three times the diameter of the cutting posterior part.
17. The milling bit according to claim 8, wherein the angular width in the equatorial plane of the spherical shell element is between 60 and 180.
18. The milling bit according to claim 1, wherein the spherical shell element in the cutting anterior part includes a relief angle between 0 and 5.
19. The milling bit according to claim 1, wherein a negative radial indentation is provided on an outer surface of the cutting tooth.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025] The various features and advantages of the disclosed examples will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the detailed description. The figures that accompany the detailed description can be briefly described as follows:
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[0028] All FIGS. from 3 to 13 are presented with three side views at different axial rotation. For milling bits with one or two cutting teeth (
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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[0041] The shank 1 is a solid rod, that may be cylindrical or another shape, and serves to secure the tool in the chuck of a milling machine. The diameter of the shank 1 may be larger or smaller than the diameter of the working sector 2.
[0042] Working sector 2 is fixed to the shank 1. It has one or more longitudinal cutting teeth 5 with cutting edges 8 that are helicoidal around the axis of rotation A and, accordingly, one or more flutes 6. The term helicoidal cutting edge in this description means a cutting edge, which is formed as a projection of a helicoid on the surface of the working sector and ends at the intersection of the milling bit's axis A and the front spherical surface of an anterior part 3. In one example, the milling 12 has a helicoidal angle from 10 to 45, more narrowly from 20 to 35 (
[0043] Each cutting tooth 5 has a corresponding flute 6 parallel to the trajectory of the cutting edge 8 and extending along the length of the working sector 2. The flute 6 is formed immediately after the trailing (rear non-cutting) edge 9 of each cutting tooth 5 with respect to the direction of rotation. The shape, the cross-section and size of the flutes 6 provide sufficient space for easy chip formation and removal without compromising the structural strength of the teeth. In a transvers section the shape of the flutes 6 is an optimized and smooth curve in the space between the cutting teeth 5, without sharp corners, in order to avoid stress concentration in the tool and chip retention conditions. The transverse profile of the flute 6 can be variable along the length of the tool, for example to be deeper or shallower, in order to provide greater strength or rigidity of the tool in the corresponding area.
[0044] The working sector 2 consists of a cutting anterior part 3, which is a part of a sphere, and a cutting posterior part 4 fixed to the shank 1, which is a transition between the shank 1 and the spherical anterior part 3. When the tool is rotated, the cutting edges 8 at the posterior part 4 geometrically describe a revolved surface in the form of a cylinder, cone, paraboloid, hyperboloid, or a combination of the above and ending with the spherical anterior part 3.
[0045] There may be one or more cutting teeth 5, and accordingly, one or more cutting edges 8. More cutting edges 8 may cause a higher cutting speed because there is less material to trim by one cutting edge 8. On the other hand, more edges means reducing the size of the flutes, and thus the space for the release of the chips in operation. This could lead to accumulation of shavings, fusion and clutter. Therefore, a number of cutting edges between one and five may be optimal. More narrowly, there are no more than three cutting teeth 5.
[0046] The forward part of the cutting 5 tooth of the milling bit 12 (
[0047] The relief angle is the angle enclosed between the outer deflecting surface 14 of the cutting tooth 5 and the motion vector of the cutting edge 13, which is tangent to the circle defined by the cutting edge 8 during rotation. In an example, the relief angle can have values from 0 up to about 5. Providing the relief angle in this range serves to reduce the parasitic friction between the outer part of the cutting edge 13 and the material being machined.
[0048] A rake angle ( on
[0049] Another improvement of the embodiments of this disclosure relates to facilitating the evacuation of chips by means of a spherical cavity 16 at the anterior part 3 of the working sector 2 and cavities along entire cutting sector 2 in some embodiments. The degree of reduction of the cutting tooth's blade section and deflecting angles depends on the milling bit's architecture and manufacturing technology.
[0050] In one example, the anterior part 3 of the working sector 2 is hollow. Accordingly, an anterior cavity 16 is formed by the inner surface of the tooth 5 or teeth and extends at least in the anterior part 3, but can also continue to the posterior part 4. The flutes 6 transit into the anterior cavity 16 and together form the drainage space for the chips.
[0051] In the embodiments with one cutting edge 5 shown in the
[0052] The shape of the anterior cavity 16 can be spherical, spheroidal, ellipsoidal, ovoid, cylindrical or other similar revolved shape or a combination thereof. Physically, the anterior cutting part 3 of the working sector 2 is a hollow sphere or a hemisphere reduced to one or more identical spherical shell elements 7 corresponding to the cutting teeth 5. Shell elements 7 are spherical segments of the theoretical sphere of the anterior part 3. The cutting edge 8 in the shell element 7 is a continuation of the projection of the helicoid forming the cutting edge 8 along its entire length.
[0053] The thickness of the shell segments 7 may be 0.3-5 mm, and must meet the minimum strength parameters permitted by the implemented material and production technology. This allows a reduction in the thickness of the cutting teeth 5 at the anterior part and, accordingly, decrease in resistance. The shell elements 7 of the cutting teeth 5 in the anterior part 3, as spherical segments, may have different angular widths depending on the number of teeth 5. The angular width of the shell elements 7 is the angle between the end points of the cutting edge 8 and the trailing edge 9 of the shell element 7 and the center of the theoretical sphere of the anterior part 3, measured at the Equatorial plane of this imaginary sphere (
[0054] With an angular width between 90 and 180, an additional through hole 11 can be provided on the surface of the shell element 7 for better evacuation of chips (shavings). The additional hole 11 may be perpendicular to the axis of rotation A of the milling bit 12.
[0055] The angular width of the shell element 7 is important for the structural strength of the milling bit 12 and particularly to the spherical anterior part 3 of the working sector 2. An angular width in the range of 100-180 gives good strength to the shell element 7 (anterior cutting spherical segment), but may reduce the evacuation of chips. This range is practically applicable when implemented with one anterior spherical shell element 7. An angular width in the range of 10-90 gives a good release of chips, but may result in a single cutting tooth being relatively structurally weak.
[0056] Accordingly, in one example, a milling bit 12 has one tooth 5 and the shell element 7 has an angular arc width between about 45-190, or more narrowly about 60-180 degrees. In another example, a milling bit 12 has two cutting teeth 5 and shell elements 7 having angular arc widths between 8-90. In another example, a milling bit 12 has three identical cutting teeth 5 rotationally symmetrical to the central axis A of the milling bit 12, and their shell elements 7 have an angular arc width between 8-45. Reducing the angular width of the spherical shells 7 of the cutting teeth 5 also reduces the cutting resistance. This also facilitates the evacuation of chips.
[0057] When there are two or more cutting teeth 5, they are rotationally symmetrical relative to the axis of rotation A of the tool, and accordingly, at equal peripheral distances from each other to ensure a uniform load on the tool body. For the same reason, the flutes 6 between the cutting teeth of the tool have the same size and shape, which ensures an equal distribution of chips.
[0058] The diameter of the spherical anterior part 3 can be the same as the diameter of the posterior part (inscribed diameter) or could exceed the diameter of the posterior part 4.
[0059] In the embodiments of the invention shown in the figures where the diameter of the anterior part 3 is the same as the diameter of the posterior part 4 (
[0060] The outmost diameter of the milling bit's anterior part 3, according to the invention, can be from 2.5 mm to about 100 mm. The theoretical maximum size of the milling bit 12 is not limited, but in practical terms, the size will be determined by the overall dimensions and details of the milled model. Larger cutters will have higher productivity. Too small milling bits will have reduced efficiency. Milling bits of a large diameter (15-60 mm) will cut material faster than milling bits of a small diameter (2.5-15 mm), so the largest diameter that can do the task is preferred. When milling a concave shape (cavity), the diameter of the milling bit will be limited by the size of the internal curves. The radius of a selected milling bit should be equal or smaller than the radius of the smallest negative geometric arc used in the virtual model.
[0061] To reduce the parasitic friction between the outer surface of the tool and the milling material, a negative radial indentation 10 may be provided on the outer surface of the cutting tooth 5 behind and along the cutting edge 8 (
[0062] This disclosure illustrates several nonlimiting embodiments divided in two main groups: milling bits 12 with inscribed hemispherical ends (
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[0071] The milling bits according to this disclosure can be manufactured in one piece, composite and assembled. The exemplary milling bits can also be made of one or more mechanically connected or welded elements in accordance with the production technology. The milling bits can be made of materials such as a tool steel and include wear-resistant inserts made of high-strength and hard synthetic materials. It is desirable that the surface of the tool is polished and coated with a nonsticking layer.
[0072] After fixation in the chuck of the mill, the milling bit starts turning, and after reaching the operational revolutions, it enters the clay and is driven linearly along a pre-generated trajectory. The milling bit follows the linear trajectory via the theoretical center of the spherical anterior part. The combination of rotational and translational movement of the tool in the material creates a cutting action. The process is subtractive, and as a result of the cutting action, the material is systematically cut off in the form of a channel with a section identical to the contour of the figure described by the cutting edges when the tool is rotated around the axis of rotation. The clay model surface is thus formed by multiple parallel, overlapping and connected channels and cavities, whether shallow or deep, machined by the milling bit.
[0073] Although the different non-limiting embodiments are illustrates as having specific components or steps, the embodiments of this disclosure are not limited to those particular combinations. It is possible to use some of the components or features from any of the non-limiting embodiments in combination with features or components from any of the other non-limiting embodiments. In other words, placement and orientation of the various components of the embodiments of
[0074] It should be understood that like reference numerals identify corresponding or similar elements through the several drawings. It should also be understood that although a particular component arrangement is disclosed and illustrated in these exemplary embodiments, other arrangements could also benefit from the teachings of this disclosure.
[0075] The foregoing description shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in any limiting sense. A worker of ordinary skill in the art would understand that certain modifications could come within the scope of this disclosure. For these reasons, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this disclosure.