The good news for shops serving oil and energy companies is that they are
busy. The downside to this is they often don’t have time to research and
integrate new machining strategies because they are running at full capacity,
suggests Gayle Vollmer, Okuma’s director of technical resources.
Take the manufacture of couplings used to join lengths of oil drill-pipes.
Coupling machining has traditionally been performed manually, with operators
loading workpieces into relatively old equipment. These heavy couplings are
difficult for operators handle, and chip control during requisite turning and
threading operations can be a challenge. Plus, the couplings’ ID, OD and threads
must be accurately machined so that the pipes they connect don’t leak.
Until recently, an automated system dedicated to manufacturing those
couplings hadn’t been created, Mr. Vollmer says. Because demand for precision
couplings is increasing, however, Okuma and the Partners in THINC collaborative
decided to develop an automated coupling production cell using vertical and
horizontal lathes, a gantry robot and a conveyor system.
 |
| Vertical turning allows chips produced during threading
operations to fall and flow away from the workpiece. |
The cell was built and tested at the Partners in THINC facility in Charlotte,
North Carolina. After experimenting with various tools, coolants, coolant
pressures and machining practices, the Partners were able to solve the primary
problem of chip accumulation during the turning and threading operations.
Unattended Coupling Production
The automated
manufacturing process begins with a Fanuc overhead gantry
robot that loads double-length coupling blanks in and out of the machines. The
overhead gantry design saves valuable floor space.
 |
|
A gantry robot and parts conveyor eliminate heavy lifting for machine
operators. |
The roughing and finishing operations for coupling ID and OD are performed on
a four-axis Okuma
LOC-650 oil-country lathe. This lathe also performs the cutoff operation that
separates the blank into two 10-inch-long couplings (the finished coupling below
has a diameter of 9 5/8 inches). The workpieces then move down a conveyor to an
Okuma Konan V80R vertical turning lathe (VTL). The V80R’s vertical spindle
orientation assists in evacuating chips during turning and threading operations.
Both machines are fitted with a Schunk “oil country” chuck.
The chips produced during threading operations fall and flow away from the
workpiece thanks to the V80R’s modified tooling adapter and ChipBlaster
high-pressure, high-volume coolant system. Coolant flow from precisely directed
nozzles helps break up the chips and flush them out of the machine. After the
threading operation, the workpiece is conveyed out of the cell and delivered to
a measuring station, where a Marposs gage inspects its threads and diameters.
The cycle time to turn, thread and deliver a completed coupling out of the cell
is only 11 minutes.
This cellular production method allows complete OD turning in one operation.
This helps meet high-precision threading requirements by avoiding the
undesirable blend line that occurs with a two-part operation. In addition to
increasing production speed, the cell eliminates the need for a 1- to 2-minute
sawing operation.
MMS Online is a trademark of Gardner
Publications, Inc, copyright 1997-2008.
MMS Online and all contents are
properties of Gardner Publications,
Inc.
All Rights Reserved