A machine shop recently faced a challenge relating to producing large mold
cores for the tooling it uses to manufacture the long-lasting, top-performing
timing belts that have made the company a leading supplier of such products to
automotive OEMs. These cores are drum-shaped components that may be as large as
28-inches in diameter or as small as 2 inches in diameter. Regardless of size,
these cores feature a series of contoured grooves, evenly spaced along the
length of the workpiece, that look like teeth on gear. A larger core may have as
many as 115 of these teeth.
The problem was finding an effective way to grind these teeth to a 16-rms
finish on the largest of these cores. The solution was a surface grinder
outfitted with special fixturing and an indexer. This grinder, the ProGrind 1267
Easy from Jones & Shipman (Farmington, Connecticut) accelerated the entire
grinding process while enabling lights-out operation.
Although the company has an immense product portfolio, the actual machining
space at its facility can be characterized as a quintessential job shop. The
machining area covers about 40,000 square feet. This location produces tooling
for the company’s global operations. It deals extensively with large parts such
as mandrels and drums of varying sizes that may be used to manufacture parts
such as timing belts. Primarily serving the automotive segment, the 17-person
shop also performs a good deal of fabrication work.
At first, the way to attain the desired finish on the large cores was not
readily apparent because the previous method could not accommodate diameters
that large. The manufacturing engineer at the company explains the limitations
associated with tooling setup and the grinder that had been used for this
specific application.
“That grinder, which we still use for mid-sized work, can comfortably
accommodate 4-inch to 11.5-inch diameters,” he says. It could not handle the
largest diameter core. “To grind about 0.03 inch off the circumference of this
particular drum, however, we were dealing with diameters ranging up to 28
inches.”
For this family of parts, the OD is essentially the same—just the number of
teeth varies.
In June 2006, the new grinder joined the company’s four other NC machines.
Strong points from the company’s perspective were the grinder’s distinctly
different programming techniques and intuitive interface, as well as the
ballscrew-driven table, which is designed to speed the grinding process while
yielding favorable flatness. Another noteworthy feature is the EasyControl,
which has enabled the company to coordinate axes to a greater extent when
applied to four-axis work. According to the builder, the control’s capability to
interpolate axes simultaneously enables precision grinding of complex shapes,
angles and surfaces.
Drawing upon the capabilities of the icon-based EasyControl software and GE
Fanuc touchscreen, the “self teach” grinder produces high levels of
straightness, flatness and parallelism. As the “Easy” name implies, the control
system is equipped to guide the operator through a series of menus to digitize
positions and create programs.
It is helpful to possess a decent knowledge of speeds and feeds and general
understanding of grinding, the company says. However, the control is said to be
so easy to use that most people can grasp it fairly quickly.
Customarily dealing with “onesies,” the shop doesn’t often run multiples of a
certain part. However, according to the company, grinding different-sized rolls
does not create setup bottlenecks. “You can access various menus by the touchpad
and select different profiles,” says one machinist. “The grinder requires
minimal input from the operator. The user need only select the form and how many
to grind. Using this interface, you can change sizes and commence based off
that.”
Aside from the relative ease with which the company is able to program its
new grinder, it cites the automatic dressing and grinding cycles as key
ingredients in easing setups, holding part accuracy and facilitating 24/7
production. The company can initiate straight or formed wheel dressing via the
touchscreen at any time in either manual, single-cycle or multi-cycle mode with
the ‘Dress on Demand’ feature.
At start-up, three prompts appear: Manual, Dress or Grind cycle mode. In
manual mode, the grinder operates as a hand-controlled machine, with manual
dress and no setup procedures. The user can adjust speeds and feeds via the
touchscreen. Dress mode offers five standard wheel shape options—flat, slot,
facing, Vee form and full ISO with one or two diamonds as needed. Dressing
increments, speeds and frequency are selectable via the menus. Grind mode allows
one or as many as 20 grind cycles, as the complexity of the component dictates.
The 28-inch-diameter parts are mounted on a Nikken indexer and tailstock,
with special fixturing between the centers. Dressing occurs at the start of the
cycle and at the feed change point. There are two cycles—a rough grind and a
finish grind. During the roughing process, two teeth are machined, and then
dressing occurs. The finishing process entails three teeth, and then
dressing.
The manufacturing engineer explains the operation in further detail:
“If there are 100 teeth in the part (and two grinding cycles), then most of
the material is roughed out first,” he says. “In that pass, we’ll grind one
tooth; the machine will index to the next one; we’ll grind a tooth. After the
machine is done with the second tooth, it comes over and dresses. After
progressing to the third and fourth teeth, the machine will return to the dress
position and so on. Finish grinding is similar, but because we remove less
material, we can grind three teeth before the machine has to move to the dress
position.”
Instead of incorporating a single-point diamond that would customarily be
used to dress a wheel, the surface grinder is equipped with two diamond rolls.
These wheels are formed using two diamond discs accurately lapped with 0.004- to
0.005-inch radii. A diamond roll basically resembles a disc with diamonds
impregnated all the way around it. Recommended by Jones & Shipman for the
process, these diamond discs are initially more costly. However, they are said
to last longer and expedite the grinding process, in turn compensating for the
extra expense.
Right now, the ProGrind is primarily reserved for grinding fairly large parts
involving heavy cuts. On average, the grind time hovers around 35 hours for the
large cores, says the company. The smaller grinder averages approximately 45
hours on smaller parts, mainly because it is not appropriate for larger
parts.
For instance, the company explains that roughing one particular mold on the
smaller grinder would take about 40 hours. Using the ProGrind, however, the shop
can complete the same roughing cycle in about 22 hours—nearly half of the time
formerly required.
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