Few machine tool components are more fundamental than the way system, which
provides the interface between moving and stationary elements of the machine. In
many machines, the moving elements ride on way systems using rolling
elements—that is, way systems with metal-to-metal contact. Hydrostatic ways, by
comparison, do not have this contact. In a hydrostatic system, the guideways use
a pressurized film of oil, with pockets in the way system distributing the oil
to center the moving element. Without the surface-to-surface contact, the slides
can operate without wear. Furthermore, because the moving element is suspended
by fluid, the impact of vibration is reduced.
However, the way system does not work in isolation. Each machine design is an
integrated system. Speaking of the “advantages” of a way system is a bit
misleading, says Chris Stine, because the machine design has to leverage any
potential benefits the way system affords. Mr. Stine is vice president of United Grinding, a
company that offers grinding machines using various way-system options. When the
machine design does leverage the benefits of hydrostatic ways, he says, those
benefits can include any of the following:
Acceleration And Weight-Carrying Capacity
With
the moving mass sliding along oil, additional energy does not have to be spent
to overcome the friction in systems with metal-to-metal contact. The resulting
productivity improvement can be seen in applications involving wide wheels, high
horsepower and/or heavy stock removal.
For example, in an application for grinding a power-generation turbine blade
using an 8-inch-wide wheel, a machine with hydrostatic ways can get much more
mass in motion compared to a similar machine using conventional guideways. The
hydrostatic machine can also accelerate a given mass at a higher rate. The
difference on a turbine blade, which typically requires repeated movements, can
be enough to grind the work in 30 percent less time.
United Grinding’s Mägerle machines with hydrostatic ways are used in grinding
applications along the lines of the one above. The company relayed comments from
some users. Eric Reutimann, owner of Spectra-Tech in Hanover Park, Illinois,
says, “The table almost ‘floats,’ as if it were on water. There is no
stick-slip, as in the case with some machines.”
Longevity
Another advantage is long life. It
is incorrect to say hydrostatic-way machines are lower maintenance machines,
because a different kind of maintenance is required. Fluid and filters have to
be tended to, and so on. However, because these ways eliminate metal-to-metal
contact, there is (in theory) no wear.
Gary Treichler, vice president and general manager of Form Grind Corporation
in Rancho Santa Margarita, California, says that he has watched his own
hydrostatic-way grinding machines “keep producing great parts,” even though they
have been in use for more than 30 years.
Vibration DampingHydrostatic ways can “wrap
around” the machine’s moving elements so that the moving element is buffered
from surface-to-surface contact in all directions (see drawing on the right).
This buffer damps vibration.
The actual importance of this vibration-damping can vary significantly from
application to application. Linear guideways with rolling elements are used in
many precision-machining applications without the vibration necessarily making a
difference. However, in some cases, vibration damping can prove crucial to
achieving a needed appearance, smoothness or flatness of the part.
In one recent example, a manufacturer needed to grind 33-inch-long plates of
optical glass to a flatness better than 100 microinches. The machine with
hydrostatic ways not only achieved a flatness well within this requirement
without a temperature-controlled room, but it also kept the glass from chipping
or breaking during grinding because of the damping effect.
Making The Choice
While a hydrostatic-way
machine may cost more than one using mechanical ways, a shop facing the
wide-grinding-wheel application mentioned above might gladly pay more for a
machine that is able to grind the part 30 percent faster.
On the other hand, a different shop machining exactly the same part might
prefer the redundancy of having multiple machines available for the work. This
shop might prefer to have a process that uses a larger number of less expensive
machines, even if those machines are individually less productive. In other
words, performance and price, by themselves, do not indicate which machine tool
is better.
Mr. Stine says whether or not the shop is a job shop might also affect the
choice. To stretch their capital equipment dollars, job shops often embrace a
philosophy that has the shop buying no more capability than necessary in each of
its machines.
Then again, perhaps the very same job shop might embrace the opposite mindset
in some cases. A job shop that needs to buy a bigger machine tool than any it
currently has available, just for the sake of one job, might choose to buy the
most capable big machine tool it can. That is, it might buy a hydrostatic-way
machine offering greater performance so that if the shop needs to enter
large-envelope machining anyway, it can provide the most aggressive big-envelope
machining services possible.
In short: It all depends. The way system doesn’t work in isolation. In an
interconnected system such as a machine tool, the true significance of a feature
such as hydrostatic ways depends not only on the design of the machine, nor only
on the part that is being machined, but also on the very outlook of the shop
that is doing the machining.
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