Honing is one of the few metalworking processes for which manual machines are
still popular, and it is used in thousands of shops for basic bore sizing and
finishing. This is in the process of changing because of recent developments in
bore sizing technology, says Rich Moellenberg, custom products manager for Sunnen Products
Company (St. Louis, Missouri). The force behind this change is the need for
greater efficiency, tighter sealing, quieter operation and longer life for
products in which a part rotates on a shaft, or a piston slides inside a
bore.
According to Mr. Moellenberg, the industry is meeting this challenge by
turning to CNC honing machines, as well as to robotically automated cells
capable of controlling hole size to accuracies of 0.25µm (0.000010 inch). The
inherent accuracy and process stability of honing have promoted this changeover
because precision parts produced today must meet high Cpk
requirements—“something that is not always as easy with boring, reaming and so
on,” he says. He adds that honing can produce a specified finish and a desirable
crosshatch pattern on the bore surface, which helps retain a lubricating film
for sliding components. Mr. Moellenberg cites the makers of outdoor power
equipment, motorcycles, ATVs, hydraulics, pneumatics, gears and valves as users
who have “discovered” automated honing in their drive to make parts with
tolerances as tight as ±0.0002 inch (±5 µm) at high Cpk levels.
Various hole-making processes, such as boring, drilling and reaming are
capable of producing excellent tolerances, but when a high Cpk requirement is
imposed, Mr. Moellenberg says that it changes the picture entirely. As he notes,
when the target is 1.33 Cpk, manufacturers typically find they have to hold
about 60 percent of the print tolerance; at 1.67 Cpk, it drops to about 40
percent of tolerance. Holes produced satisfactorily on a lathe for years that
suddenly have to meet process capability of 1.33 or 1.67 Cpk may require a much
narrower bell curve of distribution. “Flyers” at the fringes of the curve become
unacceptable.
Why does a high Cpk constrict the tolerance band? As Mr. Moellenberg
explains, Cpk is calculated as upper tolerance minus the mean or as the mean
minus the lower tolerance, whichever is smaller, and this is divided by three
times the standard deviation. A stable, consistent process helps keep the
standard deviation in the denominator small. If the mean of the group can be
focused exactly in the middle of the tolerance range, it helps produce the
largest numerator.
“To get that large numerator and small denominator, you not only want a
process where variability is small, but also you want a process in which you can
accurately target your mean to a certain value and hold it there. A lathe may
get to just a certain value, but then, if tweaked a little, it jumps to a value
out of spec,” Mr. Moellenberg says. He says that hard turning, although an
excellent technique, is more difficult to control, especially for microfinishes.
“In contrast, a computer-controlled hone can get within 10 millionths of a
specified size, and with the resolution on the feed systems of today’s machines,
the variability is very small,” he states.
According to Mr. Moellenberg, the capability of today’s automated CNC honing
systems, such as those based on Sunnen’s SV family of machines, meet today’s
high bore-sizing/finishing requirements, producing hole size accuracies of 0.25
µm (0.00001 inch), with minimal variation and no operator intervention. The SV
machines, for example, use an innovative tool-feed system and can be equipped
with integrated post-process air gaging. The combination of servo air gaging and
proprietary tool-feed control eliminates the need for an experienced honing
operator to tweak the process, Mr. Moellenberg says. The air gaging system takes
post-process measurements of parts while they are still fixtured on the
machine’s rotary table and makes any necessary compensation in the honing
process for bore diameter size or bore geometry.
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Sunnen’s new SV-1000 vertical CNC honing machine series is
based on a modular design that can be configured as a single-spindle machine to
a fully automated multi-spindle unit. The system shown includes robotic part
loading/unloading, three honing spindles, in-line air gaging and finished-part
sorting by size. |
In-process air gaging integrated in the honing tool has been around for a few
decades, but is best used for automatic shut-off, Mr. Moellenberg says, adding
that the post-process system produces the significantly greater accuracy needed
for tool-size control when working to high Cpk standards. It eliminates
measurement uncertainties caused by an undersized or worn gage probe, which can
occur with a hone-head air gage. It also allows measurement without interference
from the swarf and oil present during the process.
“This type of servo-controlled hone knows precisely where the tool is, how
much it has been fed and so on. Some of the older honing machines fed the tool
based on force—the machine sensed how hard it was pushing, but it didn’t really
know tool size at any given time. These new machines do,” Mr. Moellenberg says.
On these machines, a TurboHone multi-stone tool or a diamond-plated CGT
Krossgrinding tool can be adjusted for size with a resolution of 0.25 µm
(0.00001 inch).
The servo-controlled stroke system ensures a consistent crosshatch pattern
and can dwell in any part of the hole, end-to-end, selectively removing stock.
According to Mr. Moellenberg, this enables these machines to achieve
ultra-precise straightness and roundness. The system can also make corrections
that are not intuitive for an operator. Selectable control features, such as
“correct for bore shape” allow the operator to select a “problem” bore image,
such as barrel or taper, and the machine will automatically correct the part.
Combined with feedback from air gaging of finished parts, this honing system
makes high-Cpk hole making the fully automated process today’s manufacturers
want, he says.
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