Twin Disc, a manufacturer of marine transmissions, grinds shafts of all
lengths, weights, shapes and sizes. According to the company, the only thing all
these shafts have in common is precision—very close tolerances and unforgiving
surface finishes. Flawed shaft production can result in transmission failure.
Thus, Twin Disc strives to use the best grinding technology available. So, when
a bottleneck arose from a labor-intensive shaft-production process involving
multiple setups, the company invested in a new grinder equipped with a full B
axis. Since then, it has consolidated the troublesome operation from three
machines to one.
Based in Racine, Wisconsin, Twin Disc has been in business for more than 75
years making more than 30 different marine transmissions for pleasure craft,
military vessels, tugs, pushboats and more. In fact, Allied forces depended on
the company’s transmissions to drive some 40,000 landing craft loaded with
troops and supplies onto beaches during the Normandy invasion and throughout the
South Pacific during World War II. In addition to marine vessels, the company
makes transmissions for mining industry trucks and for various military
vehicles, including the Bradley armored personnel carrier.
The two plants in Racine have a combined 551,271 square feet of manufacturing
space and about 400 employees. The company uses a total of 21 cells, 14 of which
are manufacturing cells for milling, turning, grinding, drilling, finishing and
other such operations. The others are used for assembly, process completion and
so forth. The company performs all operations except heat treating in-house.
The drive shafts are produced in 10 different diameters with various tapers.
The shafts range from 8 to 48 inches long, with diameters ranging between 0.5
and 10 inches. The company holds tolerances between 0.0002 and 0.001 inch and
surface finishes from 10 Ra to 40 Ra. Materials include 1144, C1144, 4145, 4140
and 8620 steel alloys as well as some stainless. Order quantities range from a
single shaft to 500 pieces.
 |
|
Equipped with a full B axis that allows positioning of the
wheelhead at any angle, the grinder has significantly decreased setup time by
allowing the company to consolidate OD-grinding and taper-grinding
operations. |
The company had been looking for a process change in the production of
transmission shafts. Two grinders were used to grind the straight ODs, and a
third was used for plunge grinding tapers. Terry Andersen, grinding team leader,
programmer and machine operator, says this was a slow, operator-intensive
process. Shafts had to be refixtured from the OD grinders to the plunge grinder.
To improve productivity, the company wanted a grinder with a full B axis to
combine the processes in a single machine.
When the company began searching for a flexible grinder to do shaft work in
one shot, everyone was “a little leery,” Mr. Anderson says. There weren’t many
manufacturers to choose from, and certain shaft dimensions eliminated some right
away. At one point, the company actually acquired a grinder with a full B axis.
However, the machine wouldn’t hold diameter size or taper tolerance and was not
consistent, leading the company to continue with the old method.
“There was another company that was just coming out with a full B-axis
machine, and they maintained they could accommodate our specs, tolerances,
surface requirements and shaft dimensions, but we decided against it,” Mr.
Anderson says. “This was going to be their first machine of this type, and
frankly, no one wants to be anyone’s guinea pig—especially when you couple this
with our previous experience.”
Eventually, the company settled on the Kellenberger
Kel-Varia cylindrical grinding system with the Heidenhain
GRINDplusIT control. A key factor in the company’s acquisition of the machine
was its ability to hold tight tolerances while grinding tapers. On many shafts,
the taper is nothing more than a press fit. Most of the tapers’ surface
requirements are 40 Ra, but some have an angle of 30 to 1, which is less than a
1-degree taper.
“We had to have a machine that could handle that kind of range of demand,”
Mr. Anderson says. “It had to be flexible, agile, rigid, and above all,
repeatably consistent in holding very tight tolerances.”
|
Company: Twin Disc
Problem: Needed a single grinder flexible enough to
consolidate multiple operations
Solution: Kellenberger Kel-Varia cylindrical grinding
machine with Heidenhain GRINDplusIT control
Results: Improvements in productivity, repeatability and
accuracy |
The machine’s hydrostatic guideways are designed to provide accuracy and
avoid friction and stick-slip movement. It features absolute measuring in the B
axis, incremental, distance-coded scales in the X and Y axes and a
high-resolution C axis. The grinder can also be equipped with a second B axis
for more dimensional stability and profile accuracy.
The B axis permits automatic positioning of the wheelhead at any angle. For
positioning accuracy, it includes a precision worm gear and distortion-free
clamping. A Hirth coupling, which indexes at 2.5 degrees, also contributes to
positioning accuracy. The Kel-Set automatic grinding wheel measurement system
enables automatic movements to the measuring ball and to the grinding system,
and it stores position information to the control system. When swiveling the
wheelhead into any angle, the system automatically accounts for the positions of
the wheel edges. In addition, the option of interpolating the X and C axes
allows grinding of non-round shapes such as polygons, free contours and
eccentric forms. For various types of grinding operations, the machine can use
universal, diagonal and tandem-type wheelheads.
The grinder’s Heidenhain control features a Windows 2000 operating system, a
graphics editor, expanded grinding cycles, intermediate dressing at the push of
a button, comprehensive tool management, several reference points for each
grinding wheel, remaining-travel display and more.
 |
|
According to the company, the grinder has the accuracy and
repeatability to manufacture drive shafts with stringent tolerance and
surface-finish requirements. Additionally, it is flexible enough to handle 10
different diameters and lengths ranging from 8 to 48 inches.
|
“The Kellenberger not only met all our requirements, but it was a proven
machine, so we didn’t have to worry about working the bugs out of a new design,”
Mr. Anderson says. “It’s been very reliable, and most important, it holds
tolerances and surface finishes with remarkable repeatability.”
Because the company runs as many as 1,200 different shafts, change-over and
setup are very common. However, according to Mr. Anderson, the new grinder makes
this easy.
“Depending on what’s involved, we can changeover from shaft to shaft in about
10 minutes, especially if we’re not changing centers, and it’s strictly a matter
of moving the tailstock and changing the driver,” Mr. Anderson says. “If you
need to change centers and drivers, then you may be up and grinding in 20
minutes or less.”
About a year after purchasing the first Kellenberger, Twin Disc bought a
second. With the exception of a hydraulic tailstock to handle even heavier shaft
work, the second machine is identical to the first. The two machines reside in a
single cell, and one operator runs both.
“We’re able to run twice as much product as before,” says Gary Pope, plant
manager. “One operator does two shafts at once, and they come off finished. We
run these machines 6 days a week, 24 hours a day, and we’ve already seen
improvements in productivity. The accuracy and repeatability couldn’t be
better.”
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.