AU541110B2 - Rock drill - Google Patents

Rock drill

Info

Publication number
AU541110B2
AU541110B2 AU80801/82A AU8080182A AU541110B2 AU 541110 B2 AU541110 B2 AU 541110B2 AU 80801/82 A AU80801/82 A AU 80801/82A AU 8080182 A AU8080182 A AU 8080182A AU 541110 B2 AU541110 B2 AU 541110B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
thread
conical surface
drill bit
drilling assembly
drill rod
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
AU80801/82A
Other versions
AU8080182A (en
Inventor
L.E. Larsson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Santrade Ltd
Original Assignee
Santrade Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from SE8100767A external-priority patent/SE425261B/en
Application filed by Santrade Ltd filed Critical Santrade Ltd
Publication of AU8080182A publication Critical patent/AU8080182A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU541110B2 publication Critical patent/AU541110B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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Description

Rock drill
The present invention relates to a rock drill and more precisely to a drilling assembly for use in percussion rock drilling comprising a drill bit having a first conical surface and adapted for connection to a drill rod having a corresponding second conical surface, wherein one of the conical surfaces is provided with a helically extending thread or groove, and a drill rod intended to be used In the drilling assembly.
In percussion rock drilling either integral drill steels or detachable drill bits are used. Such drill bits are, during drilling, connected to a drill rod by means of a threaded connection or conical frictional connection.
The disadvantage of the conical connections is primarily that, during certain circumstances, there is a risk that the drill bit is lost, and that the drill rod sometimes has a tendency to slip or spin in the drill bit. Loss of the drill bit may happen if a firm frictional connection is not yet created which means that the drill bit may be thrown away by appearing shock wave forces. Slip of the drill rod, or spinning thereof in a non-rotating drill bit may be caused if the drill bit enters a cavity in the rock, which means that the shock waves are not transmitted to the rock but instead do loosen the firm connection between drill bit and drill rod.
The object of the present invention is to provide a drilling assembly having a conical frictional connection which does not have the above disadvantage.
This and other objects of the invention have been attained by giving the invention the characterizing features stated in the appending claims. The invention is described in the following with reference to the accompanying drawings in which one embodiment is shown by way of example. It is to be understood that this embodiment is only illustrative of the invention and that various modifications may be made within the scope of the claims.
In the drawings, Fig. 1 shows a drilling assembly according to the invention.
Fig. 2 shows on an enlarged scale the cooperating conical surfaces in the position when contact first arises during the connection of the drill bit and drill rod.
Fig. 3 shows the conical surfaces in Fig. 2 in their final connected position.
The drilling assembly according to the invention comprises a percussion drill bit 10, which is intended to be connected to a drill rod 11. The drill bit 10 is in conventional manner provided with a plurality of hard metal inserts 12. During drilling flushing medium is supplied to the bottom of the drill hole through a passage 13 in the drill rod and one or several branching passages 14 in the drill bit.
The drill bit 10 is provided with a conical surface 15 and the drill rod 11 has a corresponding conical surface 16. For purposes of obtaining a more reliable connection between the drill bit 10 and the drill rod 11 the conical surface 16 is provided with a helical thread 17.
In the preferred embodiment the thread 17 is made by means of a turning tool. The radius of curvature r of the profile of the thread, thus, coincides with the radius of the indexable insert of the turning tool. Preferably, the radius of curvature r is constant and has a value within the interval 0.5 mm to 2.0 mm, with preference for values somewhat smaller than 1.0 mm.
The conical surface 15 of the drill bit 10 is smooth, i.e. unthreaded, before the connection of the drill bit to the drill rod 11. During the connection, thus, contact first arises at the crests of the thread 17, see Fig. 2. During drilling, then, the thread 17 will impress a corresponding thread in the drill bit by means of the shock wave forces from the rock drilling machine. Thus, a miniature-thread connection is obtained which together with the tapered embodiment ensures a safe and reliable attachment of the drill bit to the drill rod. It has been found that in a drilling assembly according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention a substantially conversely congruent thread is impressed in the drill bit 10. In order to ensure such impression it has been found that the conical surface 16 shall be harder than the conical surface 15, preferably at least 10 Rockwell "C" units (HRC) harder. Such a difference in hardness also means that the drill bit 10 can be replaced by a new drill bit on the same drill rod when becoming worn, since the conical surface 16 on the whole is intact, which affects the drilling costs favourably.
According to the invention the thread 17 is further a left hand thread which means that, due to the rotational direction of the usual rock drilling machines, the pitch direction of the thread 17 is such that the drill bit during drilling has a tendency to be drawn even more tightly on the conical surface 16.
Further, according to the invention, the depth d of the thread 17 is larger than the smaller leg in a rightangled triangle in which the larger leg coincides with the generatrix 18 of the conical surfaces, the hypotenuse is parallel with the longitudinal axis 19 of the drilling assembly and the smallest angleoC is formed between the generatrix l8 and the hypotenuse. The angle α, thus, is half of the included taper angle. In Fig. 2 is shown the lower limit value of the depth d in order to meet the geometrical demands which are required for ensuring that the drill bit 10 will not be thrown away from the drill rod 11 by means of the shock wave forces.
In the preferred embodiment the thread 17 forms with the generatrix 18 a segment having a chord s and a height d; the curved portion of the segment coinciding with the radius r of the cutting insert of the turning tool. The height d is also the small leg in a right-angled triangle, the large leg of which being half the chord (s/2) and the top angle of which coinciding with the half cone angle α of the conical surfaces. According to the invention, thus the height d of the removed segment shall be larger than, or at least equal to, the height d of the right-angled triangle.
The lower limit value is obtained by equalizing the height of the segment, r - (/ 4r - s )/2, and the small leg in the triangle, tg α × s/2.
It is also to be found that if. the radius of curvature r is 0.8 mm and the cone angled is 6° then the pitch s of the miniature thread shall exceed 0.3326 mm.
By tests it has been found that a reliable conical connection is obtained only if all the three conditions stated below are fulfilled, namely that
1) the miniature thread is a left hand thread,
2) the depth of the miniature thread exceeds a lower limit value, and 3) the conical surface being provided with the thread is harder than the other conical surface.
It has also been found that the depth d of the thread should not be too large, because too large a depth will result in the drill bit 10 becoming difficult to loosen due to the fact that the portions thereof between the crests of the thread 17 partly have to be cut off during the disconnection. If the depth d of the thread is smaller than 3.0 mm, then probably this disadvantage is eliminated. It has been found that values smaller than 2.0 mm are to be preferred, with preference for values smaller than 0.5 mm.
In the preferred embodiment the angle β between two adjacent flank surfaces at the crest of the thread 17 is obtuse.

Claims (10)

Claims
1. A drilling assembly for use in percussion rock drilling comprising a drill bit (10) having a first conical surface (15), said drill bit being adapted for connection to a drill rod (11) having a corresponding second conical surface (16), wherein one of said first and second conical surfaces is provided with a helically extending thread or groove (17), c h a r a c t e r i z e d in that the thread (17) is designed as a left hand thread, and the conical surface (16) being provided with the thread (17) is harder than the other conical surface.
2. A drilling assembly according to claim 1, wherein the depth of thread (d) is larger than the small leg in a rightangled triangle, the large leg of which coinciding with the generatrix (18) of the conical surfaces, the hypotenuse of which being parallel with the longitudinal axis (19) of the drilling assembly, and the smallest angle (α ) of which being formed between the generatrix (18) and the hypotenuse, said triangle being inscribed within the profile of the thread (17).
3. A drilling assembly according to claim 1 or 2 wherein the profile of the thread (17) along at least a fraction of its axial extent is continuously curved, preferably at least along the bottom portions thereof.
4. A drilling assembly according to claim 3, wherein the radius of curvature (r) of the thread profile is constant and has a value within the interval 0.5 mm to 2.0 mm, with preferenc for values somewhat below 1.0 mm.
5. A drilling assembly according to any of claims 1-3, wherein the pitch of the thread (17) is larger than 0.2 mm, preferably larger than 0.3 mm, and the depth of thread (d) is smaller than 3.0 mm, preferably smaller than 2.0 mm, with preference for values smaller than 0.5 mm for purposes of making possible detachment of the drill bit substantially without mechanically damaging the drill bit and/or the drill rod.
6. A drilling assembly according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the conical surface (16) being provided with the thread (17) is at least lo Rockwell "C" units harder than the other conical surface (15).
7. A drilling assembly according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the thread (17) is provided on the conical surface (16) of the drill rod (11), whereas the conical surface (15) of the drill bit (10) is unthreaded.
8. A drill rod for use in a percussion rock drilling assembly comprising a drill bit having a first conical surface (15) and adapted to be connected to a drill rod (11) having a corresponding second conical surface (16) on an end portion, c h a r a c t e r i z e d in that said end portion is provided with a helically extending left hand thread or groove (17).
9. A drill rod according to claim 8, .'herein the depth of thread (d) is larger than the smaller leg in a rightangled triangle, the larger leg of which coinciding with the generatrix (18) of the conical surfaces and being half of the pitch (s/2), the hypotenuse of which being parallel with the longitudinal axis (19) of the drill rod (11), and the smallest angle ( α ) of which being formed between the generatrix (18) and the hypotenuse, said triangle being inscribed within the profile of the thread (17).
10. A drill rod according to claim 9, wherein the depth of thread (d) is smaller than 3,0 mm, preferably smaller than 2,0 mm with preference for values smaller than 0.5 mm for purposes of making possible detachment of the drill bit substantially without mechanically damaging the drill bit and/or the drill rod, and wherein the angle ( β) between two adjacent flank surfaces at the crest of the thread (17) is obtuse.
AU80801/82A 1981-02-02 1982-01-26 Rock drill Ceased AU541110B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
SE8100767A SE425261B (en) 1981-02-02 1981-02-02 CONFERENCE ON DRILL CHRONICLE AND DRILLER INTENDED TO USE SUCH A CONNECTION
SE8100767-6 1981-02-02
PCT/SE1982/000021 WO1982002735A1 (en) 1981-02-02 1982-01-26 Rock drill

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU8080182A AU8080182A (en) 1982-08-26
AU541110B2 true AU541110B2 (en) 1984-12-13

Family

ID=26657813

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU80801/82A Ceased AU541110B2 (en) 1981-02-02 1982-01-26 Rock drill

Country Status (2)

Country Link
AU (1) AU541110B2 (en)
FI (1) FI823173A0 (en)

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
FI823173L (en) 1982-09-14
FI823173A0 (en) 1982-09-14
AU8080182A (en) 1982-08-26

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