CA1179170A - Method of manufacturing seamless steel pipes - Google Patents

Method of manufacturing seamless steel pipes

Info

Publication number
CA1179170A
CA1179170A CA000392402A CA392402A CA1179170A CA 1179170 A CA1179170 A CA 1179170A CA 000392402 A CA000392402 A CA 000392402A CA 392402 A CA392402 A CA 392402A CA 1179170 A CA1179170 A CA 1179170A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
shell
rolling
sizer
mill
rolling mill
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.)
Expired
Application number
CA000392402A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Masachika Numano
Shinji Akita
Yutaka Mihara
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.)
JFE Engineering Corp
Original Assignee
Nippon Kokan 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 JP17881580A external-priority patent/JPS6035206B2/en
Priority claimed from JP627981A external-priority patent/JPS57121811A/en
Application filed by Nippon Kokan Ltd filed Critical Nippon Kokan Ltd
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1179170A publication Critical patent/CA1179170A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B21MECHANICAL METAL-WORKING WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21BROLLING OF METAL
    • B21B23/00Tube-rolling not restricted to methods provided for in only one of groups B21B17/00, B21B19/00, B21B21/00, e.g. combined processes planetary tube rolling, auxiliary arrangements, e.g. lubricating, special tube blanks, continuous casting combined with tube rolling

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Control Of Metal Rolling (AREA)

Abstract

Abstract of the Disclosure.

Disclosed is a method in which a starting material is rolled and made into a pipe by passing the material through a two-roll Mannesmann piercing mill, a three-roll mandrel elongator, a multiple-stand continuous pipe rolling mill of the mandred bar restraining type and a high-reduction sizer in this order.

The sizer is arranged in succession to the exit side of the multiple-stand continuous seamless steel pipe rolling mill of the mandrel bar restraining type so that the shell being rolled by the rolling mill is gripped by the sizer which in turn withdraws the shell being rolled from the mandrel bar of the rolling mill in such a manner that a tensile stress acts on the shell extending between the rolling mill exit and the sizer entry while effecting the rolling of the shell-by the rolling mill and the rolling of the shell by the sizer simultaneously.

The amounts of work shared by the piercing mill, the elongator, the rolling mill and the sizer are suitably determined in such a manner that the merits of these mills are rationally made available and combined thereby cooperative-ly ensuring high efficiency and a high degree of processing accuracy.

Description

~'7~
~IETHOD OF MANVFACTURING SEA~ILESS
STEEL PIPES

Background of the Invention.
The present invention relates to methods of manufacturing seamless steel pipes and more particularly to an improved method which employs a no'vel line arrangement covering a sequence of operations including from piercing to sizing thereby manufacturing product seamless steel pipes of wide range of sizes from starting material of the same size with high dimens.ional accuracy and efficiency.

The seamless steel pipe manufacturing methods heretofore known in the art may be divided broadly into two pracesses, that is, the Mannesmann mandrel mill process used for producing small-diameter seamless steel pipes of about 27.2 mm (~ inch) to 139.8 mm (5~ inches) in outside diameter and the Mannesmann plug mill process used for producing medium-diameter seamless steel pipes of about 152.4 mm (,6 inches) to 406.4 mm (16 inches~ in outside diameter. The former mandrel mill process produces a seamless steel pipe by rol].ing the starting material billet from a heating furnace through a Mannesmann piercing mill, a mandrel mill, a reheat-ing furnace and a stretch reducer in this order, and the application of this process to the larger-diameter products~
is limited by the fact that the mandrel bar must be increased in length or the temperature drop due to the reduction in pipe wall ~hickness increases with increase in the outside diameter of pipes to be produced. On the other hand, the ~3 7~

latter plug mill process produces a seamless steel pipe by rolling the similar billet through a ~lannesmann piercing mill, a Mannesmann type elongator (second piercing mill), a plug mill, a reeler and a sizer, and the efficiency of this process deteriorates with decrease in the outside diameter of pipes to be produced by limitations due to the rolling length and the handling time. As a result, there has existed in fact no process which is capable of efficiently producing pipes in the range of outside diameters (4 to 10 inches) which is intermediary between those of the two processes.

Also, with the above-mentioned prior art processes it has been known that the dimensional accuracy, particularly the accuracy of wall thickness of the produced seamless steel pipes is deteriorated by various factors such as the occurrence of a circumferential thickness deviation in the piercing mill, the reduced thickness deviatlon correcting effect of the elongator and the occurrence of a~thickness deviation due to-the elongator itself or the occurrence of a longitudinal thickness deviation in the mill, the butt thickness deviation, the occurrence of a pipe end thickness deviation in the stretch reducer, etc., in the case of the mandrel mill process.
Thus, the resulting accuracy has been as low as about + 12.5 with respect to the nominal wall thickness.

Moreover, where a multiple-stand continuous seamless steel pipe rolling mill is used in which the mandrel bar is restrained with respect to the axial relative movement during the rolling of a seamless steel pipe by the mandrel mill, it is necessary to use a separate equipment such as an ~7~

extracting mill at a position downstream of the rolling mill so as to withdraw the rolled steel pipe (shell) during or after the rolling operation and usually the extracting mill of the loaded type with three stands or so is used. Thus, there is a disadvantage that it increasingly becomes difficult to provide a sufficient extracting force with increase in the length of the pipe to be rolled and this makes difficult particularly the rolling of the light-wall pipes. Moreover, the fact that the length of the table from the rolling mill to the following operation or the sizer is increased gives rise to another disadvantage that it is impossible to prevent the occurrence of such problems as an increase in the overall length of the mill line and a decrease in the temperature of the shell due to the increased transfer time up to the sizer, and thus it is obliged to arrange a reheating furnace between the rolling mill and the sizer. --Summary of the Invention.
It is therefore an object of the present invention toprovide a seamless steel pipe manufacturing method which replaces as a third process the above-mentioned two prior art processes and which overcomes all of the foregoing deficiencies in the prior art.

It is another object of the invention to provide an improved such method which employs a multiple-stand continuous mandrel mill as a rolling mill.

O
It is still another object of the invention to provide such method which eliminates the provision of an extracting mill and a reheating furnace and which reduces the temperature drop during the rolling up to the siziny.
In accordance with another form of the invention, the method is designed so that after a heated raw material billet has been pierced and rolled by a two-roll piercing mill with a stretch ratio of ~p _2.5 to form a pierced shell, the shell is subjected to the - mandrel rolling by a three-roll mandred elongator with an elongation ratio 1l~ in the range of 1.5 to 1.~, and while performing a wall thickness reduction rolling by a multiple-stand continuous pipe rolling mill of the mandrel bar restraining type, a high degree of outside diameter reduction is applied to the shell with a stretch ratio ~S in the range of 1.1 to 1.3 while pulling it by a sizer connected to the exit side of the rolling mill with a minimum force of the order which is sufficient to ` 20 withdraw the mandrel bar from within the shell being rolled.
More specifically in the present invention, the piercing mill is not caused to share a large rolling reduction but it shares a rolling reduction such that the stretch ratio is less than those of the prior art processes and the elongator comprises a three-roll mill of the mandrel bar type. The following rolling is effected by a kh/~

~ 7~:~t7~

multiple-stand rolling mill of the mandrel bar re-straining type, and the sizer applies ~ high degree of outside diameter reduction to the pipe with the minimum required stretch, thus cooperatively impxoving the dimensional accuracy r particularly the wall thickness accuracy of product as high as about + 5~ and remarkably improving the inner sur~ace properties of product by virtue of the double-stage mandrel bar rolling, making the product well suited for use as an oil well pipe such as a casing pipe for oil well casing applications. Also, since the shares of working by the various mills can be combined rationally so as to allow display of the merits of these mills, it is possible to produce seamless steel pipes of good quality with a high yield ~y using in-expensive continuously cast billets as starting material, and by limiting the stretch of the sizer to the minimum requirement, it is possible to minimize the thickness devia-tion over the entire length as well as the longi-tudinal increase of the wall thickness with the resulting very remarkable improvement in the yield. Further, in accordance with the invention the sizer is arranged just in the rear of the rolling mill such that the rolling of the shell is effected by the two mills side by side, with the result . .

,~!. ,~

kh/~
J

~l7~L~

that the sizer provides a force sufficient to withdraw the shell from the mandrel bar during the rolling operation of the rolling mill and that the entire line length is reduced by more than several tens meters thus reducing the pass time between the mills and thereby reducing the temperature drop~
eliminating the need to reheat the shell before the siæing and greatly contributing to the saving of energy.

The above and other objects and advantages of this invention will be made more apparent by the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying draw-ings.

Brief Description of the Drawings.
Fig. 1 is a perspective view for explaining the various operations according to a seamless steel p-ipe manufacturing method of this invention.

Figs. 2a, 2b and 2c are dlagrams useful in explaining the working relation between a rolling mill and a sizer.

Description of the Preferred Embodiments.
Referr-ing to Fig. 1, numeral 1 designates a heating furnace, and a starting materlal billet 2a is formed into a hollow shell 2b by a two-roll Mannesmann piercing mill 3.
The reduction share of the piercing mill 3 is selected so that the stretch ratio ~p of the billet is less than 3, preferably about 2.1 to 2.4, thus allowing full play to the specific characteristics of this type of piercing mill that it is possible to effect the piercing and rolling with a high ~7~

degree of accuracy and efficiency to produce the pipes of about the medium wall thickness. When the hollow shell 2b is conveyed to a three-roll mandrel elongator 4 so that the rolling process with a stretch ratio ~IE = 1.5 to 1.8 by a mandrel bar 5 is effected, high thickness deviation correcting effect of the three-roll mandrel bar elongator and the improved pipe inner surface properties due to the mandrel bar rolling are both ensured. The resulting shell 2c passing through the three-roll mandrel elongator 4 is fed int~ a multiple-stand continuous rolling mill 6 of the mandrel bar restraining type so that the shell 2c is rolled to obtain the desired wall thickness by providing a large stretch ratio (~M = up to 5 or so) due to rolling. The mill 6 includes a mandreI bar 7 whose axial movement other than the stroke required for rolling is restrained at its tail end by a restraining mechanism 9, so that it is possible to roll long material by the relatively short mandrel bar 7- and the relative speeds of the mandrel bar 7 and the shell 2c are maintained constant in the pipe lengthwise direction thus preventing large variations in the rolling condition and reducing the longi-tudinal thickness deviation. Of course, the inner surface properties of the shell are improved.

The rolling mill 6 is followed by a sizer 8 arranged in succession so that when the shell 2c is being rolled by the rolling mill 6, a rolled shell portion 2d of the shell 2c is pulled by the sizer 8 with a moderate applied stretch and thus a force acts which withdraws downstream the shell portion 2d from the mandrel bar 7. As a result, the rolling mill 6 L7C~

is no longer required to maintain as large a clearance as heretofore required between the mandrel bar 7 and the shell inner surface in the final rolling area near its exit end, so that the rolling mill 6 is provided with the rolling condition which minimizes the circumferential thickness deviation and the production of lighter-wall pipes is made possible.

The sizer 8 provide a high degree of outside diameter -reduction under the application of the above-mentioned mini-mum requirement stretch sufficient for ~ithdrawing the shell 2d from the mandrel bar 7 and its conditions axe se-t so that its stretch ratio ~s becomes about 1.1 to 1.3. By this maintaining the stretch at a low value, it is possible ta - produce pipes of different outside diameters from the same hollow shell while ensuring a high degree of pipe dimensional accuracy and it is also possible to produce pipes of the same diameter witll the reduced thickness deviation over the entire length.

The following Table shows a detailed exemplary distribu-tion of the amounts of working according to the seamless steel pipe manufacturing method of this invention as well as those of the prior art methods.

. .

~ _ __ _ ~ r~ ~----r '-------- ----------~--~

C ~4 N ~ (~1 (~ r--I`') ~J ~_ ~ L~ 1-- ~r ~ ~o _ _ _ _ _ h _ ._ _ ,_ _. _ _ _ __ o _ ~o c ~ u~ Ln o r~ c~ ~ o a) ~ ~ . .
,~ ~ ~ .~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ r~ ~ ~r Ln L~7 ~ = = = = = = = = = = = __ = = = = = = = =

~ u~ Irl ~ ~ ~ ~r N O a~ (~1 ~ _ _ _--3 ~ ~ Ot~ Lf~ _ _ ~ _ ~ I~ co co ~_ I~ ~o ~r _ _ __ ~ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ ~ ~ O ~, O. Lr~ .
, _ ~ 1- ~ ~D ~D ~ ~ _ _ _ ~ 00 ~ ~r ~ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~
_ . . .
.. .

. . ~? ~ ~ ~i ~ ~ ~ -~; ~ ~ _ ~ _ ~ ~ ~ '~ -h ~ ~ :~

~ ~ 9, ~ ~ ~ g ~ ~ g ~ v .~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 3 ~ ~ ~ o ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ o ~ ~ ~
V V ,v V ~ V V V ~ ~ ~ V ~ V V V ~ V .,, V

a !~ C ~ O ~1 ,i ~ ,~ ~ "
~ ~ a~ ~ ~ ~ ~ u, ~ ~ ~ ~ 3 ~ ~ ~ o C~O--CI
.... _ V Q I ~ ~ 5, p4 ~ ~ 8 g 3~7~
r r ~ _ _ __ _ ___ _ ~ 'n _ ~
., ~ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ ~ ~r ~ t~l ~
'. ~ ~î = = = = = _ _ _ _ _ .~ ~ ~ o oo a:) o J~ O ~n ~_ ~ r~ I
~ U~ _ _ _ ~ o ~ l_ ~\
'' .

B ~ ~i ~ B ~ ~ ~ B ~i V ~
:: ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
v a ', 5_~ l N

', ' :

7~
As will be seen from the Table, in accordance with the present invention the same line arrangement permits the rolling and processing of both the larger outside diameter pipe of 114.3 mm produced by the conventional mandrel mill - process and the smaller outside diameter pipe of 177.8 mm produced by the conventional plug mill process and the method of this invention should be noticed as a high efficiency process which is adapted to produce pipes of sizes in the range which is intermediate between those of the conven-tional processes. Also~ in contrast to the overall stretch ratio of 14.8 according to the conventional mandrel mill process and the stretch ratio of 7.56 according to the conventional plug mill process, the processes A and B of this invention provide the stretch ratios of 23.7 and 16.7 which are respectively about two times the ratios of the corres-pondiny conventional processes. Thus, the working ratio leaves a large margin so that the concentration of size of the starting material is possible and in particular the present invention is well suited for producing products of various sizes from the continuously cast billets~ Moreover, the billet is continuously processed without being subjected to any intermediate reheating and thus the thermal loss can be reduced to a minimum.

Figs. 2a, 2b and 2c show in due order the conditions in the rolling mill 6 and the sizer 8 during the rolling opera-tion. More specifically, Fig 2ashows the conditions prior to the start of the rolling operation and Fig. 2b shows the conditions during the rolling operation. Fig. 2c shows the r~

'7~

conditions after the shell has passed through the rolling mill. In the Figures, numeral 6 designates the multiple-stand continuous seamless steel pipe rolling mill, and 7 the rolling mill mandrel bar whose axial movement other than the stroke required for the rolling is restrained at its rear end by the restraining mechanism 9. Numeral 8 designates the roll type sizer arranged to immediately follow the exit side of the rolling mill 6, and positioned between the exit end of the rolling mill 6 and the entry end of the sizer 8 is a tension detector 10 for measuring the tension between the mills~

As shown in FigO 2a, with the mandrel bar 7 being inserted, the hollow shell 2c is conveyed to the entry side of the rolling mill 6 so that the snell 2c is subjected successively to the mandrel rolling by the.respective stands of the rolling mill 6 and then it is passed.to its exit end.
During the rolling operationl the mandrel bar 7 is held.at its rear end by the restraining mechanism 9 and the rolling is effected with the mandrel bar 7 being restrained. The rolled shell 2d emerging ~rom the exit end of the rolling mill 6 is directly passed into the entry stand of the sizer 8 so that the forward end shell 2d of the hollow shell 2c is simultaneously subjected to rolling reduction while the hollow shell 2c is being rolled by the rolling mill 6.
Fig. 2c shows the hollow shell ?c, the shell 2d and a sized steel pipe 2e (it is needless to say that they form the individual portions of the single pipe) and the positional relation of the mandrel bar 7 with respect to the respective mills in the condition described so far. In this rolling ~3 7 ~

condition, if a compressive stress is applied to the shell portion 2d existing between -the rolllng mill exit and the sizer entry, the shell will be deformed. Thus, while monitoring the tension between the mills by the tension detector 10, the roll speed is distributed so that a tensile force tending to stretch is produced in the sizer ~ and thus a tensile stress is always applied. In this case, however, if any excessive tensile stress is applied, when the tail end of the shell passes through the exit stand of the rolling mill 6 as shown in Fig. 2c, the wall thickness will be appreciably increased in the shell tail end portion between the mills. As a result, it is preferable to limit the speed distribution such that the roll peripheral speed of the sizer entry stand is higher by several percent than that of the rolling mill exit stand.

.
.
,;

Claims (2)

THE EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION IN WHICH AN EXCLUSIVE
PROPERTY OR PRIVILEGE IS CLAIMED ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS:
1. A method of manufacturing seamless steel pipes comprising the steps of:
piercing and rolling a heated starting material billet with a stretch ratio µp ? 2.5 by a two-roll piercing mill to form a pierced shell;
subjecting said pierced shell to mandrel rolling by means of a three-roll mandrel elongator with an elongation ratio µE in the range of 1,5 to 1.8; and then while subjecting said shell to wall thickness reduction rolling by a multiple-stand continuous pipe rolling mill of a mandrel bar restraining type, causing a high degree of outside diameter reduction of said rolled shell with a stretch ration µS in the range of 1.1 to 1.3 by a sizer arranged in succession to an exit side of said rolling mill by pulling said rolled shell with as small a force as possible but sufficient to withdraw a mandrel bar of said rolling mill from within said rolled shell.
2. A method according to claim 1 including the steps of:
causing a tensile stress to act on said pierced shell extending between the outlet of said rolling mill and the entry of said sizer, and simultaneously effecting rolling of said pierced shell by said rolling mill and rolling of said shell by said sizer while said shell is under tension.
CA000392402A 1980-12-19 1981-12-16 Method of manufacturing seamless steel pipes Expired CA1179170A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP17881580A JPS6035206B2 (en) 1980-12-19 1980-12-19 Seamless steel pipe manufacturing method
JP55-178815 1980-12-19
JP627981A JPS57121811A (en) 1981-01-21 1981-01-21 Rolling method for seamless steel pipe
JP56-6279 1981-01-21

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1179170A true CA1179170A (en) 1984-12-11

Family

ID=26340378

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA000392402A Expired CA1179170A (en) 1980-12-19 1981-12-16 Method of manufacturing seamless steel pipes

Country Status (5)

Country Link
CA (1) CA1179170A (en)
DE (1) DE3149646A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2496505B1 (en)
GB (1) GB2089702B (en)
IT (1) IT1142117B (en)

Families Citing this family (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3236892A1 (en) * 1982-10-01 1984-04-05 Mannesmann AG, 4000 Düsseldorf ROLLING MILL FOR THE PRODUCTION OF THIN-WALLED SEAMLESS TUBES
CA1247885A (en) * 1983-08-02 1989-01-03 Dezsoe A. Pozsgay Seamless tube mill
DE3536046A1 (en) * 1985-10-09 1987-04-16 Kocks Technik METHOD, SYSTEM AND ROLLING MILL FOR THE PRODUCTION OF SEAMLESS TUBES
JP2924523B2 (en) * 1992-12-11 1999-07-26 住友金属工業株式会社 Elongation rolling method of metal tube by mandrel mill
US5799726A (en) * 1996-01-23 1998-09-01 Frank; Jimmy I. Refrigerated mixing chamber and method for making same
EP2521626B1 (en) * 2010-01-05 2014-12-17 SMS Innse S.p.A. Tube rolling plant and method for rolling seamless tubes

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4037449A (en) * 1976-07-30 1977-07-26 Aetna-Standard Engineering Company Continuous flow plug mill system
GB1575859A (en) * 1977-04-18 1980-10-01 Aetna Standard Eng Co Process for the production of seamless tubular products
US4318294A (en) * 1978-12-29 1982-03-09 Nippon Steel Corporation Method of manufacturing seamless metal pipes and tubes

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2089702B (en) 1984-08-30
IT1142117B (en) 1986-10-08
FR2496505A1 (en) 1982-06-25
FR2496505B1 (en) 1985-07-19
DE3149646C2 (en) 1987-07-23
DE3149646A1 (en) 1982-08-12
GB2089702A (en) 1982-06-30
IT8125652A0 (en) 1981-12-17

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