US1579308A - Thread-rolling dies and method of producing same - Google Patents

Thread-rolling dies and method of producing same Download PDF

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US1579308A
US1579308A US12841A US1284125A US1579308A US 1579308 A US1579308 A US 1579308A US 12841 A US12841 A US 12841A US 1284125 A US1284125 A US 1284125A US 1579308 A US1579308 A US 1579308A
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die
thread
dies
rolling
threads
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James H Graham
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B21MECHANICAL METAL-WORKING WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21HMAKING PARTICULAR METAL OBJECTS BY ROLLING, e.g. SCREWS, WHEELS, RINGS, BARRELS, BALLS
    • B21H3/00Making helical bodies or bodies having parts of helical shape
    • B21H3/02Making helical bodies or bodies having parts of helical shape external screw-threads ; Making dies for thread rolling
    • B21H3/06Making by means of profiled members other than rolls, e.g. reciprocating flat dies or jaws, moved longitudinally or curvilinearly with respect to each other

Description

April 6 1926. 1,579,308
J. H. GRAHAM THREAD ROLLING DIES AND METHOD OF PRODUCING SAME Filed March 5 1925 imyl Irwe filer.- Jun/e612. Grahaww,
Patented Apt. 6, 1926 PATENT OFFICE.
JAMES H. GRAHAM, OF- TORRINGTON, CONNECTICUT.
THREAD-ROLLING DIES AND METHOD OF PRODUCING SAME.
Application filed March 8, 1925- Serial No. 12,841.
To all whom it may concern:
I Be it known that I, JAMES H. GRAHAM, a citizen of the United States, residing at Torriugton, in the county of Litchfield and State of Connecticut, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Thread- Rolling Dies and Same, of which the tion. f This invention relates to a process of pro-v ducing right' and left intersecting thread rolling dies and to the dies resulting therefrom. I 1
It has heretofore been possible to produce a single-cut thread, either right or left, by the use of a pair of dies with diagonal following is a specificagrooves an direction. giving these ment with blank between This known process consists in dies :1 relative endwise movethe rotating cylindrical work them; the metal of the blank is caused to flow and the metal forced from the valleys or grooves on the blank forms the adjacent ridges or threads.
This old process has also been applied to the knurling of spindles by using dies having two series of grooves cut at angles to each other.
In both of these old cases the dies can be easily produced with a milling cutter having the counterpart profile of the groove to be out, and by traversing this cutter along the face of the blank at angles.
It has been found desirable to use right and left intersecting threads for the spindles of bicycle pedals, etc-.; but the cost of cuttin such threads on the spindles indi- -vidua y on a lathe would render the same prohibitive. For cheapness and quantity production it is, therefore, desirable to employ a process such as the thread roiling above referred to. It is found that the necessary dies for such work cannot be produced by the usual tool room methods. They cannot be milled out, since upon the completion of one set of threads the cutter would in cutting through and ruin the first set so out.
Furthermore, if it be attempted to roll double threads in the ordinary rolling machine by theuse ofv one right and one left die, the right-hand die will be gashing across the line of flow of metal under the Methods of Producing d ribs of predetermined size and drel.
the proper angle or the opposite ends of the other set of threads out" left-hand die, and vice versa, and there will be no resultant thread.
The present invention presents a method vof producing dies for the manufacture of articles having rlght and left intersecting threads by the rolling process. This method may be outlined as consisting in the pro ducing of an accurate original or pattern; in forcing this pattern into die blanks to produce the die surface; and-in properly hardening the dies thus produced. The pair of dies thus made are identical and co operate in the quantity production of right and left intersecting threads.
On the accompanying drawings: I
Fig. 1 is a. face .view of the die.
Fig. 2 is asection on line 2--2 of Fig. 1.
Fig. '3 is a section on line 3--3 of Fi 1.
Fig. 4 is a section on line H of ig. 1.
Fig. 5 shows in perspective the original or master plug or mandrel.
F g. 6 shows the method of forming the rolling dles fro the master plug or man- Fig. 7 shows an elevation of the threaded article produced.
The body 1 of the die blank is made of soft steel and of the proper size for use in the rolling machine.
3 is the pattern or master plug or ma drel, which is produced by cutting two oppositely directed threads thereon. In particular, extreme care must be taken that the two threads start at exactly the proper point, at the end of this master plug or mandrel, as otherwise the final article would not properly and immediately presented to it, or properly engage either a right or left threaded bore in a right or left crank hanger, for instance.
This master plug 3 is then placed between two soft steel die blanks which are inserted in the die clamps of a thread rolling machine. The die blanks are then moved back and forth under pressure over the master plug, which rotates with them, until the pa tern of the master plug has been impressed into the blanks, and the latter present the required cross section.
Since the two threads start point of the periphery of the master plug, the die blank will have impressed therein a series of regular depressions or indentations which may be described as being of lozenge take the nuts at the proper shape and having a length closely approximating one-half the circumference of the master plug. 7
The ridges bounding or defining such lozenge-shaped depressions -or indentations are straight lines which are continuous and uninterrupted throughout their entire lengths, and comprise two series 9, 10, each serieshaving its individual ridges mutually parallel and the two series intersecting at an angle substantially twice the pitch angle. These two series of ridges intersect and have their tops substantially in a plane. It will, furthermore, be noted that the point of intersection 11 between any two ridges (one right and one left) is a part of the die which simultaneously forms a part of the grooves in the finished work which pertain co-extensively to the right and the left threads.
It will he noted from Figs. 2, 3 and 4 that the indentations or depressions l, 7 in Fig. 2 pass by a regular change of cross section to one half the width in Fig. 3, and finally disappear in Fig. 4; while the next series of depressions 8, 8, which were nonexistent in Fig. 2, have reached a half-size in Fig. 8 and full depth and width in Fig. at. In the example set forth, which illus trates, say, a twenty-thread die, the distance from ridge to ridge in Figs. 2 and 4 is onetwentieth of an inch, and in Fig. 3 onefortieth of an inch.
To further distinguish this type of die from the one used in rolling single threads it may be said that if the latter were used as a printing block the impression would he of a series of parallel lines. If a knurling die were similarly employed,the impression would be a series of isolated spots. If the present die be used, the impression is a series of intersecting unbroken lines forming lozenges or rhombuses, each of which has a major dia onal substantially equal to half the circumIere-nce of the master plug or mandrel.
The formed working dies may now he heat-treated to render them resistent to the strains and wear occurring during the rolling process.
The result of employing these dies is to produce the threaded article as shown in Fig. 7.
While I have described certain definite steps, I do not restrict myself thereto, as I believe that I am the first to produce operative intersecting right and left threads upon a blank by the rollin process, whatever form of die may be used.
\Vhat I claim is: i
A right-and-left intersecting thread rolling die having a right and aleft series of ridges thereon, each of said series comprising continuous and uninterrupted individual ridges extending in parallel straight lines, sa d series of ridges defining and bounding a plurality of identical and symmetrical depressions of cross sections increasing regularly from end to center and decreasing regularly from center to end.
2. A right-and-left intersecting thread rolling die having a right and a left series of ridges thereon, each of said series comprising continuous and uninterrupted individual ridges extending in parallel straight lines, the individual ridges of each of said series intersecting those of the other series, and the tops of all of said individual ridges lying substantially in a plane.
3. The method of producing rolling dies for right-and-left intersecting threads which consists in preparing upon a master plug the threaded form to be reproduced in the finished article, and rolling said plug in contact with a blank die under pressure to form upon said die the counterpart of the master spindle.
4. The method of producing a )air of identical rolling dies for rolling rig ht-andleft intersecting threads which consists in making upon a master plug the thread form to be reproduced in the finished article, and rolling said spindle in contact with them between a pair of blank dies under pressure to form upon the said blanks the counterpart of the master plug.
5. The method of producing rolling dies having counterparts of right-and -left threaded spindles thereon which consists in producing upon amaster plug the thread form to be. reproduced in the finished article, and moving the die blanks in contact with the opposite faces of said rolling master plu 6. The method of producing rolling dies for forming right-and-left intersecting threads which consists in producing a master plug having regular intersecting grooves, and moving the die blanks in contact with the rolling master plug under pressure to obtain an impression of the master plug in the die blank.
In testimony whereof I afiix my signature.
JAMES H. GRAHAM.
US12841A 1925-03-03 1925-03-03 Thread-rolling dies and method of producing same Expired - Lifetime US1579308A (en)

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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2459910A (en) * 1946-02-23 1949-01-25 Imp Brass Mfg Co Method of making tool parts
US2699077A (en) * 1950-11-20 1955-01-11 Emma G Bedker Method of rolling threads on thread forming tools
US2992573A (en) * 1957-07-16 1961-07-18 Daniel H Prutton Form rolling die, mounting construction therefor and method of manufacture and use
US3327569A (en) * 1962-11-08 1967-06-27 Prutton Corp Thread rolling dies and methods of making them
WO2014055209A1 (en) * 2012-10-02 2014-04-10 Illinois Tool Works Inc. Method and apparatus for cold forming thread rolling dies

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2459910A (en) * 1946-02-23 1949-01-25 Imp Brass Mfg Co Method of making tool parts
US2699077A (en) * 1950-11-20 1955-01-11 Emma G Bedker Method of rolling threads on thread forming tools
US2992573A (en) * 1957-07-16 1961-07-18 Daniel H Prutton Form rolling die, mounting construction therefor and method of manufacture and use
US3327569A (en) * 1962-11-08 1967-06-27 Prutton Corp Thread rolling dies and methods of making them
WO2014055209A1 (en) * 2012-10-02 2014-04-10 Illinois Tool Works Inc. Method and apparatus for cold forming thread rolling dies
CN104661770A (en) * 2012-10-02 2015-05-27 伊利诺斯工具制品有限公司 Method and apparatus for cold forming thread rolling dies
US20150266083A1 (en) 2012-10-02 2015-09-24 Illinois Tool Works Inc. Method and apparatus for cold forming thread rolling dies
CN104661770B (en) * 2012-10-02 2017-06-09 伊利诺斯工具制品有限公司 For the method and apparatus of cold forming screw thread rolling mold
US10369618B2 (en) 2012-10-02 2019-08-06 Illinois Tool Works Inc. Method and apparatus for cold forming thread rolling dies

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