US1662672A - Method and apparatus for grinding - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for grinding Download PDF

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US1662672A
US1662672A US757740A US75774024A US1662672A US 1662672 A US1662672 A US 1662672A US 757740 A US757740 A US 757740A US 75774024 A US75774024 A US 75774024A US 1662672 A US1662672 A US 1662672A
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articles
lap
grinding
revolution
laps
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US757740A
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William E Hoke
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24BMACHINES, DEVICES, OR PROCESSES FOR GRINDING OR POLISHING; DRESSING OR CONDITIONING OF ABRADING SURFACES; FEEDING OF GRINDING, POLISHING, OR LAPPING AGENTS
    • B24B5/00Machines or devices designed for grinding surfaces of revolution on work, including those which also grind adjacent plane surfaces; Accessories therefor
    • B24B5/18Machines or devices designed for grinding surfaces of revolution on work, including those which also grind adjacent plane surfaces; Accessories therefor involving centreless means for supporting, guiding, floating or rotating work
    • B24B5/24Machines or devices designed for grinding surfaces of revolution on work, including those which also grind adjacent plane surfaces; Accessories therefor involving centreless means for supporting, guiding, floating or rotating work for grinding conical surfaces
    • B24B5/245Machines or devices designed for grinding surfaces of revolution on work, including those which also grind adjacent plane surfaces; Accessories therefor involving centreless means for supporting, guiding, floating or rotating work for grinding conical surfaces for mass articles

Definitions

  • My invention relates to a method and apparatus for grinding or abrading, prefer-- a ing articles of this type, after they have been hardened, to a highy accurate predetermined inal form and polish.
  • My invention is a new application of the method described in my United States Patent No. 1,486,338, patented March 11, 1924, in which, I have described the method of making a multiplicity of identical articles by repeated lapping and systematic interchange of the relative position of the articles.
  • This saine system or mode of operation is utilized in finishing articles of the kind above described, but is based on what I believe to be an entirely new-principle or idea which consists in finishing the articles by lapping betweencurved surfaces of revolution.
  • lapping surfaces may be considered as generated by the revolution of a line about" a rectilinear axis not in the plane of the lgeneratrix and are, when the generating line 1s straight, portions of surfaces of hyperboloids of revolution, and have the characteristic that through any point of they surface two rectilinear elements of the surface may be drawn.
  • Fi 1 is a sectional elevation on plane A- of Fig. 2 of one form of device
  • Fig. 2 is a plan of Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 3 is a detail
  • Fig. 4 is a partial plan of one form of work holder
  • FIG. 5 is an elevation of Fig. 4;
  • Fig. 6 is a partial plan of another form of work holder
  • F 7 is an'elevation of Fig. 6;
  • Figs. 8, 9, 10 and 11 are diagrams.
  • Figs. 12, 13, 14 and 15 show in section details of lap construction.
  • 1 is a nonrevoluble lap of cast iron or other suitable material; 2 is a like cooperating lap resting upon the articles being ground, but is preferably free to move in any direction, or in other words, is freely floating.
  • the lap 2 is provided with upstanding pins 3, 4 having an upper hooked portion as shown in the detail, Fig. Loosely engaging these pins is a cross-bar or dog 5 carried by the shaft 6 which is rotated by any suitable mechanism, such as the spindle of a drill press.
  • the articles to be lapped such as cylinders or coned rollers 7, are held in proper position by means of a work holder or spider 8, this spider being free to rotate on an axially located pin 9, the spider being spaced from the lower lap l by means of a washer or boss 10.
  • This spider or work holder serves to maintain the articles 7 with their axes at an angle to the vertical plane passing through the axis of rotation of the shaft 6.
  • the lapping surfaces 8 and 9 are, in this particular instance, doubly ruled warped surfaces generated by lines which are at an angle to the horizontal plane and also at an angle to the vertical plane in which is the axis of revolution of the lap.
  • Fig. 9 is a meridional or axial section on plane A-B of the lower lap, the ⁇ lines 8", 8, being on this plane portions of a.
  • the article being lapped has its axis in a plane passing through these generating lines on the upper and lower laps, and therefore is engaged by these cooperating lapping surfaces with what is theoretically, and in practice substantially, a line engagement. It will be noted that, as shown in Fig. 1, the working space between the surfaces 8 and 9 is upwardly inclined, although, as will be pointed out later, this particular arrangement is notiessential to my invention.
  • one of the lapping surfaces may have a plane surface, while the other cooperating surface is a hyperboloid surface of revolution.
  • a multiplicity of the articles to be lapped, arranged in the work holder are placed in position on the lower non-revoluble lap and the upper rotatable freely floating lap is then placed in position resting on the articles.
  • the articles will be moved around in the working space between the two lapping ⁇ surfaces and will be given at the same time a movement of rotation about their individual axes and a longitudinal movement along those axes, or some combination of these movements, as the result of which they are not simply rolled around, but are subjected to a grinding action.
  • the articles being lapped are so arranged as to have substantially line contact, as above described, with the lapping surfaces, the articles are ground along their straight line generatrices. If their axes are yinclined still further in either direction, the
  • articles of a general convex or barrel shaped or of a concave or spool shaped cross-section can be ground.
  • the working space between the two laps is most conveniently arranged as shown in Fig. 1, but the opening may be peripherally arranged.
  • the upper lap 2 has at its periphery shoulders 12, 1Q, which hear upon the upper or butt ends of the articles, the weight of the upper lap thus tending to force the article downwardly and inwardly, so that sufficient grinding press'ure' is applied, while at the same time the periphery of the butts of the articles is dubbed off.
  • the grinding surfaces of these shoulders may be either plane or curved to fit the work.
  • the lower lap may also be provided with a shoulder 15.
  • the upper lap may have a shoulder 16 and the lower lap a shoulder 17.
  • the lower lap is shown as provided with a shoulder 18, so shaped as to lap on its upper surface 19, the lower end of a cone roller, such as are used in roller bearings, the upper lap having a properly shaped shoulder 20.
  • shoulders are particularly desirable when frusto-conical articles are being lapped, and have the particular advantage that in addition to the accurate finishing of the conical' surface, the end-portions or butts of the frusto-conical articles are simultaneously lapped to the exact desired relation between i the diameter of the butt portion and the longitudinal dimensions ofthc cone.
  • Ry the use of properly shaped shoulders on one or both laps, any of the many shapes of cone.- rollers now commonly used may thus be brought to exceedingly accurate dimensions and to the shape desired for use. It is not essential that both lapping surfaces should be surfaces of revolution.
  • one of the laps e. g. the lower lap, may be a plane surface, and the other a hyperboloidal or other suitable .surfacel of revolution. l
  • the work holder 8 may consist (as shown in Figs. 4 and 5) of a suitable disk-shaped device having an upturned rim with openings 12, 12 corresponding in shape to the article being ground; or if the article, such as a wrist pin, is hollow, the work carrier disk may have supporting pins 14, 14 eX- tending into the holes in the wrist pins. In any case, the work holder acts as a guide to hold the articles at the proper angle of inclination, the articles being otherwise free to move under the influence of the laps.
  • the floating lap is self-centering, but in other forms of the device it may be necessary to provide means for centering the revoluble While my invention is mainly designed for bringing articles of the kind described to a final exceedingly accurate form or contour by the use of lapping surfaces, it is obvious Vneeaeva that the same princi les apply to coarser grinding by the use o other commonly used abrasive surfaces.
  • An apparatus for grinding articles comprising one non-rotatable lap and a cooperating rotatable lap, said la s having abrading surfaces at least one o which is a surface of double curvature yhaving the characteristic that through any point of the surface two rectilinear surface elements may be drawn, and means for rotating said rotatable y lap.
  • An apparatus as claimed tin claim 4 having a work holder foi" articles to be ground between the laps, said ⁇ holder having being ground, and a work holder having means for holding the articles at a proper inclination.
  • An apparatus for grinding articles as claimed in claim 4 having a Work holder for articles to be ground between the la s, said holder having means for holding t e articles at the desired angle and in whichone of the laps is freely floating.
  • An apparatus for grinding articles having curved surfaces comprising one lap having' a hyperboloid surface of revolution, a cooperating lap having a corresponding hyperboloid surface of revolution, a work holder having means for holding the articles while being ground between such lapping surfaces at such angle that generating lines on the surfaces of the articles will coincide with generating lines on each of the hyperboloid lapping surfaces, and means for rotating one of said laps.
  • An apparatus for grinding articles having curved surfaces comprising a pair of laps one of which is revoluble, said laps having abrading surfaces at least one of which is a hyperboloid of revolution, a work holder having means for holdin the articles while being ground at the esired an le, and means comprising a shoulder or s oulders for limiting the movement of the articles being ground in the direction of their axes.
  • An apparatus for grinding articles iting the movement of the articles bein ground in the direction of their axes sai means having abrasive surfaces of the pro er shape to accurately form the surfaces of t ose portions of the articles with which they engage.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Grinding And Polishing Of Tertiary Curved Surfaces And Surfaces With Complex Shapes (AREA)
  • Finish Polishing, Edge Sharpening, And Grinding By Specific Grinding Devices (AREA)

Description

March 13, 1928..
W. E. HOKE METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR GRINDING Filed Dec. 23. 1924 4 Sheets-Sheet 1 March 13, 1928. 1,662,672
W. E. HOKE METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR GRINDING Filed Dec. 23. 1924 4 Sheets-Sheet 2 gmanlot;
W. E. HOKE METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR GRINDING March 13, 1928.
Filed Deo. 25. 1924 4 ShetS-Sheeb 3 March 13, 1192-8.
' w. E. HOKE' METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR GRINDING Filed Dec. 23. 1924 4 Sheets-Shee 4 W1K. j
elk/tounge.
Patented Mar." 13, 1928.
UNITED STATES 1,662,672 PATENT OFFICE.
WILLIAM E. HOKE, F BALTIMORE, lMARYLAND. A
METHOD AND APPARATUS FOB GBINDING.
Application tiled December 23, 19274. Serial No. 757,740.
My invention relates to a method and apparatus for grinding or abrading, prefer-- a ing articles of this type, after they have been hardened, to a highy accurate predetermined inal form and polish.
My invention is a new application of the method described in my United States Patent No. 1,486,338, patented March 11, 1924, in which, I have described the method of making a multiplicity of identical articles by repeated lapping and systematic interchange of the relative position of the articles. This saine system or mode of operation is utilized in finishing articles of the kind above described, but is based on what I believe to be an entirely new-principle or idea which consists in finishing the articles by lapping betweencurved surfaces of revolution. These lapping surfaces may be considered as generated by the revolution of a line about" a rectilinear axis not in the plane of the lgeneratrix and are, when the generating line 1s straight, portions of surfaces of hyperboloids of revolution, and have the characteristic that through any point of they surface two rectilinear elements of the surface may be drawn.
The articles to be ground or lapped, whether cones or cylinders, will therefore be abraded or ground by what is substantially a line contact between the surfaces of the article being groundA and the surface of the lap.
While I have referred to cylindrical and conical articles, the generating line of which is straight, my invention is also applicable for the finishing of articles having curved generating lines, either concave or convex, the articles being spool shaped or barrel shaped; or the invention may also be applied to the finishing of articles having other more or less curved outlines, as long as the surfaces of such articles are surfaces of revolution.
The invention will be readily understood by reference to the accompanying description and drawings in which Fi 1 is a sectional elevation on plane A- of Fig. 2 of one form of device;
Fig. 2 is a plan of Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 is a detail;
Fig. 4 is a partial plan of one form of work holder;
5 is an elevation of Fig. 4;
Fig. 6 is a partial plan of another form of work holder;
F 7 is an'elevation of Fig. 6;
Figs. 8, 9, 10 and 11 are diagrams; and
Figs. 12, 13, 14 and 15 show in section details of lap construction.
Referring to Fig. 1 in which the machine is diagralnniatically illustrated, 1 is a nonrevoluble lap of cast iron or other suitable material; 2 is a like cooperating lap resting upon the articles being ground, but is preferably free to move in any direction, or in other words, is freely floating. The lap 2 is provided with upstanding pins 3, 4 having an upper hooked portion as shown in the detail, Fig. Loosely engaging these pins is a cross-bar or dog 5 carried by the shaft 6 which is rotated by any suitable mechanism, such as the spindle of a drill press.
` Either the non-rotatable or the revoluble lap may be freely floating.
The articles to be lapped such as cylinders or coned rollers 7, are held in proper position by means of a work holder or spider 8, this spider being free to rotate on an axially located pin 9, the spider being spaced from the lower lap l by means of a washer or boss 10. This spider or work holder serves to maintain the articles 7 with their axes at an angle to the vertical plane passing through the axis of rotation of the shaft 6. The lapping surfaces 8 and 9 are, in this particular instance, doubly ruled warped surfaces generated by lines which are at an angle to the horizontal plane and also at an angle to the vertical plane in which is the axis of revolution of the lap.
This will be apparent in accordance with well known principles of descriptive geometry from the diagram Fig. 8, since the revolution of the line 8-8 about the axis 6 will generate one hyperboloidal surface of revolution, while the line 9-9 will generate a second hyperboloidal surface. If the article being lapped is a cylinder, then the two warped surfaces will be generated by parallel lines.
The characteristics of such warped surfaces are shown in Figs. 9, l0 and 11, in
f which Fig. 9 is a meridional or axial section on plane A-B of the lower lap, the` lines 8", 8, being on this plane portions of a.
hyperbole, while on a properly taken section the lines 8b, 8b are straight lines.
The article being lapped has its axis in a plane passing through these generating lines on the upper and lower laps, and therefore is engaged by these cooperating lapping surfaces with what is theoretically, and in practice substantially, a line engagement. It will be noted that, as shown in Fig. 1, the working space between the surfaces 8 and 9 is upwardly inclined, although, as will be pointed out later, this particular arrangement is notiessential to my invention.
As shown in Fig. 15, one of the lapping surfaces may have a plane surface, while the other cooperating surface is a hyperboloid surface of revolution.
In operation, a multiplicity of the articles to be lapped, arranged in the work holder (see Fig. 2) are placed in position on the lower non-revoluble lap and the upper rotatable freely floating lap is then placed in position resting on the articles. As the upper lap is rotated, the articles will be moved around in the working space between the two lapping` surfaces and will be given at the same time a movement of rotation about their individual axes and a longitudinal movement along those axes, or some combination of these movements, as the result of which they are not simply rolled around, but are subjected to a grinding action. At the outset the upper llap will rest upon those articles which are of greater dimension than other articles in the group, and the dimensions of these particular articles will gradually be reduced until the upper lapping surface bears upon a larger number of these separate articles. The articles-are then symmetrically transposed according to the method described in my Patent No. 1,486,388, and again subjected to the lapping operation; and this alternate lapping and transposition is continued until each one of the articles is brought to its predetermined final exactly accurate size.
When the articles being lapped are so arranged as to have substantially line contact, as above described, with the lapping surfaces, the articles are ground along their straight line generatrices. If their axes are yinclined still further in either direction, the
surfaces will be ground with correspondingly curved surfaces.
So also, if the generating lines are curved, articles of a general convex or barrel shaped or of a concave or spool shaped cross-section can be ground.
The working space between the two laps is most conveniently arranged as shown in Fig. 1, but the opening may be peripherally arranged.
The upper lap 2 has at its periphery shoulders 12, 1Q, which hear upon the upper or butt ends of the articles, the weight of the upper lap thus tending to force the article downwardly and inwardly, so that sufficient grinding press'ure' is applied, while at the same time the periphery of the butts of the articles is dubbed off.
The grinding surfaces of these shoulders may be either plane or curved to fit the work.
As shown in Fig. 1Q, the lower lap may also be provided with a shoulder 15. Or asshown in Fig. 13, the upper lap may have a shoulder 16 and the lower lap a shoulder 17.
In Fig. 14, the lower lap is shown as provided with a shoulder 18, so shaped as to lap on its upper surface 19, the lower end of a cone roller, such as are used in roller bearings, the upper lap having a properly shaped shoulder 20.
The purpose of these shoulders, whether one or'more than one is used, is to limit the movement of the article in the direction of its own axis.
These shoulders are particularly desirable when frusto-conical articles are being lapped, and have the particular advantage that in addition to the accurate finishing of the conical' surface, the end-portions or butts of the frusto-conical articles are simultaneously lapped to the exact desired relation between i the diameter of the butt portion and the longitudinal dimensions ofthc cone. Ry the use of properly shaped shoulders on one or both laps, any of the many shapes of cone.- rollers now commonly used may thus be brought to exceedingly accurate dimensions and to the shape desired for use. It is not essential that both lapping surfaces should be surfaces of revolution. As shown in Fig. 15, one of the laps, e. g. the lower lap, may be a plane surface, and the other a hyperboloidal or other suitable .surfacel of revolution. l
The work holder 8 may consist (as shown in Figs. 4 and 5) of a suitable disk-shaped device having an upturned rim with openings 12, 12 corresponding in shape to the article being ground; or if the article, such as a wrist pin, is hollow, the work carrier disk may have supporting pins 14, 14 eX- tending into the holes in the wrist pins. In any case, the work holder acts as a guide to hold the articles at the proper angle of inclination, the articles being otherwise free to move under the influence of the laps.
In the construction shown in Fig. 1, the floating lap is self-centering, but in other forms of the device it may be necessary to provide means for centering the revoluble While my invention is mainly designed for bringing articles of the kind described to a final exceedingly accurate form or contour by the use of lapping surfaces, it is obvious Vneeaeva that the same princi les apply to coarser grinding by the use o other commonly used abrasive surfaces.
/While I preferably make one of the laps freely floating, so that it can adjust its position4 and rest upon the articles belng abraded, this construction is not strictly es sential, as even if the revoluble lap be mounted on a fixed axis, results sufficiently accurate for commeigcal purposes may be obtained.
I claim:
l. The method of grinding articles having curved surfaces which consists in subjecting said articles to abrasion between re1- atively moving abradin surfaces at least one of which is a curve surface of revolution having the characteristic that through any pointof the surface two rectilinear surface elements may be drawn.
2. The method of grinding articles having curved surfaces which consists in subjecting them to abrasion between grinding means at least one of which has a hyperboloidal surface of revolution.
3. The method according to claim 1 in which the grinding means are laps one of which is non-rotatable and the other is rotatable, one ofsaid laps being' freely floating.
4. An apparatus for grinding articles comprising one non-rotatable lap and a cooperating rotatable lap, said la s having abrading surfaces at least one o which is a surface of double curvature yhaving the characteristic that through any point of the surface two rectilinear surface elements may be drawn, and means for rotating said rotatable y lap.
5. `An apparatus for grinding articles comprising one non-rotatable lap and a cooperating rotatable lap, said laps=having abrading surfaces at least one of which is a hyperboloid of revolution, and means for rotating said rotatable lap.
6. An apparatus as claimed tin claim 4 having a work holder foi" articles to be ground between the laps, said `holder having being ground, and a work holder having means for holding the articles at a proper inclination.
8. An apparatus for grinding articles as claimed in claim 4 having a Work holder for articles to be ground between the la s, said holder having means for holding t e articles at the desired angle and in whichone of the laps is freely floating.-`
9. An apparatus for grinding articles having curved surfaces, such as cones or cylinders, comprising one lap having' a hyperboloid surface of revolution, a cooperating lap having a corresponding hyperboloid surface of revolution, a work holder having means for holding the articles while being ground between such lapping surfaces at such angle that generating lines on the surfaces of the articles will coincide with generating lines on each of the hyperboloid lapping surfaces, and means for rotating one of said laps.
10. An apparatus as claimed in claim 9 in which the la s are positioned one above the other, one o such laps arran ed to be nonrotatable and the other to be reely floatin said upper lap having a shoulder surroun ing the grinding surface and adapted tobear on the articles being ground.
11. An apparatus for grinding articles having curved surfaces comprising a pair of laps one of which is revoluble, said laps having abrading surfaces at least one of which is a hyperboloid of revolution, a work holder having means for holdin the articles while being ground at the esired an le, and means comprising a shoulder or s oulders for limiting the movement of the articles being ground in the direction of their axes.
12. An apparatus for grinding articles iting the movement of the articles bein ground in the direction of their axes, sai means having abrasive surfaces of the pro er shape to accurately form the surfaces of t ose portions of the articles with which they engage.
In testimony whereof,
I aix my signature.
WILLIAM E. HOKE.v
US757740A 1924-12-23 1924-12-23 Method and apparatus for grinding Expired - Lifetime US1662672A (en)

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2668397A (en) * 1951-06-29 1954-02-09 James Kuights Company Method and apparatus for correcting crystal blanks
US2754635A (en) * 1952-10-06 1956-07-17 Federal Mogul Bower Bearings Machine for end-grinding tapered rollers

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2668397A (en) * 1951-06-29 1954-02-09 James Kuights Company Method and apparatus for correcting crystal blanks
US2754635A (en) * 1952-10-06 1956-07-17 Federal Mogul Bower Bearings Machine for end-grinding tapered rollers

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