US2541786A - Lapping device - Google Patents

Lapping device Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2541786A
US2541786A US90925A US9092549A US2541786A US 2541786 A US2541786 A US 2541786A US 90925 A US90925 A US 90925A US 9092549 A US9092549 A US 9092549A US 2541786 A US2541786 A US 2541786A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
lapping
shaft
bar
elements
tool
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 - Lifetime
Application number
US90925A
Inventor
Steckroth Herman
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US90925A priority Critical patent/US2541786A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2541786A publication Critical patent/US2541786A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • 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
    • B24B33/00Honing machines or devices; Accessories therefor
    • B24B33/08Honing tools
    • B24B33/081Honing tools for external surfaces

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a novel and practical lapping device, adapted to be used for lapping shafts which, after they have been machined as closely as may be by regular turning and similar methods, are finished by lapping as for example, when a shaft is to be' tted within a bearing and small amounts of metal at the exterior surface of the shaft need to -be removed, such amounts being measured in minute fractions of an inch or fractions of a thousandth of an inch.
  • Lapping is ordinarily accomplished by means of movable application of an abrasive with pressure against a surface which is to be processed.
  • the present invention has for its object and purpose a novel, practical and effective tool which may be handled by a workman for rapidly and accurately lapping a shaft or the like which, in a lathe and rotated between the head and tailstock thereof may be driven and rotated continuously and the lapping done on the moving surface of the shaft.
  • Fig. l is a side elevation of the lapping tool of myinvention, showingthe tool in its retracted, inoperative position as it is being applied toa shaft, the shaft being in transverse cross section.
  • Fig. 2 is a similar section showing the position of the tool when lapping occurs and
  • Fig. 3 is a somewhat enlarged perspective view of one of the lapping elements a number of which are located around and bear against a shaft which is processed.
  • the shaft I may be a metallic member, cylindrical in cross section which has been turned or otherwise machined substantially to size and which at its outer surface is to be subjected to the lapping operation which the tool I have invented is designed to expedite.
  • the tool includes an elongated bar 2 which, at one end, is curved upwardly in substantially the arc of a circle to form a curved arm 3 as shown.
  • the under side of the bar 2 between its ends, is equipped with a series of transverse spaced ridges, and valleys between them, to aid in holding the tool when gripped by the hand.
  • a second elongated bar 4 is slidably mounted, being located directly thereover. At its inner end and adjacent the arm 3 it is 3 Claims. (Cl. 51-184.1)
  • a coiled tension spring 8 has its opposite ends connected with two upwardly extending posts 9, one of which is permanently secured to the upper bar 4, near the handle 6, and the other to the bar 2 near the inner end of the guide 1. The normal effect of the spring is to move the bar 4 lengthwise of the lower bar 2 in a'direction such that the lug 5 is moved toward the arm 3. But through grasping the handle 6 by ⁇ one hand and holding the bar 2 and the guide I thereon by the other hand, the spring may be stretched and the upper bar 4 moved in the opposite direction as shown in Fig. l; v
  • Three lapping elements are shown as rockingly mounted, one on the lug 5 and the other two adjacent opposite ends of the curved arm 3 and at the inner sides thereof.
  • Said lapping elements each consists of two spaced plates I9 of a generally triangular form, with slots I I in the plates as shown and also in a curved shoe I2 which -is located between and secured to the plates at curved edges thereof.
  • Such plates Il] are spaced a suicient distance that they may be located one at each side of the lug 5 and at each side of the arm 3, and have pivotal connection therewith as indicated at I3, with the concave sides of the shoes I2 of the three lapping elements thus mounted positioned so that when the bar 4 moves, under the influence of the spring 8, inwardly as shown in Fig.
  • the three concave sides of the shoes I2 which may be covered by emery cloth I4 or other lapping material used, t snugly against the outer cylindrical surface of the shaft I.
  • the emery cloth or other equivalent abrasive material used has its ends received in the slots II and may be secured therein in any suitable manner.
  • the upper bar 4 is pulled back, as in Fig. 1, so that the tool may be moved to position it with the shaft I located between the several lapping elements. Then upon release of the handle B, spring 8 moves the bar 4 and the lapping element carried by the post 5 thereon, until the abrasives, at I4 on the three lapping elements, engage the surface of the shaft substantially conforming thereto.
  • the outer surface of the shaft which is rotated about its longitudinal axis in a lathe or other similar machine is subjected to a-brasive cutting so as to remove small portions of the outer surface of the shaft until it has reached a required accurate size.
  • the tool may be moved back and forth lengthwise of the shaft for lapping either the shaft for its entire length or at selected portions in the length thereof.
  • the lapping elements For shafts of different diameters the lapping elements, one of which is shown in Fig. 3, will be of different dimensions to conform to the shafts which are to be processed.
  • the tool is of simple, but very practical and ef-v fective construction. It is easily operated, and lapping is accomplished with greater speed and expedition than heretofore, and Awith better results as to accuracy. y
  • an elongated member having, vat one end, .a laterally extending arcuate terminal section, a pair of lapping elements mounted for rocking movement adjacent -opposite ends of said arcuate section, and having concave sides of arcuate form and of substantially the same radius of curvature, a second elongated member located against a longitudinal side of said rst member and at the same side of sai'd first member as the arcuate extension thereof, a .guide connected to the first member embracing the second member for slidably mounting the two members for relative longitudinal movement with respect to each other, a third lapgping element of like structure as the first two lapping elements rockingly mounted on said second longitudinal member at one end thereof, with its arcuate side and the arcuate sides of the tWo first mentioned lapping members adapted to bear, at spaced distances from each other, against the outer surface of a cylindrical shaft, a coiled compression spring, and an arm connected to each of said longitudinal members

Description

Feb., i3, E95i H. sTEcKRo-TH LAPPING DEVICE Filed May 2, 1949 HERMAN Tamm-m INH" Patented Feb. 13,'1951 V UNITED STATESl PATENT OFFICE This invention relates to a novel and practical lapping device, adapted to be used for lapping shafts which, after they have been machined as closely as may be by regular turning and similar methods, are finished by lapping as for example, when a shaft is to be' tted within a bearing and small amounts of metal at the exterior surface of the shaft need to -be removed, such amounts being measured in minute fractions of an inch or fractions of a thousandth of an inch.
Lapping is ordinarily accomplished by means of movable application of an abrasive with pressure against a surface which is to be processed. The present invention has for its object and purpose a novel, practical and effective tool which may be handled by a workman for rapidly and accurately lapping a shaft or the like which, in a lathe and rotated between the head and tailstock thereof may be driven and rotated continuously and the lapping done on the moving surface of the shaft.
An understanding of the invention may be had from the following description, taken in connection with the .accompanying drawing, in
which,
Fig. l is a side elevation of the lapping tool of myinvention, showingthe tool in its retracted, inoperative position as it is being applied toa shaft, the shaft being in transverse cross section.
Fig. 2 is a similar section showing the position of the tool when lapping occurs and,
Fig. 3 is a somewhat enlarged perspective view of one of the lapping elements a number of which are located around and bear against a shaft which is processed.
Like reference characters refer to like parts in the different figures of the drawing.
The shaft I may be a metallic member, cylindrical in cross section which has been turned or otherwise machined substantially to size and which at its outer surface is to be subjected to the lapping operation which the tool I have invented is designed to expedite.
The tool includes an elongated bar 2 which, at one end, is curved upwardly in substantially the arc of a circle to form a curved arm 3 as shown. The under side of the bar 2, between its ends, is equipped with a series of transverse spaced ridges, and valleys between them, to aid in holding the tool when gripped by the hand. Above the bar 2 a second elongated bar 4 is slidably mounted, being located directly thereover. At its inner end and adjacent the arm 3 it is 3 Claims. (Cl. 51-184.1)
formed with an upwardly extending lug or post 5, and adjacent the opposite end has an upwardly extending handle 6. The bar 4i is held in sliding relation to the lower bar 2, being guided in a sheet metal guide 'I of generallyy inverted U-form, the sides of which have a riveted or equivalent permanent connection to the bar 2. A coiled tension spring 8 has its opposite ends connected with two upwardly extending posts 9, one of which is permanently secured to the upper bar 4, near the handle 6, and the other to the bar 2 near the inner end of the guide 1. The normal effect of the spring is to move the bar 4 lengthwise of the lower bar 2 in a'direction such that the lug 5 is moved toward the arm 3. But through grasping the handle 6 by `one hand and holding the bar 2 and the guide I thereon by the other hand, the spring may be stretched and the upper bar 4 moved in the opposite direction as shown in Fig. l; v
Three lapping elements are shown as rockingly mounted, one on the lug 5 and the other two adjacent opposite ends of the curved arm 3 and at the inner sides thereof. Said lapping elements each consists of two spaced plates I9 of a generally triangular form, with slots I I in the plates as shown and also in a curved shoe I2 which -is located between and secured to the plates at curved edges thereof. Such plates Il] are spaced a suicient distance that they may be located one at each side of the lug 5 and at each side of the arm 3, and have pivotal connection therewith as indicated at I3, with the concave sides of the shoes I2 of the three lapping elements thus mounted positioned so that when the bar 4 moves, under the influence of the spring 8, inwardly as shown in Fig. 2 the three concave sides of the shoes I2, which may be covered by emery cloth I4 or other lapping material used, t snugly against the outer cylindrical surface of the shaft I., The emery cloth or other equivalent abrasive material used has its ends received in the slots II and may be secured therein in any suitable manner.
In applying the tool to the shaft which is to be processed, the upper bar 4 is pulled back, as in Fig. 1, so that the tool may be moved to position it with the shaft I located between the several lapping elements. Then upon release of the handle B, spring 8 moves the bar 4 and the lapping element carried by the post 5 thereon, until the abrasives, at I4 on the three lapping elements, engage the surface of the shaft substantially conforming thereto.
It is evident that under such conditions, and
with the force of spring 3 exerted, the outer surface of the shaft which is rotated about its longitudinal axis in a lathe or other similar machine is subjected to a-brasive cutting so as to remove small portions of the outer surface of the shaft until it has reached a required accurate size. The tool may be moved back and forth lengthwise of the shaft for lapping either the shaft for its entire length or at selected portions in the length thereof.- p
For shafts of different diameters the lapping elements, one of which is shown in Fig. 3, will be of different dimensions to conform to the shafts which are to be processed.
The tool is of simple, but very practical and ef-v fective construction. It is easily operated, and lapping is accomplished with greater speed and expedition than heretofore, and Awith better results as to accuracy. y
The invention is defined in the appended claims and is to be con'sidered comprehensive of all forms of structure coming within their scope.
I claim:
1. In a structure as described an elongated member having a laterally disposed curve section at one end thereof, a second elongated member located againsta side of the first member, having an arm at an end spaced from the curved end section of the first member, means for slidably mounting said members for 'relative longitudinal movement of one with respect to the other, and abrasive earrying lapping elements rockably .mounted -on the rst longitudinal member at its curved lateral extension Aand on the arm of the second member, said elements having outer sides of arcuate concave form, all of substantially the same radius of curvature, `adapted to be positioned around a shaft located between lsaid elements in spaced relation to each other around the shaft, between which shaft and the concave sides of said elements, abrasive is adapted to be located for lapping the shaft upon rotation thereof, with said lapping elements against the shaft surface, and yielding spring means between said elongated .relative to each other to move said lapping elements toward each other, thereby adapting them to engage with yielding pressure against the surface of a shaft located between them.
slidable lmembers normallymoving said members I'.3
2. A structure as defined in claim 1', and hand engageable means on said elongated slidable members for moving them in an opposite direction against said spring means to separate the lapping elements carried on one member from the other, thereby adapting said device for application to a shaft with the shaft located between the lapping elements.
3. In a device of the class described an elongated member having, vat one end, .a laterally extending arcuate terminal section, a pair of lapping elements mounted for rocking movement adjacent -opposite ends of said arcuate section, and having concave sides of arcuate form and of substantially the same radius of curvature, a second elongated member located against a longitudinal side of said rst member and at the same side of sai'd first member as the arcuate extension thereof, a .guide connected to the first member embracing the second member for slidably mounting the two members for relative longitudinal movement with respect to each other, a third lapgping element of like structure as the first two lapping elements rockingly mounted on said second longitudinal member at one end thereof, with its arcuate side and the arcuate sides of the tWo first mentioned lapping members adapted to bear, at spaced distances from each other, against the outer surface of a cylindrical shaft, a coiled compression spring, and an arm connected to each of said longitudinal members to which the .ends .of said spring are attached for normally movingvsaid longitudinal members slidably with respect to each other to yieldingly press said lapping mem-3 bers against a vshaft between them.
HERMAN STECKROTHQ;
,REFERENCES CITED The following references rare Iof record in the le of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS
US90925A 1949-05-02 1949-05-02 Lapping device Expired - Lifetime US2541786A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US90925A US2541786A (en) 1949-05-02 1949-05-02 Lapping device

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US90925A US2541786A (en) 1949-05-02 1949-05-02 Lapping device

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2541786A true US2541786A (en) 1951-02-13

Family

ID=22224985

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US90925A Expired - Lifetime US2541786A (en) 1949-05-02 1949-05-02 Lapping device

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2541786A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2649663A (en) * 1949-08-26 1953-08-25 Sunnen Joseph External honing device

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1748313A (en) * 1925-09-16 1930-02-25 Carborundum Co Finishing device
US2083685A (en) * 1936-07-27 1937-06-15 Ray Edgar Falkinburg Grinding or polishing device
US2243925A (en) * 1938-12-23 1941-06-03 Tilander Lauri Karl Portable grinding device, especially for grinding of crankshafts
US2374849A (en) * 1944-11-06 1945-05-01 Robert C Worley Combined micrometer and crank grinding tool

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1748313A (en) * 1925-09-16 1930-02-25 Carborundum Co Finishing device
US2083685A (en) * 1936-07-27 1937-06-15 Ray Edgar Falkinburg Grinding or polishing device
US2243925A (en) * 1938-12-23 1941-06-03 Tilander Lauri Karl Portable grinding device, especially for grinding of crankshafts
US2374849A (en) * 1944-11-06 1945-05-01 Robert C Worley Combined micrometer and crank grinding tool

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2649663A (en) * 1949-08-26 1953-08-25 Sunnen Joseph External honing device

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2261055A (en) Watch movement holder
US4027562A (en) Force applying device for scoring wheels
US2976652A (en) Belt sander
US2541786A (en) Lapping device
DE2560123C2 (en) Elastic holder for grinding wheel
US3030742A (en) Sanding pad
US3376672A (en) Abrading machine with a plurality of abrasive wheels
US3448504A (en) Surface smoothing arrangement
GB971146A (en) Apparatus for sanding vehicle bodies
US2429300A (en) Saw-tooth grinder
US3049739A (en) Paint remover and surfacing tool
US1982836A (en) Honing device for cylinders
US2786314A (en) Sharpener for slicing bands
JPH03184767A (en) Device for repolishing cut edge part of cutoff tool upon separation of wafer particularly from rod-like or block-like workpiece consisting of semiconductor and its use and sawing method
US1602509A (en) Machine for cutting piston rings
US2474064A (en) Sanding block
US2652082A (en) Nail holding attachment for hammers
US3199252A (en) Shaving blade conditioner
US4655007A (en) Honing apparatus
US2292957A (en) Diamond tool
US2059723A (en) Means and method for rotating and locating articles for machining thereof
US2220370A (en) Drum for smoothing surfaces
US2443399A (en) Sanding block
US2476754A (en) Crystal grinding machine
US2837879A (en) Safety razor blade sharpener