Workpiece clamp with two alternately applicable compression rings
The present invention relates to machine tools that use spindles for drilling at high speeds.
More particularly, it relates to spindles themselves, and more specifically the workpiece clamps which they usually have, which fulfil the function of pressing down on the workpiece being drilled via a compression ring or "foot", to keep it still and compressed against other workpieces beneath it to obtain precise and exactly aligned drilling, and ensure that chips cannot get between the adjacent faces of several superimposed workpieces.
To perform the said function, the said compression ring has a hole whose axis coincides during the machining action with the drilling axis, in other words with the axis of the tool for doing the drilling.
Particularly when drilling several superimposed sheets of synthetic material, such as those that make up "multilayer" printed circuit boards, it is necessary for the said hole of the compression ring to have as small a diameter as possible in order to improve the efficiency of the chip removal system and ensure that the elastic recovery of the material through it cannot be a source of inaccuracies in the machining or allow the abovementioned intrusion of chips between the superimposed layers .
It is for this kind of reason that, when holes of different diameters are to be drilled in sequence in the same workpiece, compression rings with holes of different diameters are used, being changed as required during machining.
Changing the rings at present requires manual
disassembly and reassembly of the rings, fetching them from a magazine which may be separate from the machine tool or provided in a suitable position on the machine tool itself. This operation wastes a lot of time and, even when using semiautomatic devices for changing the rings, it brings about an appreciable rise in the production costs.
Since it is usually sufficient to have two compression rings with different diameter holes, especially when drilling printed circuit boards, it seemed to the inventor of the present innovation that the downtimes and constructional complications described above could be eliminated by providing a workpiece clamp on which two compression rings are mounted, with mechanical means for positioning them alternately, in accordance with the machine tool programme, in the working position, by a simple, fast operation.
To this end the inventor has provided a solution whereby a rack, moved by a double-acting pneumatic piston, causes by its movement a simultaneous rotation of two pinions integral with the two compression rings, the effect being to position each alternately in its working position, and the other in a position where it cannot interfere with the tool while the tool is working.
To this end he devised the subject of the present invention, which is a workpiece clamp as described in the appended Claim 1.
A more detailed description will now be given of a preferred illustrative embodiment of the workpiece clamp of the invention: in the course of this description reference will also be made to the appended drawings, which show:
- in Figure 1 the said illustrative embodiment of the workpiece clamp of the invention in a
section taken on parallel vertical planes, in the situation in which one of the two compression rings is in the working position, i.e. with the axis of its hole coinciding with the drilling axis; in Figure 2 the same section as in Figure 1 with the workpiece clamp in the waiting position and neither of the two rings in the working position; - in Figure 3 the same section as in the previous figures, in the situation in which the compression ring that was in the working position in Figure 1 has been replaced by the other compression ring; - in Figure 4 a cross section through the workpiece clamp in the same situation as in Figure 1, clearly showing the position of the drilling tool relative to the double-acting piston by which the compression ring is moved.
To begin with Figure 1, this shows that a workpiece clamp 1 according to the invention is fitted with two compression rings 2, 3 each having a hole 2f, 3f for the tool to pass through (the tool being shown only in Figure 4). These compression rings are connected rigidly, on opposite sides of the drilling axis Z-Z of the tool 12 (see also the said Figure 4), to two pinions 4, 5 in such a way that they rotate with them about their axes, which are horizontally parallel and perpendicular to the plane of the drawing.
The abovementioned pinions 4, 5 mesh with a horizontal rack 6 connected by a link rod 8 to a double-acting pneumatic piston 7 which can execute a stroke C in both directions S, T (see also Figure 3 for this) from a central point P situated on the centre plane of the workpiece clamp 1.
The double-acting pneumatic piston 7 (which will be
referred to from now on as the "piston" ) , of a type known per se, is operated by air flows controlled by a system of valves 11, also of known type, in order to cause the rack 6 to execute the said stroke C in both said directions S, T, in such a way as to be synchronized with the machining program.
When machining is not being performed, the workpiece clamp 1, as shown Figure 2 , is in a waiting position, with the piston 7 held in position by two identical springs 9, 10 arranged symmetrically in the position in which the longitudinal axis of the said link rod 8, which projects perpendicularly downwards from it, passes through the said central point P.
In this situation, that is in the situation in which no pneumatic action is being exerted on the piston 7, the two compression rings 2, 3 (which from now on will be termed "rings" for short) are in a symmetrical position in which neither of them interferes with the working area, i.e. in which they are at a convenient distance from the drilling axis Z-Z.
When air is introduced into the piston 7 on the right- hand side in the drawing, as shown in Figure 1, the rack 6 executes a stroke C in the direction indicated by the arrow S, rotating both the pinions 4, 5 and the rings 2, 3 which are connected to them through the same angle as each other. As the rings are mounted symmetrically, at the end of the stroke C in the said direction S they are positioned as shown, that is one ring 2 has the axis M-M of its hole 2f coincident with the drilling axis Z-Z, and the other ring 3 is moved away to the side so as not to interfere with the machining area.
When the direction of the air flow is reversed, i.e. when acting from left to right on the piston 7 as indicated by the arrow T in Figure 3, the piston 7, and
all the parts whose movement depend on it, move first to the position shown in Figure 2 and then on to the position in Figure 3, that is where the ring 3, which in Figure 1 was away from the working area, has the axis N-N of its hole 3f coincident with the drilling axis Z-Z, and where the other ring 2, which in Figure i was in the working position, has been moved a suitable distance away. By cyclically repeating these operations, synchronized as already described, the two rings can be changed very fast and completely automatically, thus achieving the result sought by the inventor.
Obviously, in order for the workpiece clamp 1 of the invention to be able to work, the axes M-M, N-N of the two rings 2, 3 must lie on a plane which does not interfere with the region of the piston 7 and contains the drilling axis Z-Z. One possible positioning of the parts that is suitable for this purpose is that shown in Figure 4, which relates to the illustrative example described above. In this figure the vertical plane α passing through the axis of the piston 7 is at a distance D from the plane β which is parallel to it and contains the drilling axis Z-Z, that is the axis of the tool 12.