Double‐Rough Pinch Grinding Process Outperforms Other Methods by 50%

Rollomatic, a machine tool manufacturer based in Switzerland, has developed a new process in the field of pinch and peel grinding.

ShapeSmart® NP50 pinch and peel grinding machine

 

 

Rollomatic is the original inventor of the pinch/peel grinding methodology and attempts to stay in the forefront in developing specific processes related to making this type of machine even more productive.

Pinch grinding offers accurate geometrical dimensions on the blank and tight surface finish requirements. In pinch grinding, the roughing and finishing wheels grind parts simultaneously, with the finishing wheel trailing the roughing wheel. The rough and finish grinding are performed in one pass. This innovative way to cylindrically grind parts eliminates separate processes and reduces cycle time.

Rollomatic developed an advanced process known as "double rough pinch grinding" which vastly decreases cycle times for blank preparation of the following carbide cutting tools:

Both grinding stations are equipped with diamond wheels with a grit size which is normally used for rough grinding. The blank is then "pinched" between two rough‐grit diamond wheels. The wheels interact on the blank simultaneously in a synchronized approach. While one wheel does the majority of the work, the second wheel cleans up what was left from the other wheel.

ShapeSmart® NP50 pinch and peel grinding machine top view showing the two grinding wheels interacting on the blank simultaneously.

 

 

The surface finish on the blank is better than what would normally be considered an acceptable finish. The cycle time is a fraction of what it would have been using the customary pinch grinding method with roughing and finishing Wheels.

Both grinding spindles are "synchronous direct‐drive spindles" with 19 hp peak each. The most important feature of a synchronous motor is that it provides constant speed during its operation and that the torque curve is highly efficient. The rotational force is not reduced with higher RPM's. Synchronous motors always run at a speed equal to their synchronous speed, as opposed to asynchronous motors (induction motors) which always have a lag and are therefore less efficient.

On a test production run of 100 pieces, the following results were achieved:

Want more information? Click below.

Rollomatic

Rate this article

[Double‐Rough Pinch Grinding Process Outperforms Other Methods by 50%]

Very interesting, with information I can use
Interesting, with information I may use
Interesting, but not applicable to my operation
Not interesting or inaccurate

E-mail Address (required):

Comments:


Type the number:



 

Copyright © 2024 by Nelson Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction Prohibited.
View our terms of use and privacy policy ::m::