Centerless-Ground Parts PDF
Centerless-Ground Parts PDF
Centerless-Ground Parts PDF
Figure 4.14.3. End-feed centerless grinding. (Courtesy Cincinnati Milacron.) End-feed grinding is used for tapered work. Either the grinding wheel or the
regulating wheel or both are dressed to the proper taper. The workpiece is fed axially to a xed end stop. Figure 4.14.3 illustrates the process.
Internal centerless grinding is used for ring- and sleeve-shaped parts. The
workpiece is supported between three rolls, which establish its location and cause it to rotate. An internal grinding wheel removes stock. Since the part is located from its outside surface, the ground inner surface is nearly perfectly concentric with the outside.
The centerless-grinding method can be applied to solid parts with diameters as small as 0.1 mm (0.004 in) and as large as 175 mm (7 in). Rings and tubing somewhat larger250 mm (10 in)can be centerless-ground with equipment currently available. Parts as short as 10 mm (0.4 in) and as long as 5 m (16 ft) are centerless-ground. Centerless grinding produces accurate cylindrical surfaces. The method is ideally suited for pins, shafts, and rings when close-tolerance outside diameters, precise roundness, and smooth surfaces or all three are required. Long, slender parts that would be subject to deection in conventional cylindrical grinding can be ground accurately by the centerless method. Screw threads also can be ground with this process. For through-feed grinding, the surface to be ground must be a straight cylinder. If the part has two or more diameters, only the largest can be ground with the through-feed method. Figure 4.14.4 shows a variety of parts ground with the through-feed centerless method. The infeed method is slightly slower but possesses the advantage of having the capability of producing multidiameter or formed surfaces. Tapered parts or parts with steps are ground with this method. Valve tappets, arbors, yoke pins, shackle bolts, and distributor shafts are typical examples.
Figure 4.14.4. A variety of parts produced with through-feed centerless grinding. (Courtesy Cincinnati Milacron.)
ft/min) per pass. From one to six passes may be involved. Centerless grinding is more rapid than conventional cylindrical grinding because loading and unloading time is much shorter. There is also no need for drilling center holes on the ends of the workpiece. Setup times for centerless grinding range from a few minutes to as much as 4 h, depending on the changes required and the machine used. Sometimes a change in the material being ground may require more setup time than a workpiece change because it may entail changes in wheels and coolant. Job shops can group lots of parts of like material and nearly the same diameter and economically process lots of 100 pieces or less. Justication for centerless grinding in comparison with center-type cylindrical grinding depends on the availability of equipment and wheels and other tooling and the complexity of the parts to be ground. Single-diameter parts can be ground as easily with the centerless method as with center-type grinding if quantities are 10 to 25 or more. Complex parts may require quantities of 1000 or more to justify the centerless approach.
1. If possible, the ground surface of the workpiece should be its largest diameter to permit the use of through-feed grinding. (See Fig. 4.14.5.) 2. Short pieces are more susceptible to having unspecied taper or concave or barrel-shaped surfaces. To help avoid this problem, keep ground surfaces at least one diameter in length if possible. (See Fig. 4.14.6.) 3. Parts with irregular shapes cannot have a ground surface longer than the grinding-wheel width unless the shape permits a combination of infeed and through-feed grinding. (See Fig. 4.14.7.) 4. It is preferable to avoid grinding the ends of infeed centerless-ground parts. This stricture includes radii on the ends of parts. If the end must be nished, avoid
Figure 4.14.5. Only the largest diameter of the workpiece can be through-feed centerless-ground. If a smaller diameter must be centerless-ground, as in the left-hand part, the slower plunge centerless-grinding method must be used.
Figure 4.14.6. The width of a centerless-ground part should be at least as large as its diameter.
Figure 4.14.7. Parts with irregular surfaces can-not be longer than the width of the grinding wheel unless both infeed and through-feed are used and the part is stepped in one direction as shown.
square, nearly square, or round ends. The included angle of a pointed end should be 120 or less. (See Fig. 4.14.8.) 5. As with cylindrical grinding, it is best to avoid llets and radii and instead use undercut or relief surfaces. This eliminates dicult wheel dressing when there is a llet. (See Figs. 4.13.2a and 4.13.5.) When radii or llets are used, they should be as large as possible, and on any one part all of them should be the same size to simplify wheel dressing. 6. When a part is designed for form centerless grinding (infeed method), the form should be as simple as possible to reduce wheel dressing and other costs. 7. If accuracy is critical, avoid keyways, ats, holes, and other interruptions to the surface to be ground or make them as small as possible. (See Fig. 4.13.3.)
Figure 4.14.8. Do not design the ends of centerless-ground parts to have ground surfaces unless infeed grinding is used and the end surface has an included angle of less than 120.
8. If a at is necessary at the end of a shaft to provide a surface against which a setscrew is to be tightened or for some other reason, and if tolerances are tight, it is preferable to put ats on opposite sides of the part. This prevents the tendency for a high spot to develop opposite the at. Another remedy is to retain a full cylindrical section at the end of the shaft. (See Fig. 4.14.9.)
Figure 4.14.9. When interruptions are unavoidable, balance them if possible or provide full cylindrical surfaces on both sides.
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James G.Bralla: Design for Manufacturability Handbook, Second Edition. CENTERLESS-GROUND PARTS, Chapter (McGraw-Hill Professional, 1999, 1986), AccessEngineering
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