GB2031311A – Disposable cutting insert
– Google Patents
GB2031311A – Disposable cutting insert
– Google Patents
Disposable cutting insert
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Info
Publication number
GB2031311A
GB2031311A
GB7931669A
GB7931669A
GB2031311A
GB 2031311 A
GB2031311 A
GB 2031311A
GB 7931669 A
GB7931669 A
GB 7931669A
GB 7931669 A
GB7931669 A
GB 7931669A
GB 2031311 A
GB2031311 A
GB 2031311A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
insert
angle
land
edge
rake
Prior art date
1978-09-15
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB7931669A
Other versions
GB2031311B
(en
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.)
Fansteel Inc
Original Assignee
Fansteel Inc
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.)
1978-09-15
Filing date
1979-09-12
Publication date
1980-04-23
1979-09-12
Application filed by Fansteel Inc
filed
Critical
Fansteel Inc
1980-04-23
Publication of GB2031311A
publication
Critical
patent/GB2031311A/en
1982-07-28
Application granted
granted
Critical
1982-07-28
Publication of GB2031311B
publication
Critical
patent/GB2031311B/en
Status
Expired
legal-status
Critical
Current
Links
Espacenet
Global Dossier
Discuss
Classifications
B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23—MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
B23B—TURNING; BORING
B23B27/00—Tools for turning or boring machines; Tools of a similar kind in general; Accessories therefor
B23B27/14—Cutting tools of which the bits or tips or cutting inserts are of special material
B23B27/141—Specially shaped plate-like cutting inserts, i.e. length greater or equal to width, width greater than or equal to thickness
B23B27/143—Specially shaped plate-like cutting inserts, i.e. length greater or equal to width, width greater than or equal to thickness characterised by having chip-breakers
Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
Y10T—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
Y10T407/00—Cutters, for shaping
Y10T407/23—Cutters, for shaping including tool having plural alternatively usable cutting edges
Y10T407/235—Cutters, for shaping including tool having plural alternatively usable cutting edges with integral chip breaker, guide or deflector
Description
1
GB 2 031 311 A 1
SPECIFICATION
Disposable hard metal cutting insert
The present invention relates to disposable hard metal, indexable inserts for single-point and 5 multiple-point negative rake holding cutting devices having receiving recesses to fit and clamping means to retain the inserts.
For some years, beginning prior to World War II and with increasing volume, the metal cutting 10 industry has been using toolholders with hard metal inserts to contact the work. Early on, the hard metal, in the form of tungsten carbide, was brazed onto a steel shank. Many different grades of carbide have been developed. One departure 15 from the brazed-on tip was the use of a mechanical toolholder which would hold a slug type of insert, that is, an insert square, triangular or round in cross-section in a range of 1/2″ to 3/4″ in thickness and having a length of 1 -1/2 to 2″ or 20 more. This type of insert was held more or less vertically with proper clearance rake angles at the front of a mechanical toolholder and was intended to be backed by a back-up screw and fed upwardly by that screw as the insert was worn and reground 25 to sharpness.
The next phase of development produces the so-called throwaway inserts (TA) which were in the form of small flat pellets of tungsten carbide. Toolholders were fashioned with a small pocket at 30 one corner with a flat support wall and back-up side walls leaving a corner open to expose a retained insert to the work. Various top clamps and pin-type retaining devices were utilized to secure the small inserts securely in the holders. 35 As a refinement on these inserts, so-called chip control grooves were ground into the top surfaces spaced inwardly from the cutting edge to provide chip control of the cut metal. This involved curling the removed metal in a way to avoid long 40 entangled strips of metal. Preferably, the chips were curled in the form of a helix and broken off in lengths which would drop away from the work. Later these chip control grooves were presed into the green tungsten carbide inserts prior to the 45 heat treatment, called sintering, which consolidated the tungsten carbide for final use. This enabled more complex configurations to be formed in the face of the inserts.
An example of one of the early inserts is shown 50 in the United States patent to Dowd, No.
3,1 37,917. More recent examples are illustrated in United States patents Nos. 3,792,515; 3,875,663; and 3,973,307. The latter patent shows a raised, peripheral land extending around 55 the insert and a drop-off from this land to a flat and lower surface which occupies the central portion of the insert.
It will be appreciated that there are many variables in a cutting operation quite apart from 60 the material being cut. These include the depth of cut, the rotational speed in lathe cutting, for example, and the feed rate.
This disclosure of the present invention relates to an insert designed for heavy duty cutting with
65 the objects of lowering power consumption and providing a more evenly started and broken chip. Reduced variations in both the radial force and feed forces are an object as the chip starts to form and then breaks. In addition, there is an object to 70 provide much less variation in the tangential forces. A further object is to provide a stronger insert.
There is provided by the present invention an indexable throwaway insert formed of hard 75 material comprising a polygonal body having conjunctive sides lying in planes parallel to the axis of the body and defined by upper and lower peripheral edges lying in parallel planes perpendicular to said axis, each upper peripheral 80 edge forming the outer boundary at a sharp junction of a narrow land extending inwardly and downwardly from the edge at a relatively low angle, a secondary surface extending around the periphery of said body joining conjunctively with 85 the inner edge of said land and dropping sharply downward from said land at an angle of 30° to 55° and a central surface within said secondary surface in the form of a low angle, flat-sided pyramid rising from each side of the polygonal 90 body substantially to but below the level of the plane of said edges at the center of the body. A low angle is used with large inserts, and a higher angle with small inserts.
Other objects and features of the invention will 95 be apparent in the following description and claims directed to the details of a preferred embodiment.
DRAWINGS accompany the disclosure, and the various views thereof may be briefly described as: 100 FIGURE 1, a plan view of a square insert constructed in accordance with the present invention.
FIGURE 2, a sectional view on line 2—2 of FIGURE 1.
105 FIGURE 3, an enlarged plan view of one corner of a square insert.
FIGURE 4, a view of a triangular insert constructed in accordance with the invention.
FIGURE 5, an enlarged view of a section of the 110 bottom of the hole in an insert.
With reference to the drawings, in FIGURE 1, a square insert 10 is illustrated to be formed of a suitably selected grade of tungsten carbide known in the art. Other polygonal shapes might be used 115 such as triangular, hexagonal and so forth.
Side walls 12, conjunctive and radiused at the corners, lie in intersecting planes which are parallel to the axis of the insert 10 and perpendicular to a plane containing the top cutting 120 edges 14, each side wall terminating at its top edge in the cutting edge 14 which is formed by the side walls and a land 16 which is defined by a plane which angles from edge 14 downwardly at an angle of 5° to 15°. As an example, a 5° angle 125 js illustrated in FIGURE 2. When used in a toolholder that has a 5° composite negative rake, an insert with a 5° decline in the land plane 1 6 presents a neutral side rake and negative back rake to the work being machined, thus creating a
2_
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GB 2 031 311 A 2
shearing action to produce the chip during the cutting. As another example, by using a greater angle of descent for land plane 16, a positive side rake and negative back rake is presented to the work when the insert is used in the above-described toolholder with a 5° composite negative rake.
The width of the land plane 16 will vary with the size of the insert and the feed rate to be employed. A large insert is normally associated with heavier metal cutting and greater feed rates than small inserts. As an example, a 3/4″ square insert is preferably provided with a land of 0.025″.
The insert 10 has a central hole 18, which is used in either: a pin-type holder (not shown), that has a pin in the holder which projects into the opening and which can be moved to force the insert against the backing walls (insert pocket walls) in the holder; or in a combination toolholder that utilizes both a pin (as described) and also a top clamp for forcing the insert down on the seat as the method of holding the insert in the pocket.
Hole 18 may incorporate a countersink 19 at the lower base 23 of the insert to minimize chipping or breaking of the insert.
The surface 20 of the insert inside the land 16 drops sharply at about 30° to 55° and, in the example shown, at 45°. It then is radiused at 24 to blend with the inner surface 22 of the insert which rises in a plane to hole 18 in the insert. The angle of rise of the surfaces 22 is about 3° in the example shown, and will always be a very low angle in the range of about 1 to 5° for other inserts. Each inclining surface 22 narrows as it rises to the center of the insert so, in essence, a low angle pyramid is formed inside the lands 1 6 and the drop-off surfaces 20. The inclined surfaces 22 intersect and terminate at hole 18 slightly below the plane created by cutting edge 14. The surface 22 serves in heavy feed cutting to contact and curl the chip enough to provide sufficient curl and frequent enough chip breakage that cutting can be performed advantageously.
A triangular insert 30 is shown in FIGURE 4, constructed in accordance with the invention. A three-sided pyramid within the land 1 6 has planes 32 rising to the center hole 34. Other multiple side units can also be utilized such as pentagons or hexagons.
The hole 18 of FIGURES 1 to 3 and the hole 34 of FIGURE 4 preferably has a peripheral edge at the bottom plane of the insert which is relieved as shown in FIGURE 5 with a smaH counterbore 19 and radius to reduce corner stress at this point.
The pyramid construction provides an insert of improved strength over heavy duty inserts of the prior art.
The inserts of this invention provide efficient metal cutting over a broad range of insert sizes, and are particularly effective in medium to heavy feed cutting applications.
The following results show the average tangential, feed and radial forces in pounds used to cut A.I.S.I. 8620 steel 5.7″ in diameter at 224
R.P.M., 334 SFPM (surface feet per minute), 0.048 IPR (inches per revolution) and 0.250 DOC (depth of cut) using an insert of this invention:
Tangential force — 2850 lb.
Feed force — 1960 lb.
Radial force — 870 lb.
Thus, the heavy duty insert with a sturdy land construction provides excellent cutting characteristics in a relatively simple insert construction which can be readily shaped in pressing prior to sintering. The die formations are correspondingly simple, thus insuring low cost and low rejection in the formation process.
Claims (9)
1. An indexable throwaway insert formed of hard material comprising a polygonal body having conjunctive sides lying in planes parallel to the axis of the body and defined by upper and lower peripheral edges lying in parallel planes perpendicular to said axis, each upper peripheral edge forming the outer boundary at a sharp junction of a narrow land extending inwardly and downwardly from the edge at a relatively low angle, a secondary surface extending around the periphery of said body joining conjunctively with the inner edge of said land and dropping sharply downward from said land at an angle of 30° to 55° and a central surface within said secondary surface in the form of a low angle, flat-sided pyramid rising from each side of the polygonal body substantially to but below the level of the plane of said edges at the center of the body.
2. An insert according to claim 1 in which said central surface rises at an angle ranging from 1 ° to 5°.
3. An insert according to claim 1 or 2 in which said narrow land extends inwardly and downwardly from said edge at an angle of from 5° to 15°.
4. An insert according to claim 1 or 2 in which said narrow land extends inwardly and downwardly from said edge at an angle of 5°.
5. An insert according to any of claims 1 to 4 in which said polygonal body is a 3/4″ square and in which the radial width of said narrow land is about 0.025″.
6. A cutting tool comprising a combination of a composite negative toolholding means and an insert according to any of claims 1 to 5, said cutting tool presenting a neutral or positive side rake and negative back rake cutting action to the work, creating a shearing action to produce a chip.
7. A cutting tool according to claim 6 in which said negative tool means has a composite negative rake of 5° and said insert has an angle of 5 to 15° extending inwardly and downwardly on the narrow land.
8. A cutting tool according to claim 6 in which
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GB 2 031 311 A
said composite negative rake toolholding means is
9. An indexable throwaway insert of hard a single-point or multiple-point negative rake 5 material, substantially as hereinbefore defined holding device. with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Printed for Her Majesty’s Stationery Office by the Courier Press, Leamington Spa, 1980. Published by the Patent Office, 25 Southampton Buildings, London, WC2A 1 AY, from which copies may be obtained.
GB7931669A
1978-09-15
1979-09-12
Disposable cutting insert
Expired
GB2031311B
(en)
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number
Priority Date
Filing Date
Title
US05/942,551
US4218160A
(en)
1978-09-15
1978-09-15
Heavy duty cutting insert
Publications (2)
Publication Number
Publication Date
GB2031311A
true
GB2031311A
(en)
1980-04-23
GB2031311B
GB2031311B
(en)
1982-07-28
Family
ID=25478260
Family Applications (1)
Application Number
Title
Priority Date
Filing Date
GB7931669A
Expired
GB2031311B
(en)
1978-09-15
1979-09-12
Disposable cutting insert
Country Status (7)
Country
Link
US
(1)
US4218160A
(en)
CA
(1)
CA1109655A
(en)
DE
(1)
DE2936583C2
(en)
ES
(1)
ES484172A1
(en)
FR
(1)
FR2435990A1
(en)
GB
(1)
GB2031311B
(en)
IT
(1)
IT1120551B
(en)
Cited By (1)
* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title
US4447175A
(en)
*
1980-08-27
1984-05-08
Kennametal Inc.
Cutting insert
Families Citing this family (5)
* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title
IL58006A
(en)
*
1979-08-08
1983-02-23
Iscar Ltd
Cutting insert with chip control means
US5000626A
(en)
*
1988-12-22
1991-03-19
Gte Valenite Corporation
Cutting insert for low ranges of feed and depth of cut
US4963061A
(en)
*
1989-04-07
1990-10-16
Gte Valenite Corporation
Ceramic cutting insert
SE9402378L
(en)
*
1994-07-05
1995-11-06
Sandvik Ab
Inserts with micro chip switch located on the primary phase
SE520629C2
(en)
*
2000-09-05
2003-08-05
Sandvik Ab
Cutter for coarse turning purposes with tapered rear end
Family Cites Families (13)
* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title
DE383423C
(en)
*
1923-01-16
1924-02-05
Hans Klopstock Dr Ing
High-performance turning tool with two cutting edges at an obtuse angle
US3137917A
(en)
*
1960-05-25
1964-06-23
Joseph F Dowd
Tool bits
GB1154754A
(en)
*
1966-03-24
1969-06-11
Gen Electric
Improvements in Cutting Tool Inserts
US3381349A
(en)
*
1966-04-25
1968-05-07
Newcomer Prod Inc
Cutting tool
US3399442A
(en)
*
1966-09-08
1968-09-03
Kennametal Inc
Cutting insert
SE349759B
(en)
*
1971-10-27
1972-10-09
Sandvik Ab
SE354593C
(en)
*
1972-05-17
1975-01-09
Sandvik Ab
SE361609B
(en)
*
1973-01-08
1973-11-12
Sandvik Ab
US3997951A
(en)
*
1974-09-11
1976-12-21
Ex-Cell-O Corporation
Cutting tools
IL47571A
(en)
*
1974-11-29
1978-12-17
Kennametal Inc
Molded cutting insert
US3973307A
(en)
*
1974-11-29
1976-08-10
Kennametal Inc.
Cutting insert
CH590099A5
(en)
*
1975-01-14
1977-07-29
Stellram Sa
US4056871A
(en)
*
1976-10-21
1977-11-08
Kennametal Inc.
Cutting insert
1978
1978-09-15
US
US05/942,551
patent/US4218160A/en
not_active
Expired – Lifetime
1979
1979-08-30
IT
IT50132/79A
patent/IT1120551B/en
active
1979-09-06
CA
CA335,099A
patent/CA1109655A/en
not_active
Expired
1979-09-11
DE
DE2936583A
patent/DE2936583C2/en
not_active
Expired
1979-09-12
GB
GB7931669A
patent/GB2031311B/en
not_active
Expired
1979-09-14
ES
ES484172A
patent/ES484172A1/en
not_active
Expired
1979-09-14
FR
FR7922999A
patent/FR2435990A1/en
active
Granted
Cited By (1)
* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title
US4447175A
(en)
*
1980-08-27
1984-05-08
Kennametal Inc.
Cutting insert
Also Published As
Publication number
Publication date
US4218160A
(en)
1980-08-19
DE2936583C2
(en)
1984-08-30
GB2031311B
(en)
1982-07-28
DE2936583A1
(en)
1980-03-27
CA1109655A
(en)
1981-09-29
FR2435990B1
(en)
1983-11-18
IT1120551B
(en)
1986-03-26
FR2435990A1
(en)
1980-04-11
ES484172A1
(en)
1980-10-01
IT7950132D0
(en)
1979-08-30
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Legal Events
Date
Code
Title
Description
1988-05-05
PCNP
Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee