Integrated Automation: Video Spotlight

Automation in deep hole drilling machines goes far beyond just robots. Automated capabilities are commonly included in machines to empower manufacturers to achieve ideal production flows, to reduce manual part and tool handling, and to maintain superior accuracy standards in drilled workpieces.

Automation is commonly integrated into deep hole drilling machines, working in part with the entire system to enhance capabilities while providing a seamless and ergonomic experience for operators. UNISIG works with each customer’s application demands to create a solution that optimizes their production and specification goals, resulting in a machine system that brings confidence to their manufacturing.

Shop Metalworking Technology recently featured updated technology in the new B850 model of rack-and-pinion deep hole drilling machine
10

Feb

New B850 Machine Technology

Shop Metalworking Technology recently featured updated technology in the new B850 model of rack-and-pinion deep hole drilling machine. The new model includes modernized feed systems and a new, high-performance, helical-geared transmission for increased rigidity and reduced backlash. Other elements, such as intuitive, user-friendly controls, have been integrated into this and other, similar models.

large diameter deep hole drilling
UNISIG's B700 deep hole drilling machine uses BTA tooling systems to drill holes up to 300 mm diameter, in depths up to 6 m. A clean design and intuitive controls interface allow immediate
09

Sep

B700 BTA Deep Hole Drilling Machine Operation | Video

UNISIG’s B700 deep hole drilling machine uses BTA tooling systems to drill holes up to 300 mm diameter, in depths up to 6 m. A clean design and intuitive controls interface allow immediate productivity for manufacturers across several industries.

Continue reading“B700 BTA Deep Hole Drilling Machine Operation | Video”

Pull boring enables users to achieve remarkable straightness in deep holes. A variation of this technique is also effective when maintaining consistent wall thickness (in long, cast pipes, for example) is top priority.
24

Jun

Pull Boring Highlights the Capability of Deep Hole Making

By Mark Albert, Editor-In-Chief
Originally posted in Modern Machine Shop Online

Pull boring enables users to achieve remarkable straightness in deep holes. A variation of this technique is also effective when maintaining consistent wall thickness (in long, cast pipes, for example) is top priority.

Because the ability to make deep holes effectively and efficiently is critical in many applications, deep hole technology is one of the most highly developed sectors in metalworking. It covers a diverse range of processes and methodologies. UNISIG (Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin), a supplier of machines, tools and automation for deep hole making, says the list of industries it serves includes aerospace, automotive, defense, hydraulics, mold making, oilfield and energy. Yet deep hole making is largely the domain of shops specializing in this capability, whereas technology suppliers such as UNISIG believe that a wider awareness of deep hole making processes would alert new users to valuable opportunities.

As an example of how deep hole technology has mastered some of its most extreme challenges, UNISIG points to one particularly interesting technique: pull boring, which enables users to achieve remarkable straightness in deep holes. A variation of this technique is also effective when maintaining consistent wall thickness (in long, cast pipes, for example) is top priority.

As its name implies, pull boring involves pulling a cutter through an existing hole. Pull boring is usually performed on the same machine that created the original hole. In this case, a boring bar is inserted all the way through the existing hole. After emerging at the opposite end, the bar is fitted with a single-point pull boring head. The bar is then engaged in the tool drive mechanism and drawn back through the workpiece. The bar rotates in one direction, while the workpiece is rotated in the opposite direction by the work spindle. The tooling head holds a carbide insert of the appropriate grade and style for the workpiece material. This insert functions much like an ID turning tool, enlarging the original hole slightly as it is pulled into the workpiece. Coolant pumped around the boring bar channels chips up and out through its hollow center to aid metal removal and protect the surface.

According to Sarang Garud, a UNISIG applications engineer, hole drift tolerances achieved by pull boring can be less than 0.001 inch per foot (0.08 mm/meter) of workpiece length, if material, tooling and process conditions are favorable. However, reaching this level of straightness may require several passes.

For concentricity, a multi-point pull-boring head is used instead of a single-point tool. A multi-point tool typically has between two and six inserts, Mr. Garud says. Wear pads are located in front of the inserts so that the existing ID of the bore provides support during cutting. In contrast, a single-point head is supported by the finished bore ID, so wear pads are located behind the insert.

Mr. Garud notes that pull boring involves several nuances. For example, it is customary to make the original hole by boring halfway through the part, turning it end for end and boring the second half of the hole. This practice reduces the overall out-of-straightness condition in the resulting hole because each half of the bore will show less drift compared to a hole bored all the way through in a single pass. Thus, pull boring has a “head start” in its straightening action.

Pull boring can be applied to any part that a deep hole machine can accommodate. The only limit on part length is the length of the deep hole machine. Likewise, pull boring benefits from the same qualities of accuracy and rigidity in the deep hole machine that affect the original boring operation. In addition, sensing the rate and pressure of coolant flow, which the UNISIG machines do automatically, enables users to protect workpieces and cutting tools by closely monitoring cutting conditions during pull boring.

A special accessory that makes pull boring more efficient is the lantern chuck. A drum-shaped device with openings on opposite sides, the lantern chuck is installed at the workpiece headstock end of the machine. The side openings make it easy to install and align a guide bushing for the pull boring tool. The lantern chuck also eliminates the need to machine a special pilot hole otherwise required so that the pull boring tool enters the workpiece on center.

Advances in deep hole technology will strengthen the capability of specialist shops while widening its use in general metalworking. By providing complete machining systems, tooling, coolant, accessories and process know-how, UNISIG says it is ready to support customers following either trend.

pull boring tool in machine

Although deep hole drilling machines such as this B630 from UNISIG are designed for the special needs of creating holes through long workpieces, they have the flexibility to perform a variety of operations such as boring, counterboring, trepanning, roller burnishing and pull boring.

pull bore operation diagram

Pull boring is a precision operation in which a cutter is pulled through an existing hole to improve straightness.

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