Renishaw systems crucial to manufacturing at Martin-Baker現在、このページはご希望の言語でご利用いただけません。 Google 翻訳を使用すると自動翻訳でページを表示できます。 弊社はこのサービスの提供に責任を持たず、翻訳結果を弊社でチェックすることはありません。 Martin-Baker, the world’s leading supplier of aircraft ejection seats, rely on Renishaw’s QC10 ballbar and machine tool probe systems to manufacture complex, high-quality components.
Martin-Baker gauges the success of its ejection seats by the number of successful ejections. With over 7000 lives saved to date the company can easily justify its reputation as the leading supplier of aircraft escape systems in the world, having 80% of the world market and supplying aircraft manufacturers and end-users in most countries. The first ejection seats were developed in 1944, and a series of developments over the years have led to the very sophisticated micro-processor controlled, rocket-propelled seats supplied today. The company may have a long history, but manufacturing at the factory in Uxbridge, Middlesex, is right up to date, with the latest equipment in use. This is very important, when you consider that about 1 in 10 of Martin-Baker seats have actually been used in emergencies. It is difficult to imagine a situation where the reliability of mechanical parts, for the few seconds when they do their job, could be more important.
Probing on fully automated systemsMost components are manufactured on 3 Makino A55 4-axis machining centres, fed by a common 60 pallet loading system. These machines are set up identically to allow flexibility when requirements for quantities and types fluctuate. All three rely on spindle-mounted probes to control their operation.
“When needed” is a key phrase here, the probe system being sufficiently flexible to be used only when a measurement is required, with routines lasting just a matter of seconds. The programmers need add only 1 or 2 simple lines of code to their program to take these measurements, with the resident probing software enabling the probe to be loaded into the spindle from the tool changer, working out the necessary moves and automatically updating offsets. Probing on older machines with manual loading
These Makino machines are also used to produce the slots on the guide rails along which the seat will be propelled when used. While the weight must be kept to a minimum, it is essential for the strength of the rail that the wall thickness is sufficient along the full length. This brings challenges when setting up and aligning. The probe checks the exact position of multiple positions on the material clamped to the machine bed. These readings are used to adjust the machining program and ensure that the correct amount is machined in all the required places. Before probing, when this was done manually, the whole job took over 2 hours. Each rail is now completed in 30 minutes, with a far higher confidence and reduced scrap. Each Makino is fitted with an indexer, which although used for a variety of jobs to reduce time consuming manual setting for each face, does not position as accurately as the work requires. Therefore the spindle probe is quickly used in-cycle after each indexed move and takes points on a part’s surface. This determines the component position and the control then works out any compensation required to the machining program. Peter Smith is in no doubt how important this is to the process, “Without this, the machine couldn’t do all the faces of the component, in fact we couldn’t easily machine some of these components at all”. Future plans for machining operationsRecently, Martin-Baker has had two very large Mori Seiki mill-turn machines installed, to provide extra capacity to cope with demand and upgrade machining capability and productivity. Both are fitted with Renishaw MP700 spindle probes, which are ideal for such versatile multi-axis machines. To fit probing was not a difficult decision, as Martin-Baker now has a well established policy that all new machines must have probing systems. Confidence in machine performance with the QC10 ballbar
The QC10 ballbar is coupled to magnetic mounts on the machine’s bed and in the machine spindle. It then follows the radius of a circle described by the machine in 2 axes, controlled by a simple program running on the machine’s control. The high accuracy transducer in the ballbar records any variation in this measured radius and the ballbar software, running on a linked PC, displays and diagnoses the results. Whether the machining performed on that machine involves circular interpolation or not, this test enables the software to identify and quantify the exact causes of any positioning errors. If the error can be corrected by making adjustments, for example trimming servos, the exact figure is entered, and another test run after adjustment to confirm the improved performance. News updatesRegister for regular news updates from Renishaw Full article
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