EP0046604A1 - Tool for roughing, smoothing and polishing solid surfaces, particularly adapted for stony materials - Google Patents

Tool for roughing, smoothing and polishing solid surfaces, particularly adapted for stony materials Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0046604A1
EP0046604A1 EP81200684A EP81200684A EP0046604A1 EP 0046604 A1 EP0046604 A1 EP 0046604A1 EP 81200684 A EP81200684 A EP 81200684A EP 81200684 A EP81200684 A EP 81200684A EP 0046604 A1 EP0046604 A1 EP 0046604A1
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rollers
plate
rotation
tool according
tool
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EP81200684A
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German (de)
French (fr)
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EP0046604B1 (en
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Ermanno Pacini
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24BMACHINES, DEVICES, OR PROCESSES FOR GRINDING OR POLISHING; DRESSING OR CONDITIONING OF ABRADING SURFACES; FEEDING OF GRINDING, POLISHING, OR LAPPING AGENTS
    • B24B41/00Component parts such as frames, beds, carriages, headstocks
    • B24B41/04Headstocks; Working-spindles; Features relating thereto
    • B24B41/047Grinding heads for working on plane surfaces

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a tool for roughing, smoothing and polishing solid surfaces, particularly adapted for stony materials.
  • the roughing, smoothing and polishing operations a re as known, the last stages of the working of stony materials and substantially serve, in the order, to ha ve a planar surface, to remove the surface roughnesses and, finally, to obtain a specular surface.
  • the most widespread type of tool for these operations consists of a horizontal circular plate provided with rotary and translatory motion, which supports at its lower face a circumferential succession of variou sly arranged abrasive segments or small abrasive discs, called “satellites”, which are rotated about their own axes, in opposite sense with respect to the sense of rotation of the supporting plate.
  • This second model of the above said tool is more ex pensive than the first one, but is shows the advantage of compensating at least partially, through the con trary rotation of the satellites, the difference bet-print the peripheral speeds of points at different distances from the center of rotation of the plate.
  • the abrasive remains in contact with the material being worked only along a generating line of the cylinder and for extremely short times, so that the mud, after having been diluted greatly by the cooling water, is immediately removed as a result of the same rotation of the cylinder.
  • abrasive plate which consists of a normal horizontal plate provided with abrasive elements with horizontal axis, which are radially arranged with respect to the axis of rotation of the plate and have a lower section in the form of a circular arc of about 25°.
  • Said abrasive elements are rotated about their own axes through an angle of 25° in alternated senses, with the result that the contact between the abrasive and the material to be worked occurs continuously along generating lines and the working speed of each single grain of abrasive depends both on its distance from the axis of the plate and on the sense of rotation imparted to the abrasive element in that precise instant.
  • the working speed is thus variable from one to another grain and, for a same abra sive grain, from one to another instant.
  • the object of the present invention is to realize a tool for roughing, smoothing and polishing solid surfa ces, particularly of stony material, which tool, by using partially the favourable features of the above li sted tools, finally results into a reduction of the working times and costs and a quality improvement of the final product.
  • such an object is attai ned by means of a tool, comprising a horizontal plate ro tating about a vertical axis, a plurality of truncated-cone abrasive rollers rotatably supported by said plate in radial position with a lower generating line arranged parallel to the plate plane below said plate, and means for providing each of said rollers with a ro tary motion about their own axes, characterized in that said rotary motion of the rollers has such a sense that, as a result of the combination of the rotary motions of the plate and the rollers and having suitably selected the ratio of the maximum to the minimum diameter of the rollers and the speeds of rotation of the plate and the rollers, all the points of said lower generating line of the rollers have substantially equal speeds of movement with respect to the surface to be worked.
  • the rollers are rotated about their own axes in such a sense as to cause their lower generating line to move in a sense opposite to that of rotation of the plate, i.e. so that along said lower generating line, which is the "working line", the peripheral speed due to the rotation of the plate and that due to the rotation of the roller are substracted from one another.
  • the truncated-cone rollers must have the major base faced to the outside of the plate, so that the maximum value is substracted from the maximum value and the mi nimum value is substracted from the minimum value to make the difference uniform from one to the other end of the roller.
  • the rollers may be rotated about their own axes in such a sense as to cause their lower generating line to move in the same sense of rotation as the plate, i.e. so that along said lower generating li ne the peripheral speed due to the rotation of the pla te and that due to the rotation of the roller are added to one another.
  • the truncated-cone rollers must have the major base faced to the center of the plate, so that the maximum value is added to the minimum value and viceversa.
  • a horizontal plate 1 provided with radial windows 2 is fixed below a rotatable, substantially cup-like, inner support 3, which is rotated about its own vertical axis 19, coincident with that of the plate, as guided by a stationa ry, cup-like, outer support 4, to which the inner support 3 is rotatably connected through bearings 5 and 6.
  • a central rod or sleeve 7 of the rotata ble support 3 there is supplied in conventional manner cooling and washing water, which reaches through radial bores 8 the annular peripheral chamber 9 formed between the lateral lower flaring 10 of the rotatable support 3 and the underlying plate 1.
  • Each roller 11 has end pins 12 and 13 rotatably sup ported by the rotatable support 3 through sealed bearings 14 and 15.
  • the outer pin 12 even exists from the rotatable inner support 3, ending with a pinion 16 in engagement with a crown gear 17 carried by an annular plate 18 ma de integral with the stationary outer support 4.
  • V P1 and V P2 the peripheral speeds of the plate 1 at the diameters D 1 and D 2 , expressed in ms /s ec , V R1 and V R2 the peripheral speeds of the rollers 11 at the diameters d 1 and d , expressed in ms/sec, and V the working speed which is desired to have at every point of the lower generating line of the rollers 11.
  • the tool is made in two separable parts 31 and 32, which are normally fixed to one another by a nut 33 screwed onto the threaded end 34 of a pin 35, which projects downwards from the upper part 31 and passes through a cen tral bore 36 of the lower part 32.
  • the upper part 31 comprises a stationary support 37 and a rotatable support 38, which include respective upwardly extending tubular rods 39 and 40, which are coaxially arrangen and rotatably cou pled to one another through a bearing 41.
  • the rotatable support in turn rotatably carries three shafts 42, which are radially arranged at circumferentially spaced positions and on which a conical pinion 43, engaged with a conical crown gear 44 of the stationary sup port 37, and a cylindrical gear 45 are rigidly mounted.
  • the lower part 32 in turn comprises a support 46, which is rotated along with the rotatable support 38 of the upper part 31 as made integral therewith by the pin 35 and the nut 33.
  • Said support 46 rotatably carries three shafts 47, which are radially arranged at circum ferentially spaced positions, exactly below the shafts 42 of the upper part 31.
  • the shafts 47 are slightly inclined with respect to the horizontal working plane 51, so that each truncated-cone roller 49 has a generating line completely engaged with the same working plane, as it happened to the rollers 11 of the tool of Figs. 1 to 3.
  • a plate 52 fixed to the support 46 completely closes the lower part 32 of the tool, allowing only a minimum section of the rollers 49 around the working generating line to project through the radial windows 53.
  • a feed system for the coo ling and washing water which system extends within the rotatable support 38 of the upper part 31 of the tool in the form of channels 54 and 55 and ends above the rollers 49 into a roller housing chamber 56 (Fig. 4).
  • the shafts 42 are obliged to rotate at higher speed in the sense indicated by the arrow 62 in the same Figure and the rollers 49 are finally obliged to rotate about their own axes in the sense indicated by the arrow 63, i.e. in the sa me sense as the rollers 11 of Fig. 1 upon an identical rotation of the rotatable support 13.

Abstract

A rotating plate (1) carries a plurality of truncated-cone rollers (11) arranged in radial position and rotated about their own axes. The sense of rotation of the rollers is chosen in such a way as to give the rollers (11) a peripheral speed having such a direction as to combine with the peripheral speed of the plate (1) to produce equal working speeds in all the points of the lower generating line (22) of the rollers (11).

Description

  • The present invention relates to a tool for roughing, smoothing and polishing solid surfaces, particularly adapted for stony materials.
  • The roughing, smoothing and polishing operations a re, as known, the last stages of the working of stony materials and substantially serve, in the order, to ha ve a planar surface, to remove the surface roughnesses and, finally, to obtain a specular surface.
  • The most widespread type of tool for these operations consists of a horizontal circular plate provided with rotary and translatory motion, which supports at its lower face a circumferential succession of variou sly arranged abrasive segments or small abrasive discs, called "satellites", which are rotated about their own axes, in opposite sense with respect to the sense of rotation of the supporting plate.
  • This second model of the above said tool is more ex pensive than the first one, but is shows the advantage of compensating at least partially, through the con trary rotation of the satellites, the difference bet- wenn the peripheral speeds of points at different distances from the center of rotation of the plate.
  • The latter feature is particularly important, since the peripheral speed really represents one of the most important data of those rules for the employment of diamond tools, which were published the first time In 1971 by Assodiam, Italian association of the manufacturers of diamond tools, and are now carefully followed by technicians in all the world.
  • An unfavourable feature of the above said tools with rotating plate however consists in that the abrading material is always in contact with the material being worked and, therefore, allows the cooling water neither to wash the abrasive elements well nor to remove the mud efficiently. The latter, by coming between the material being worked and the abrasive, redu ces the capacity of penetration of the single points and, therefore, the output per hour.
  • In order to obviate partially this drawback, it is necessary to exert on the slab to be roughed a high pressure, which may give rise to breakages if the slab, due to a bad sawing, has a concavity at its resting face.
  • Far from this type is another tool, which is mainly used for roughing the tiles and substantially consi sts of a cylinder with horizontal axis, which carries at its periphery a plurality of diamond segments which define a total working width equal to 45,60 or 70 cms. As a result of the rotation of the cylinder, the abrasive segments remove from the rough tiles, placed on an underlying belt conveyor, a thickness depending on the height of the axis of rotation of the cylinder.
  • In this case, all the abrasive material works at the same peripheral speed, which may be chosen in such a way as to be as close as possible to the optimum, and this is certainly one of the reasons which cause a higher output per hour and a longer duration of this tool with respect to the tools with horizontal pla te.
  • Moreover, the abrasive remains in contact with the material being worked only along a generating line of the cylinder and for extremely short times, so that the mud, after having been diluted greatly by the cooling water, is immediately removed as a result of the same rotation of the cylinder.
  • Finally, still for the same reason, i.e. since the area of contact is very restricted, it is not necessary to press strongly the tool on the slab, with consequent danger of breakage in order to obtain a given op timal value of Kgs/cm .
  • In front of these advantages, however, the above de scribed tool shows the serious drawback of a limited working width. In fact, it is apparent that, while a horizontal plate can translate in every direction, i.e. it has 360° of movement, a cylinder can do so only in directions substantially perpendicular to its axis of rotation.
  • It has recently appeared on the market a new tool, called "Fickert plate" from the name of its inventor, which consists of a normal horizontal plate provided with abrasive elements with horizontal axis, which are radially arranged with respect to the axis of rotation of the plate and have a lower section in the form of a circular arc of about 25°. Said abrasive elements are rotated about their own axes through an angle of 25° in alternated senses, with the result that the contact between the abrasive and the material to be worked occurs continuously along generating lines and the working speed of each single grain of abrasive depends both on its distance from the axis of the plate and on the sense of rotation imparted to the abrasive element in that precise instant. The working speed is thus variable from one to another grain and, for a same abra sive grain, from one to another instant.
  • There are also known further tools, which, even thou gh they have not substantially been put into practice, are however known as described in the patent literatu re. Among them, there should be cited those of the Ger man patents 801498, 651894 and 1115608, which include rollers with conical head, which are rotated about almost vertical oblique axes distributed along the circumference of a supporting plate, which rotates in turn about a vertical axis. None of these tools is however able to ensure the desired equality of working speed to all the abrasive grains, so that the working cannot be other than uneven and the consumption of abrasive irregular.
  • There is finally to keep in mind the French patent 1407811, which describes and shows a tool with rotating horizontal plate, provided with short radially-arranged truncated-cone abrasive rollers, which work at respective generating lines. Contrarily to what explained in the specification and illustrated by designating arrows in Fig. 1, however, the constructional arrangement shown in Fig. 2 is such as to give the single trun cated-cone rollers senses of rotation which do not annul but, if any, increase the speed inequalities produ ced by the rotation of the plate at the single points of the generating lines of the rollers. In the tool of the above said French patent either, therefore, there is not found the desired eveness of working speed for a perfect working and an even consumption of abrasive.
  • The object of the present invention is to realize a tool for roughing, smoothing and polishing solid surfa ces, particularly of stony material, which tool, by using partially the favourable features of the above li sted tools, finally results into a reduction of the working times and costs and a quality improvement of the final product.
  • According to the invention, such an object is attai ned by means of a tool, comprising a horizontal plate ro tating about a vertical axis, a plurality of truncated-cone abrasive rollers rotatably supported by said plate in radial position with a lower generating line arranged parallel to the plate plane below said plate, and means for providing each of said rollers with a ro tary motion about their own axes, characterized in that said rotary motion of the rollers has such a sense that, as a result of the combination of the rotary motions of the plate and the rollers and having suitably selected the ratio of the maximum to the minimum diameter of the rollers and the speeds of rotation of the plate and the rollers, all the points of said lower generating line of the rollers have substantially equal speeds of movement with respect to the surface to be worked.
  • Preferably, in order to realize the above said equa lity of speed of movement or "working speed", the rollers are rotated about their own axes in such a sense as to cause their lower generating line to move in a sense opposite to that of rotation of the plate, i.e. so that along said lower generating line, which is the "working line", the peripheral speed due to the rotation of the plate and that due to the rotation of the roller are substracted from one another. In this case, the truncated-cone rollers must have the major base faced to the outside of the plate, so that the maximum value is substracted from the maximum value and the mi nimum value is substracted from the minimum value to make the difference uniform from one to the other end of the roller.
  • Otherwise, the rollers may be rotated about their own axes in such a sense as to cause their lower generating line to move in the same sense of rotation as the plate, i.e. so that along said lower generating li ne the peripheral speed due to the rotation of the pla te and that due to the rotation of the roller are added to one another. In this case, the truncated-cone rollers must have the major base faced to the center of the plate, so that the maximum value is added to the minimum value and viceversa.
  • In both cases, moreover, it is possible to make the tool in two parts, the lower one of which, supporting the truncated-cone rollers, can be removed to allow the substitution of the abrasive or even, if necessary, the substitution of the rollers. These operations are thus made extremely rapid to full advantage of the pro ductivity of the tool and the machine including the latter.
  • Two exemplary embodiments of the tool according to the invention are illustrated for better clarity, but without any limiting intention, in the enclosed drawings, in which:
    • Fig. 1 shows a tool according to the invention as horizontally sectioned along line I-I of Fig. 2;
    • Fig. 2 shows an enlarged detail of said tool as ver tically sectioned along line II-II of Fig. 1;
    • Fig. 3 shows another detail of said tool as sectioned along line III-III of Fig. 1;
    • Fig. 4 shows in diametral vertical section another embodiment of the tool according to the invention, of the type made in two detachable parts;
    • Fig. 5 shows the same embodiment with the lower part detached from the upper part.
  • With reference to Figs. 1 to 3, a horizontal plate 1 provided with radial windows 2 is fixed below a rotatable, substantially cup-like, inner support 3, which is rotated about its own vertical axis 19, coincident with that of the plate, as guided by a stationa ry, cup-like, outer support 4, to which the inner support 3 is rotatably connected through bearings 5 and 6. Along the central rod or sleeve 7 of the rotata ble support 3 there is supplied in conventional manner cooling and washing water, which reaches through radial bores 8 the annular peripheral chamber 9 formed between the lateral lower flaring 10 of the rotatable support 3 and the underlying plate 1.
  • In the above said annular chamber 9, at said radial windows 2, there are housed truncated-cone abrasive rollers 11, which are radially arranged with their major bases faced to the outside and their lower generating lines 22 projecting below the plate 1 through the windows 2 and parallel to the plate plane (Fig. 2).
  • Each roller 11 has end pins 12 and 13 rotatably sup ported by the rotatable support 3 through sealed bearings 14 and 15.
  • The outer pin 12 even exists from the rotatable inner support 3, ending with a pinion 16 in engagement with a crown gear 17 carried by an annular plate 18 ma de integral with the stationary outer support 4.
  • The (for example, anticlockwise) rotation of the ro tatable support 3 and the plate 1 is thus able to cause an opposite-sense (i.e. clockwise) rotation of each roller 11 about its own axes, at a speed much higher than that of the plate 1. It follows that the lower generating line of each roller, which is engaged with the underlying surface being worked, is subjected to two pe ripheral speeds of opposite signs, of which that due to the rotation of the plate, which is the lower one, is substracted from that due to the rotation of the roller about its own axis, which is the higher one.
  • It is thus made possible to obtain that equality of working speed at all the points of the lower generating line of the rollers 11, which is an essential condition to attain the desired working uniformity, as well as an even consumption of the abrasive material of the rollers.
  • To this end, it is however necessary to provide for a proper sizing of the rollers 11 too, particularly as regards the ratio of their base diameters, as well as a proper choice of the speed of rotation of the plate and the rollers. More precisely, it is necessary to ta ke into account the following formulae, which can be obtained through simple reasonings, once called d and d2the diameters of the minor and major bases of the rollers 11, D1 and D2 the diameters of the plate 1 at said minor and major bases (or, more precisely, at the points A and B of the lower generating lines of the rollers), NP and N R the speeds of rotation of the plate 1 and the rollers 11 (in the senses indicated by the arrows 20 and21 in Fig. 1), expressed in rpm, VP1 and VP2 the peripheral speeds of the plate 1 at the diameters D1 and D2, expressed in ms/sec, VR1 and V R2 the peripheral speeds of the rollers 11 at the diameters d1 and d , expressed in ms/sec, and V the working speed which is desired to have at every point of the lower generating line of the rollers 11.
  • It is apparent, in fact, that the speed of rotation of each roller 11 about its own axis confers the most internal point A of the same roller a peripheral velocity VR1 given by the following formula:
    Figure imgb0001
    and directed from left to right looking at Fig. 3.
  • The rotation of the plate 1, on the other hand, con fers the same point A an oppositely directed peripheral speed VP1, which is given by the following formula:
    Figure imgb0002
  • The resulting peripheral speed, further directed from left to right in Fig. 3 because the peripheral speed of the roller as due to its rotation about its own axis is higher than that due to the rotation of the plate, is obviously given by VR1 - VP1.
  • In order to make it equal to the desired value VL, it is therefore necessary that the following relation is satisfied:
    Figure imgb0003
  • This can be obtained in the planning stage by establishing the several parameters according to the experience and constructional requirements and bearing in mind that dl cannot obviously be chosed too small.
  • Repeating the same reasonings for the more external point B of each roller 11, there is obtained the similar relation:
    Figure imgb0004
    from which, once established D2, there can easily be ob tained the value of d2 which allows the same speed VL to be granted to the point B also.
  • Since the speeds of the end points A and B are e-qualto one another and to the desired speed, this obviously holds true for all the other points of the lower generating line of each roller 11 too, i.e. the en tire generating line has an equal peripheral working speed. This allows the tool the best working conditions with uniform removal of material and likewise uniform consumption of abrasive. At the same time, should an uneven consumption of abrasive occur, it would be possible to remedy promptly by changing the ratio of the two end diameters (d , d2) of the abrasive rollers, possibly with a simple addition of abrasive where necessary.
  • During working, cooling and washing water is fed at controlled pressure to the inside of the rod 7 of the rotatable support 3 and from here, through the bores 8, to the annular chamber 9 and then, through the win dows 2, on the surface being worked. It is thus obtained an efficient washing and cooling of the abrasive rollers, which are immersed in cold and clean water du ring the most part of their time of rotation, as well as a certain dilution of the mud, which is produced in a minimum amount, since only one generating line of the rollers is in contact with the material, and is progressively removed because of the same water and the rotating movement of the abrasive rollers.
  • Further advantages result from the presently preferred embodiment which is illustrated in Figs. 4 and 5. According with the latter Figures, in fact, the tool is made in two separable parts 31 and 32, which are normally fixed to one another by a nut 33 screwed onto the threaded end 34 of a pin 35, which projects downwards from the upper part 31 and passes through a cen tral bore 36 of the lower part 32.
  • More precisely, the upper part 31 comprises a stationary support 37 and a rotatable support 38, which include respective upwardly extending tubular rods 39 and 40, which are coaxially arrangen and rotatably cou pled to one another through a bearing 41. The rotatable support in turn rotatably carries three shafts 42, which are radially arranged at circumferentially spaced positions and on which a conical pinion 43, engaged with a conical crown gear 44 of the stationary sup port 37, and a cylindrical gear 45 are rigidly mounted.
  • The lower part 32 in turn comprises a support 46, which is rotated along with the rotatable support 38 of the upper part 31 as made integral therewith by the pin 35 and the nut 33. Said support 46 rotatably carries three shafts 47, which are radially arranged at circum ferentially spaced positions, exactly below the shafts 42 of the upper part 31. On each shaft 47 there are fi xed a cylindrical gear 48, engaged with the above mentioned gear 45, and a truncated-cone roller 49 provided with abrasive coating 50. As can be detected from Fig. 4, the shafts 47 are slightly inclined with respect to the horizontal working plane 51, so that each truncated-cone roller 49 has a generating line completely engaged with the same working plane, as it happened to the rollers 11 of the tool of Figs. 1 to 3.
  • A plate 52 fixed to the support 46 completely closes the lower part 32 of the tool, allowing only a minimum section of the rollers 49 around the working generating line to project through the radial windows 53.
  • There is finally provided a feed system for the coo ling and washing water, which system extends within the rotatable support 38 of the upper part 31 of the tool in the form of channels 54 and 55 and ends above the rollers 49 into a roller housing chamber 56 (Fig. 4).
  • The mode of operation of the tool illustrated in Figs. 4 and 5 is conceptually identical to that of the tool illustrated in Figs. 1 to 3, i.e. the rotation of the rotatable support 39, and therefore of the plate 52, about its own vertical axis causes a correspon ding rotation of the rollers 49 about their almost horizontal axes. This time, however, it happens to the shafts 42 to receive the latter rotary motion as a result of the engagement of the pinions 43 with the sta tionary crown gear 44 and to transmit the same to the truncated-cone rollers 49 through the connection between the gears 45 and 48. It is easy to verify that, if the rotatable support 38 is rotated in the sense indicated by the arrow 61 in Fig. 4, the shafts 42 are obliged to rotate at higher speed in the sense indicated by the arrow 62 in the same Figure and the rollers 49 are finally obliged to rotate about their own axes in the sense indicated by the arrow 63, i.e. in the sa me sense as the rollers 11 of Fig. 1 upon an identical rotation of the rotatable support 13. There further re sult therefore a speed subtraction and compensation and, with a suitable choice of size and speed, the pos sibility of obtaining the desired equality of speed in all the points of the lower generating line of the rol lers.
  • Moreover, it is possible to detach rapidly the lower part 32 from the upper one 31 for the rapid substi tution of the abrasive and, if necessary, of the same rollers 49.
  • In Figs. 4 and 5, and still more in Figs. 1 to 3, there is given a generic representation of the abrasive coating of the rollers, since the features of the present invention are totally independent from the ty pe of abrasive which is used and, on the contrary, there should be intended as comprised in the field of the invention polishing material also (for example, felt) to be used for workings which do not provide for removal of material. For mere indication it is however to be considered particularly useful and efficient to realize the abrasive coating in the form of one or more helixes wound about the rollers. With such a helix- like arrangement, in fact, there is obtained the impor tant result of causing a thrust of the mud outwards, which is particularly useful during the roughing, when the single rollers should remove great amounts of material and meet with very irregular surfaces. Through the spaces between the helixes, the mud can easily move outwards and thus go out of the working area. It is moreover to be noted that, as a result of the helix-li ke construction of the abrasive coating, the direction and the sense of the peripheral velocity vector are slightly different from those of the work vector of the abrasive grain, which has consequently a solid support. Finally, since the contact area is limited, it is possible to obtain a good working pressure of the abrasive even with a low weight of the tool.

Claims (8)

1. Tool for roughing, smoothing and polishing solid surfaces, particularly adapted for stony materials, comprising a horizontal plate rotating about a vertical axis, a plurality of truncated-cone abrasive rollers rotatably supported by said plate in radial position with a lower generating line arranged parallel to the plate plane below said plate, and means for providing each of said rollers with a rotary motion about its own axis, characterized in that said rotary motion of the rollers has such a sense that, as a result of the combi nation of the rotary motions of the plate and the rollers and having suitably selected the ratio of the maximum to the minimum diameter of the rollers and the speeds of rotation of the plate and the rollers, all the points of said lower generating line of the rollers have substantially equal speeds of movement with respect to the surface to be worked.
2. Tool according to claim 1, characterized in that said rollers are rotated about their own axes in such a sense as to cause their lower generating lines to move in a sense opposite to that of rotation of the plate.
3. Tool according to claim 1, characterized in that said rollers are rotated about their own axes in such a sense as to cause their lower generating lines to mo ve in the same sense of rotation as the plate.
4. Tool according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that said rollers are rotated about their own axes at a speed higher than that of rotation of the plate.
5. Tool according to claim 1, characterized in that said plate is arranged as a closure of a superimposed rotatable support provided with a roller housing chamber, said plate being provided with radial windows, through which a lower portion of each roller can project below the plate.
6. Tool according to claim 5, characterized in that said chamber is fed with cooling and washing water whi ch exits through said windows.
7. Tool according to claim 1, characterized in that said rollers are coated with helically-shaped abrasive material.
8. Tool according to claim 1, characterized in that it is made in two separable parts, the lower one of which carries said truncated-cone rollers.
EP81200684A 1980-08-25 1981-06-18 Tool for roughing, smoothing and polishing solid surfaces, particularly adapted for stony materials Expired EP0046604B1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AT81200684T ATE10815T1 (en) 1980-08-25 1981-06-18 TOOL FOR GRINDING, SMOOTHING AND POLISHING SOLID SURFACES, PARTICULARLY SUITABLE FOR STONY MATERIALS.

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IT2426880 1980-08-25
IT24268/80A IT1132464B (en) 1980-08-25 1980-08-25 TOOL FOR ROUGHING, SMOOTHING AND POLISHING OF SOLID SURFACES, PARTICULARLY SUITABLE FOR STONE MATERIALS

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EP0046604A1 true EP0046604A1 (en) 1982-03-03
EP0046604B1 EP0046604B1 (en) 1984-12-19

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AT (1) ATE10815T1 (en)
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Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0124161A2 (en) * 1983-04-27 1984-11-07 Ermanno Pacini Truncated-cone roller with abrasive surface for smoothing tool with radial truncated-cone rollers
FR2545747A1 (en) * 1983-05-11 1984-11-16 Hansen & Hundebol
DE3537486A1 (en) * 1984-12-17 1986-06-19 Società in nome collettivo Officine Meccaniche e Fonderie F.lli Mordenti, Piano di Valeriano, La Spezia Stone-grinding device
US4646473A (en) * 1984-05-08 1987-03-03 Udviklingscentret Hansen Method and apparatus for finishing surfaces
US4765097A (en) * 1985-06-24 1988-08-23 Diamant Boart Societe Anonyme Surface-dressing rollertool
EP0405185A1 (en) * 1989-06-27 1991-01-02 Kurt Held Apparatus for roughing a laminate surface
EP0437831A1 (en) * 1990-01-18 1991-07-24 Brema Srl Lapping head with floating grinders for rocky materials, particularly for granite slabs
USRE34014E (en) * 1983-05-11 1992-08-04 Udviklingscentret Hansen & Hundebol A/S Method and apparatus for finishing surfaces
FR2674163A1 (en) * 1991-03-21 1992-09-25 Toncelli Luca Smoothing head for materials made of stone
US5665656A (en) * 1995-05-17 1997-09-09 National Semiconductor Corporation Method and apparatus for polishing a semiconductor substrate wafer
EP1046463A2 (en) * 1999-04-20 2000-10-25 CO.ME.S. S.r.l. Gauging head for stone materials
ITFI20080126A1 (en) * 2008-07-11 2010-01-12 Comes Srl HEAD FOR THE TREATMENT OF STONE OR CERAMIC MATERIALS
EP2255924A1 (en) * 2009-05-29 2010-12-01 Mbd S.R.L. Method for calibrating surfaces of stone material
CN102398197A (en) * 2010-09-14 2012-04-04 交通运输部公路科学研究所 Flat plate polishing machine

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE4316879C2 (en) * 1993-05-19 1995-09-28 Senger Lore Grinding head

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DE468719C (en) * 1928-11-17 Georg Siguda Additional grinding device for grinding machines with vertical rotating grinding spindle carrying the grinding tool with cardan joint
FR817793A (en) * 1936-03-11 1937-09-10 Heuze Atel Improvements in working with hard materials, such as glass, and related devices
DE651894C (en) * 1932-12-22 1937-10-21 Marbriere De Paris Soc Surface grinding and polishing device for rock
US2420876A (en) * 1945-02-07 1947-05-20 Freud Ernest Machine for surface finishing action on materials
DE801498C (en) * 1949-07-15 1951-01-08 Karl Dipl-Ing Fickert Surface grinding and polishing machine with planetary rotating grinding wheels
FR1153833A (en) * 1955-06-20 1958-03-21 Polishing machine with several wheels, for marble, tiles, cement slabs and similar materials
FR1407811A (en) * 1964-06-25 1965-08-06 Roland Hignard Device for grinding and polishing surfaces such as stones

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE468719C (en) * 1928-11-17 Georg Siguda Additional grinding device for grinding machines with vertical rotating grinding spindle carrying the grinding tool with cardan joint
DE651894C (en) * 1932-12-22 1937-10-21 Marbriere De Paris Soc Surface grinding and polishing device for rock
FR817793A (en) * 1936-03-11 1937-09-10 Heuze Atel Improvements in working with hard materials, such as glass, and related devices
US2420876A (en) * 1945-02-07 1947-05-20 Freud Ernest Machine for surface finishing action on materials
DE801498C (en) * 1949-07-15 1951-01-08 Karl Dipl-Ing Fickert Surface grinding and polishing machine with planetary rotating grinding wheels
FR1153833A (en) * 1955-06-20 1958-03-21 Polishing machine with several wheels, for marble, tiles, cement slabs and similar materials
FR1407811A (en) * 1964-06-25 1965-08-06 Roland Hignard Device for grinding and polishing surfaces such as stones

Cited By (22)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0124161A2 (en) * 1983-04-27 1984-11-07 Ermanno Pacini Truncated-cone roller with abrasive surface for smoothing tool with radial truncated-cone rollers
EP0124161B1 (en) * 1983-04-27 1988-06-22 Ermanno Pacini Truncated-cone roller with abrasive surface for smoothing tool with radial truncated-cone rollers
FR2545747A1 (en) * 1983-05-11 1984-11-16 Hansen & Hundebol
GB2141648A (en) * 1983-05-11 1985-01-03 Hansen & Hundebol Abrasive finishing of door surfaces
USRE34014E (en) * 1983-05-11 1992-08-04 Udviklingscentret Hansen & Hundebol A/S Method and apparatus for finishing surfaces
US4646473A (en) * 1984-05-08 1987-03-03 Udviklingscentret Hansen Method and apparatus for finishing surfaces
DE3537486A1 (en) * 1984-12-17 1986-06-19 Società in nome collettivo Officine Meccaniche e Fonderie F.lli Mordenti, Piano di Valeriano, La Spezia Stone-grinding device
FR2574693A1 (en) * 1984-12-17 1986-06-20 Mordenti Snc Rotary set for granite grinding and thickness gauging
US4765097A (en) * 1985-06-24 1988-08-23 Diamant Boart Societe Anonyme Surface-dressing rollertool
US5087319A (en) * 1989-06-27 1992-02-11 Kurt Held Apparatus for continuous manufacture of laminates
EP0405185A1 (en) * 1989-06-27 1991-01-02 Kurt Held Apparatus for roughing a laminate surface
EP0437831A1 (en) * 1990-01-18 1991-07-24 Brema Srl Lapping head with floating grinders for rocky materials, particularly for granite slabs
FR2674163A1 (en) * 1991-03-21 1992-09-25 Toncelli Luca Smoothing head for materials made of stone
US5665656A (en) * 1995-05-17 1997-09-09 National Semiconductor Corporation Method and apparatus for polishing a semiconductor substrate wafer
EP1046463A2 (en) * 1999-04-20 2000-10-25 CO.ME.S. S.r.l. Gauging head for stone materials
EP1046463A3 (en) * 1999-04-20 2002-04-10 CO.ME.S. S.r.l. Gauging head for stone materials
ITFI20080126A1 (en) * 2008-07-11 2010-01-12 Comes Srl HEAD FOR THE TREATMENT OF STONE OR CERAMIC MATERIALS
WO2010004374A1 (en) * 2008-07-11 2010-01-14 Co.Me.S S.R.L. Head for the treatment of stone and cerahic materials
EP2255924A1 (en) * 2009-05-29 2010-12-01 Mbd S.R.L. Method for calibrating surfaces of stone material
WO2010136057A1 (en) * 2009-05-29 2010-12-02 Mbd S.R.L. Method for calibrating surfaces of stone material
CN102398197A (en) * 2010-09-14 2012-04-04 交通运输部公路科学研究所 Flat plate polishing machine
CN102398197B (en) * 2010-09-14 2013-09-18 交通运输部公路科学研究所 Flat plate polishing machine

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0046604B1 (en) 1984-12-19
IT8024268A0 (en) 1980-08-25
IT1132464B (en) 1986-07-02
ATE10815T1 (en) 1985-01-15
DE3167810D1 (en) 1985-01-31

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