PatentDe  


Dokumentenidentifikation EP1100653 18.03.2004
EP-Veröffentlichungsnummer 0001100653
Titel DREHENDE ABRICHTROLLE MIT AUFGELÖTETER DIAMANTSCHICHT
Anmelder Saint-Gobain Abrasives, Inc., Worcester, Mass., US
Erfinder ANDREWS, M., Richard, Westborough, US;
BULJAN, Sergej-Tomislav, Acton, US
Vertreter derzeit kein Vertreter bestellt
DE-Aktenzeichen 69914766
Vertragsstaaten AT, CH, DE, ES, FR, GB, IT, LI, SE
Sprache des Dokument EN
EP-Anmeldetag 02.03.1999
EP-Aktenzeichen 999086283
WO-Anmeldetag 02.03.1999
PCT-Aktenzeichen PCT/US1999/004642
WO-Veröffentlichungsnummer 2000006340
WO-Veröffentlichungsdatum 10.02.2000
EP-Offenlegungsdatum 23.05.2001
EP date of grant 11.02.2004
Veröffentlichungstag im Patentblatt 18.03.2004
IPC-Hauptklasse B24B 53/14
IPC-Nebenklasse B24D 3/06   B24D 18/00   

Beschreibung[en]

This invention relates to rotary dressing tools designed for truing and dressing the profiled faces of abrasive grinding wheels.

Rotary diamond dressing tools impart the required form onto a grinding wheel and must be designed and made to specifications driven by the design of the grinding wheel. These tools have narrow quality specifications with low tolerances for deviations in geometry and mechanical attributes. Although dressing tools have been constructed in a variety of ways utilizing various materials and processes. most processes known in the art are demanding and inefficient.

For example, in one commercial process. diamond grains are hand set into a pattern in the cavity of a mold with an adhesive, then a powdered metal bond material is added and pressed into place around the diamonds. The pressed materials are densified by processes such as infiltration. hot pressing, sintering, or a combination thereof, to fix the diamonds in place and form the tool. In another typical process, a diamond layer may be set onto a custom designed mold and fixed in place by reverse electroplating. See, e.g., US-A-4,826,509. The sintering or plating step is followed by an extensive grinding step to remove grain high spots and to flatten the surface.

In another process described in U.S. Pat. No.-A-4,805,586, the diamond grains are pretreated to roughen and enlarge their surface area and to permit the grains to be arranged within the bond so that the majority of the grains are in direct contact with adjacent grains. These pretreated diamond grains are then electroplated to the surface of a base body with nickel or cobalt or alloys of nickel or cobalt..

In US-A-5,505,750, the diamond grains and metal powder bond are infiltrated with a near-eutectic copper-phosphorus composition during sintering.

Many powder metal matrix abrasive components for dressing tools utilize relatively small diamond grains (e.g.. less than 0.5 mm in diameter) embedded within the powder matrix and the resulting composite is ground to the required geometry. Such abrasive components are not very sharp and grinding wheel dressing with them is relatively inefficient due to rapid wear of the tool. When such a powder matrix is used with large diamond grains. the finishing process loses considerable amounts of diamond as the composite is ground to the required geometry. It is not possible to achieve a durable. fine (e.g., about 0.127 mm (0.005 inch)) dressing tip radius in tools made from diamond grains in a powder metal bond.

Polycrystalline diamond (PCD) inserts have been used to construct rotary dressing tools. PCD inserts are embedded in a powder metal matrix, sintered onto the tool, and then ground to the required geometry and surface finishing. See, e.g., US-A-4,685,440. PCD inserts offer a relatively flat surface and can be easily ground to the required geometry during finishing operations, or, for some shapes, can be provided as a near net shape piece. However, PCD is not 100% diamond. PCD material initially contains significant quantities (10-12 wt%) of metal catalyst and the metal catalyst is typically leached from the PCD material. leaving voids, to yield essentially pure diamond with a density of about 90 to 95 % of the theoretical density. Therefore, dressing tools made with PCD inserts lack the durability of dressing tools made with diamond abrasive grains which are fully dense, 100% diamond materials.

The rotary diamond tool for dressing abrasive wheels described in US-A-5,058,562 is made by using a chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process to deposit a layer of diamond film directly onto a base plate of the tool and assembling the base plate with a pair of backup plates to provide stiffness. With this approach, there are no diamond cutting points created, merely a hard, flat diamond surface. In a dressing tool, a flat diamond surface merely acts to crush the wheel face, rather than to cut bond and spent abrasive grains from the face and, thereby, open the face of the wheel for further grinding.

The rotary diamond tool for dressing abrasive wheels described in US-A-4,915,089 is made by forming a single layer of diamond grains in a plane orthogonal to the rotational axis of the tool. The layer of diamond grains is sandwiched between two layers of metal backup plates. The diamond layer is bonded to the plates by hot pressing the diamond grains and metal powder between the metal backup plates in a suitable mold to sinter the metal powder. The 4,915,089 patent mentions an alternative design wherein diamond grains are attached to one or both sides of the tool by plating or metal bonding, but teaches that the alternative design suffers the disadvantage of poor diamond retention. In the preferred design, arcurate segments of the laminated assembly of diamond grains and plates are brazed to the circumference of a disc-shaped metal wheel to form a dressing tool. optionally with a continuous abrasive rim. However, consistent with the geometry of this tool design, the patent teaches that the tool is used to dress a straight face wheel and the tool would not be useful for dressing a profile into the face of a grinding wheel.

EP-B-116668 discloses a dressing tool having a single layer of electroplated diamond grains arranged in a geometric design similar to that of the tool of U.S.-A-4,915,089. In contrast to the active braze bond used in the tools of the invention, with the electroplated bond of the EP-B-1 16668 tool, poorer diamond grains retention, shorter tool life and higher manufacturing costs are predicted.

DE 38 11 784 A1 discloses a rotary profile dressing tool comprising an essentially cylindrical metal core which has been formed into a ring wheel at the periphery. On both radial surfaces of the ring wheel abrasive rims are formed around the periphery of the ring wheel by monolayers of diamond grains being attached to the ring wheel by means of an embedding mass. The embedding mass can be a metal bond obtained by reducing a reducible metal paste, a sintered material or a galvanic embedding mass.

The invention is a rotary profile dressing tool having a rigid, disc-shaped core and an abrasive rim bonded to the periphery of the core only along the inner diameter of the abrasive rim, the core and the abrasive rim being oriented in a direction orthogonal to the axis of rotation of the tool, wherein the abrasive rim comprises an abrasive component bonded to the core by means of an active braze, and wherein the abrasive component consists of diamond grains arranged in a single layer and said diamond grains are exposed on both sides of the tool. Furthermore, the invention comprises a rotary profile dressing tool having a rigid, disc-shaped core and an abrasive rim consisting of strips of an abrasive component, each strip being filled into slots machined into and through the perimeter of the metal core, the abrasive rim being oriented in a direction orthogonal to the axis of rotation of the tool, and wherein the abrasive component is bonded to the core by means of an active braze and wherein the abrasive component consists of diamond grains arranged in a single layer and said diamond grains are exposed on both sides of the tool.

  • Fig. 1 is an illustration of the operation of a rotary profiling dresser showing a grinding wheel with a profiled grinding face.
  • Fig. 2 is a planar view of a rotary profile dressing tool of the invention.
  • Fig. 3 is a partial cross-section of a single layer of diamond abrasive grain brazed onto a backing element in a rotary profile dressing tool.
  • Fig. 4 is a partial cross-section of a single layer of diamond abrasive grain brazed onto a rotary profile dressing tool of the invention without a backing element.
  • Fig. 5 is a partial cross-section of a diamond film insert brazed onto a backing element in a rotary profile dressing tool.

As shown in Figure 1, the dressing tools of the invention are effective in profile dressing and truing operations carried out on abrasive grinding wheels. The dressing tool 3 is rotated about an axis (depicted in Fig. 1, with a dashed line numbered 5) and moved into contact with the profiled face 2 of the grinding wheel I in a direction along either an X axis (arrow 6) or a Y axis (arrow 7) as needed to dress or true the profile of the wheel.

As used herein, "true" (or truing) refers to operations used to make a grinding wheel round and profiled into the desired contours. Dress or dressing refers to operations used to open the grinding surface (or face) of the grinding wheel to . improve grinding efficiency and avoid workpiece burn or other damage caused as the wheel face dulls during grinding. The wheel face dulls, for example, when the exposed sharp abrasive grains have been consumed, or the wheel face becomes smooth due to failure of the bond to erode and expose new grain or due to loading of the wheel face with debris from grinding operations.

Some operations permit a single dressing tool to be used simultaneously for both purposes and others do not. Truing is generally required when a grinding wheel is first mounted on a machine for use and whenever operations cause the wheel to go out of round or lose its contour. Depending upon the particular grinding operation, the dressing tools of the invention may be used to true or to dress or to do both.

A rotary dressing tool is illustrated in planar view in Fig. 2. A single layer of the diamond grain 8 is embedded in a metal braze 9 and bonded to the metal core 11 of the tool. The metal core of the tool contains a central hole for mounting the tool onto an drive spindle of a machine equipped with a means for rotating the tool around an axis 5. Also depicted in Fig. 2 is an optional feature of the invention consisting of four holes 12 around the central arbor hole for attaching the metal core of the tool to a support element (not shown).

In Figs. 3-5, the abrasive rim 4 of the dressing tool 3 is constructed in one of several ways. In Fig. 3, which does not show an embodiment according to the present invention, the abrasive grain 8 and braze 9 are supported by a backing element 13 which is part of the unitary construction of the metal core 10. In Fig. 4, the abrasive grain 8 and the braze 9 are self-supporting and are brazed to the metal core 10 only along the inner diameter of the abrasive rim 4. Such a construction has the advantage that the dressing tool having exposed abrasive grain on each side of the tool may be operated in either direction along the X axis (arrow 6) so as to approximately double the efficiency of the dressing operation and, thus, to generate profiles previously unobtainable with a single tool setup.

In either construction, after brazing, the diamond grains 8 are submerged within the braze 9 layer and are not necessarily visible in the manner of metal bonded single layer abrasive cutting tools. Such a self-supporting abrasive component cannot be constructed if utilizing an electroplating process to bond the abrasive grain to the core of the dressing tool because the electroplated metal diamond composite would lack sufficient strength to be used. It is only possible when making a brazed single layer diamond abrasive tool utilizing an active braze wherein the diamond grains function as a structural element of the tool, as described herein.

As shown in Fig. 5 which does not show an embodiment according to the present invention, a diamond film insert 14 may is bonded to the metal core 10 with an active braze 15. As used herein, diamond film refers to a thin layer of material made by a CVD or jet plasma process, with or without diamond seed particles, consisting of approximately 100% diamond. Examples of diamond film preparations are provided in US- A-5,314,652; US-A-5,679,404; and US-A-5,679,446 which are hereby incorporated by reference. The diamond film is made into a thin layer (e.g., 100 to 1,000 microns) having the desired size for a tool insert and then the diamond film insert is brazed to the backing element 13 portion of the metal core 10 in substantially the same manner, and with the same types of brazes, as the diamond abrasive grains are brazed to the metal core.

The preferred embodiment differs from the prior art in several significant ways. The abrasive components depicted in Figs. 3-5 require less drastic finishing operations to achieve the precise surfaces desired for dressing tools. Like PCD inserts, diamond film inserts (Fig. 5) are flat films. As for the single layer diamond abrasive grain embodiment (Fig. 4), some initial grinding of the surface may be needed, but the single layer of grain eliminates much of the uneven character of a composite matrix of abrasive grain in a powdered metal bond.

The dressing tools of the invention are designed to present the same tip radius to the wheel face throughout the life of the dressing tool because the width of the single layer of diamond grain (or the diamond film insert) is not affected by the dressing operation. As the outermost diamond grain is consumed, a single grain below it is present at the radial tip of the dressing tool and the radius of the dressing tip remains constant as the tool is used. Thus. the tools of the invention are self-sharpening and maintain a precise geometry as they are consumed.

In further contrast to the prior art tools, the dressing tools of the invention have a long life and superior efficiency in dressing and truing grinding wheels.

The angle of the backing element may range from 0 to 90°, preferably from 10 to 45°, and most preferably ranges from 15 to 30° in dressing tools designed for use on vitrified grinding wheels.

In constructing the tools of the invention, brazing is typically carried out at 600-900° C, utilizing an active braze, and preferably at 800-900° C utilizing an active bronze or nickel braze. An "active braze" is a braze containing at least one material (e.g., titanium or chromium) that is chemically reactive with the surface of the diamond grain. When heated. the braze creates a chemical bond between the braze material, the diamond grain, and, optionally the metal core of the tool. A preferred active bronze braze is made from a mixture of copper, tin and titanium hydride powders, optionally with the addition of silver powder, by the method described in commonly owned U.S. Ser. No. 08/920,242, filed August 28, 1997, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference. A preferred active braze comprises 55 to 79 wt% copper, 15 to 25 wt% tin and 6 to 20 wt % titanium.

Another preferred active braze suitable for use in the invention is a nickel braze, comprising 60 to 92.5 wt% nickel, preferably 70 to 92.5 wt % nickel, and 5 to 10 wt% chromium, 1.0 to 4.5 wt% boron, 1.0 to 8.0 wt % silicon and 0.5 to 5.0 wt % iron. The nickel braze optionally comprises other materials, such as 0.1 to 10 wt % tin.

The rigid, disc-shaped core is constructed of a wear resistant material having a use life complementary to the life of the diamond abrasive component. Steel, particularly tool steel. tungsten carbide, iron. cobalt. and composites thereof and combinations thereof. are suitable for use in the core. Steel is preferred. Suitable composites include ceramic particles or fibers contained in a metal matrix continuous phase. The core may be molded or machined into the desired tool dimensions by methods well known in the art.

Figures 2-5 show a continuous abrasive rim construction. In an alternative embodiment, the abrasive component is inserted as strips along the metal core. The strips may be filled into slots machined into and through the perimeter of the metal core.

Other embodiments are suited for use in the rotary profile dressing tools of the invention, provided the diamonds are oriented such that a set of diamond grains at any given point around the periphery of the tool is presented to the face of the wheel as a single cutting point and, as this single diamond point is worn, the set of remaining diamond grains consecutively presents another diamond grain to replace the worn one and become the single cutting point until the set has been exhausted.

Comparative Example 1

A test tool was constructed from a 10 cm (4 inch) outer diameter stainless steel (304L) core by vacuum brazing approximately 100% concentration of SDA 100+ diamond grit (425 to 500 microns, obtained from DeBeers) onto a 20° included angle backing element on the rim of the core. The tool was designed to yield a dressing tip radius of about 0.25 mm (0.01 inch), a radius approximately equal to the radius of the diamond grit selected for the tool after a minor amount of grinding to finish the abrasive component to the desired initial dressing tip radius.

Brazing was carried out at 880° C utilizing an active bronze braze. The active bronze braze was made from a mixture of 100 parts by weight of 77/23 copper/tin alloy powder and 10 parts by weight of titanium hydride powder. The powder mixture was blended at 13 wt % with Braz™ organic binder to make a paste composition, and the paste was spread onto designated portions of the rim of the metal core of the tool. Diamond grain was dusted onto the paste in a single layer and excess diamond grain was shaken off of the tool. The tool was oven dried to evaporate the water from the binder and the dried tool was heated to 880° C for 30 minutes under a low oxygen atmosphere at less than 0.133 Pa (<10-3 Torr) pressure, and then permitted to cool. In the finished tool, the braze contained 70.2 wt% copper, 21.0 wt% tin and 8.8 wt% titanium.

A second tool was made in the same fashion, except the dressing tip radius was 0.12 mm (0.005 inch) and the diamond grit size was 0.212 to 0.25 mm.

The 0.25 mm (0.01inch) tip radius tool was tested in a commercial setting on thread grinders. The grinding wheels were 46 x 1.3 x 25 cm (18 x 0.50 x 10 inch), 3SG100-VBX467 (sol gel alumina abrasive grain) wheels (obtained from Norton Company, Worcester, MA) operating at 30 surface meters/second (6000 surface feet/minute) during dressing, at an infeed of 0.013 mm (0.0005 inch) per pass after the initial form dressing (0.025 mm (0.001 inch) per pass). No wear of the abrasive component of the dresser was observed after 12 weeks of continuous operation. This compares favorably to a typical commercial rotary dressing tool used in this commercial setting which has measurable wear after 6 weeks of continuous operation. In addition, about 50% improvement in grinding wheel productivity was observed due to the sharpness of the rotary dressing tool.

The 0.12 mm (0.005 inch) tip radius tool was tested in the same commercial setting and has shown very little measurable wear after 5 weeks of continuous operation (i.e., about 2 microns per day).

Example 2

A dressing tool was constructed utilizing a 15 cm (6 inch) stainless steel core having slots preformed along the rim into which 0.60-0.71 mm (about 0.025 inch) diameter diamond grains were brazed to yield a tool with a dressing tip radius of 0.3 mm (0.012 inch). The diamond was brazed into the slots using the braze and the method of Example 1. This striped construction had straight sides (0° included angle). The tool was effective in dressing profiles into vitrified bonded CBN wheels.


Anspruch[de]
  1. Drehbares Profilabrichtwerkzeug mit einem steifen, scheibenförmigen Kern (10) und einem Schleifrand (4), der lediglich entlang des inneren Durchmessers des Schleifrands (4) an den Umfang des Kerns gebunden ist, wobei der Kern (10) und der Schleifrand (4) in eine Richtung orthogonal zu der Rotationsachse des Werkzeuges ausgerichtet sind, wobei der Schleifrand (4) eine Schleifkomponente enthält, die mittels eines Aktivhartlots (9) an den Kern (10) gebunden ist, und wobei die Schleifkomponente aus Diamantkörnern besteht, die in einer einzigen Schicht angeordnet sind, und die Diamantkörner auf beiden Seiten des Werkzeugs freiliegen.
  2. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei der steife Kern (10) aus Material besteht ausgesucht aus der Gruppe bestehend aus Stahl, Werkzeugstahl, Wolframcarbid, Eisen und Kobalt, und verstärkte Komposite daraus, sowie deren Kombinationen.
  3. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei das Aktivhartlot ein Bronzelot ist, das eine wirksame Menge Titan enthält, um mit der Schleifkomponente zu reagieren.
  4. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 3, wobei das Aktivhartlot 55 bis 79 Gew.-% Kupfer, 15 bis 25 Gew.-% Zinn und 6 bis 20 Gew.-% Titan umfasst.
  5. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei die Diamantkörner (8) einen durchschnittlichen Durchmesser von 0,15 bis 2,0 mm aufweisen.
  6. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 5, wobei der Schleifrand (4) einen Radius an der Spitze hat, der in etwa der Hälfte des durchschnittlichen Durchmessers der Diamantkörner (8) entspricht.
  7. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei das Aktivhartlot 60 bis 92,5 Gew.-% Nickel, 5 bis 10 Gew.-% Chrom, 1,0 bis 4,5 Gew.-% Bor, 1,0 bis 8,0 Gew.-% Silizium und 0,5 bis 5,0 Gew.-% Eisen enthält.
  8. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 7, wobei das Aktivhartlot des Weiteren 0,1 bis 10 Gew.-% Zinn umfasst.
  9. Drehbares Profilabrichtwerkzeug mit einem steifen, scheibenförmigen Kern (10) und einem Schleifrand (4), der aus Streifen einer Schleifkomponente besteht, wobei jeder Streifen in Schlitze, die in und durch den Umfang des Kerns gearbeitet sind, gefüllt ist, wobei der Schleifrand (4) in eine Richtung orthogonal zu der Rotationsachse des Werkzeuges ausgerichtet ist, und wobei die Schleifkomponente mittels eines Aktivhartlots (9) an den Kern (10) gebunden ist, und wobei die Schleifkomponente aus Diamantkörnern besteht, die in einer einzigen Schicht angeordnet sind, und die Diamantkörner auf beiden Seiten des Werkzeugs freiliegen.
  10. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 9, wobei der steife Kern (10) aus Material besteht ausgesucht aus der Gruppe bestehend aus Stahl, Werkzeugstahl, Wolframcarbid, Eisen, Kobalt und verstärkte Komposite daraus, sowie deren Kombinationen.
  11. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 9, wobei das Aktivhartlot ein Bronzelot ist, das eine wirksame Menge Titan enthält, um mit der Schleifkomponente zu reagieren.
  12. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 11, wobei das Aktivhartlot 55 bis 79 Gew.-% Kupfer, 15 bis 25 Gew.-% Zinn und 6 bis 20 Gew.-% Titan umfasst.
  13. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 9, wobei die Diamantkörner (8) einen durchschnittlichen Durchmesser von 0,15 bis 2,0 mm aufweisen.
  14. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 13, wobei der Schleifrand (4) einen Radius an der Spitze hat, der in etwa der Hälfte des durchschnittlichen Durchmessers der Diamantkörner (8) entspricht.
  15. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 9, wobei das Aktivhartlot 60 bis 92,5 Gew.-% Nickel, 5 bis 10 Gew.-% Chrom, 1,0 bis 4,5 Gew.-% Bor, 1,0 bis 8,0 Gew.-% Silizium und 0,5 bis 5,0 Gew.-% Eisen enthält.
  16. Abrichtwerkzeug gemäß Anspruch 15, wobei das Aktivhartlot des Weiteren 0,1 bis 10 Gew.-% Zinn umfasst.
Anspruch[en]
  1. A rotary profile dressing tool having a rigid, disc-shaped core (10) and an abrasive rim (4) bonded to the periphery of the core (10) only along the inner diameter of the abrasive rim, the core (10) and the abrasive rim (4) being oriented in a direction orthogonal to the axis of rotation of the tool, wherein the abrasive rim (4) comprises an abrasive component bonded to the core (10) by means of an active braze (9) and wherein the abrasive component consists of diamond grains arranged in a single layer and said diamond grains are exposed on both sides of the tool.
  2. The dressing tool of claim 1, wherein the rigid core (10) consists of material selected from the group consisting of steel, tool steel, tungsten carbide, iron and cobalt, and reinforced composites thereof, and combinations thereof.
  3. The dressing tool of claim 1, wherein the active braze is a bronze braze containing an effective amount of titanium to react with the abrasive component.
  4. The dressing tool of claim 3, wherein the active braze comprises 55 to 79 wt% copper, 15 to 25 wt% tin and 6 to 20 wt% titanium.
  5. The dressing tool of claim 1, wherein the diamond grains (8) have an average diameter of 0.15 to 2.0 mm.
  6. The dressing tool of claim 5, wherein the abrasive rim (4) has a tip radius equal to about one-half of the average diameter of the diamond grains (8).
  7. The dressing tool of claim 1, wherein the active braze comprises 60 to 92.5 wt% nickel, 5 to 10 wt% chromium, 1.0 to 4.5 wt% boron, 1.0 to 8.0 wt% silicon and 0.5 to 5.0 wt% iron.
  8. The dressing tool of claim 7, wherein the active braze further comprises 0.1 to 10 wt% tin.
  9. A rotary profile dressing tool having a rigid, disc-shaped core and an abrasive rim (4) consisting of strips of an abrasive component, each strip being filled into slots machined into and through the perimeter of the core, the abrasive rim (4) being oriented in a direction orthogonal to the axis of rotation of the tool, and wherein the abrasive component is bonded to the core (10) by means of an active braze (9) and wherein the abrasive component consists of diamond grains arranged in a single layer and said diamond grains are exposed on both sides of the tool.
  10. The dressing tool of claim 9, wherein the rigid core (10) consists of a material selected from the group consisting of steel, tool steel, tungsten carbide, iron, cobalt, and reinforced composites thereof, and combinations thereof.
  11. The dressing tool of claim 9, wherein the active braze is a bronze braze containing an effective amount of titanium to react with the abrasive component.
  12. The dressing tool of claim 11, wherein the active braze comprises 55 to 79 wt% copper, 15 to 25 wt% tin and 6 to 20 wt% titanium.
  13. The dressing tool of claim 9, wherein the diamond grains (8) have an average diameter of 0.15 to 2.0 mm.
  14. The dressing tool of claim 13, wherein the abrasive rim (4) has a tip radius equal to about one-half of the average diameter of the diamond grains (8).
  15. The dressing tool of claim 9, wherein the active braze comprises 60 to 92.5 wt% nickel, 5 to 10 wt% chromium, 1.0 to 4.5 wt% boron, 1.0 to 8.0 wt% silicon and 0.5 to 5.0 wt% iron.
  16. The dressing tool of claim 15, wherein the active braze further comprises 0.1 to 10 wt% tin.
Anspruch[fr]
  1. Outil de dressage rotatif de profil ayant un noyau (10) rigide, en forme de disque, et une couronne abrasive (4) liée à la périphérie du noyau (10) seulement le long du diamètre intérieur de la couronne abrasive, le noyau (10) et la couronne abrasive (4) étant orientés selon une direction orthogonale à l'axe de rotation de l'outil, la couronne abrasive (4) comprenant un composant abrasif lié au noyau (10) au moyen d'une brasure active (9) et le composant abrasif consistant en grains de diamant disposés selon une couche unique et lesdits grains de diamant étant exposés sur les deux faces de l'outil.
  2. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 1, dans lequel le noyau (10) rigide consiste en un matériau sélectionné dans le groupe consistant en l'acier, l'acier à outils, le carbure de tungstène, le fer et le cobalt, et les composites renforcés de ceux-ci, ainsi que leurs combinaisons.
  3. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 1, dans lequel la brasure active est une brasure de bronze contenant une quantité efficace de titane pour réagir avec le composant abrasif.
  4. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 3, dans lequel la brasure active comprend de 55 à 79 % en poids de cuivre, 15 à 25 % en poids d'étain et 6 à 20 % en poids de titane.
  5. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 1, dans lequel les grains de diamant (8) ont un diamètre moyen compris entre 0,15 et 2,0 mm.
  6. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 5, dans lequel la couronne abrasive (4) a un rayon de pointe égal à environ la moitié du diamètre moyen des grains de diamant (8).
  7. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 1, dans lequel la brasure active comprend de 60 à 92,5 % en poids de nickel, 5 à 10 % en poids de chrome, 1,0 à 4,5 % en poids de bore, 1,0 à 8,0 % en poids de silicium et 0,5 à 5,0 % en poids de fer.
  8. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 7, dans lequel la brasure active comprend en outre 0,1 à 10 % en poids d'étain.
  9. Outil de dressage rotatif de profil ayant un noyau rigide en forme de disque et une couronne abrasive (4) consistant en bandes d'un composant abrasif, chaque bande étant chargée dans des fentes usinées dans et sur tout le périmètre du noyau, la couronne abrasive (4) étant orientée selon une direction orthogonale à l'axe de rotation de l'outil, le composant abrasif étant lié au noyau (10) au moyen d'une brasure active (9), le composant abrasif consistant en grains de diamant disposés selon une couche unique et lesdits grains de diamant étant exposés sur les deux faces de l'outil.
  10. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 9, dans lequel le noyau (10) rigide consiste en un matériau sélectionné dans le groupe consistant en l'acier, l'acier à outils, le carbure de tungstène, le fer, le cobalt et les composites renforcés de ceux-ci, ainsi que leurs combinaisons.
  11. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 9, dans lequel la brasure active est une brasure de bronze contenant une quantité efficace de titane pour réagir avec le composant abrasif.
  12. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 11, dans lequel la brasure active comprend de 55 à 79 % en poids de cuivre, 15 à 25 % en poids d'étain et 6 à 20 % en poids de titane.
  13. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 9, dans lequel les grains de diamant (8) ont un diamètre moyen compris entre 0,15 et 2,0 mm.
  14. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 13, dans lequel la couronne abrasive (4) a un rayon de pointe égal à environ la moitié du diamètre moyen des grains de diamant (8).
  15. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 9, dans lequel la brasure active comprend de 60 à 92,5 % en poids de nickel, 5 à 10 % en poids de chrome, 1,0 à 4,5 % en poids de bore, 1,0 à 8,0 % en poids de silicium et 0,5 à 5,0 % en poids de fer.
  16. Outil de dressage selon la revendication 15, dans lequel la brasure active comprend en outre 0,1 à 10 % en poids d'étain.






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