The C.O.R.E architecture embraces the digital age by having intuitive operation that facilitates machine set-up, operation, networking and maintenance, underpinned by ‘work simplification in production’ to, says Walter Ewag UK’s sales director and General Manager, Philip Morris, “pave the way for a new generation of machine tools which fully embrace the digital age”.
Laser Contour Check is now optional on all Walter Helitronic tool grinding and erosion machines, and it ensures high-precision and fast in-process measurement of tool parameters using blue laser technology in conjunction with intelligent measuring to measure various features on cylindrical tools from 1 to 52mm diamenter. Any deviations are compensated for directly during the machining process.
Laser Contour Check’s analogue laser beam measures a tool’s entire contour rather than measuring at specific points as with tactile or digital methods. Laser technology also avoids possible damage to the tool’s cutting edges as well as measuring errors that could occur due to probe tip wear during tactile measuring routines. The measuring system can be integrated directly into the machine’s working area and moves into position when required.
Both C.O.R.E and Laser Contour Check will be demonstrated at EMO on Walter’s Helitronic Mini Plus and Helitronic Micro tool grinders; the former for producing tools of 1 to 16 mm diameter and up to 255 mm long, and regrinding tools of 3 mm to 100 mm diameter; the latter machine for processing tools from 0.1 mm to up to 12.7 mm diameter and 220 mm long.
Helitronic Mini Plus can be supplied by Walter Ewag UK as a cost-effective ‘basic’ machine or as a fully automated model. The basic version can be configured with a wide range of efficiency options and various loading systems, effectively extending it to a fully-equipped ‘high-end’ tool grinder capable of all current and future applications in the small and medium tool diameter range.
Also on show at EMO will be the Walter Helitronic G 200 tool grinder which, with a maximum grinding wheel diameter of 150 mm, can process tools of 1 mm to 125mm diameter and up to 235mm long.
Alongside these at the show will be the two-in-one (grinding and erosion) Helitronic Vision Diamond 400 L for tools of 3mm to 315mm diameter and up to 420mm long, and this will feature a Robot Loader 25.
The loader adds a new level of automation by permitting enhanced levels of unattended production. The loader can accommodate 21 tools of up to 315 mm diameter and weighing 20 kgs (or 28 tools of up to 220 mm diameter; 70 tools up to 105 mm diameter).
Insert grinding is the forte of Walter‘s six-axis Compact Line which is designed for processing (including peripheral grinding) inserts of tungsten carbide, cermet, ceramic, PCBN and PCD, and a particular feature is the application of protective chamfers on inserts’ main cutting edges. The machine also has a ‘three-in-one’ dressing unit that ensures grinding wheel concentricity and high process reproducibility, plus it offers wheel dressing, regeneration and ‘crushing’ in a single package.
Walter’s tool measurement expertise will be highlighted by the Helicheck Nano – the world’s first automated measuring machine for ‘micro’ and ‘nano’ tools as small as 0.1mm diameter and standard tools up to 16mm diameter – and the Helicheck Plus with 3D sensor.
Walter says that the comprehensive measurement of tools with diameters of less than 1mm is usually fraught with problems and that even the use of microscopy sees human operation posing the greatest risk of error.
The Helicheck Nano takes a different approach, however, offering non-destructive and operator-independent reliable measurement of tools using transmitted and reflected light. It’s a process made possible by the use of variable optics having up to 800x magnification and, in combination with high-resolution cameras, these microscopic optics are the basis for measurements in the nanoscale.
Importantly, the machine offers the possibility of automation with a robot loading system enabling up to 7,500 tools to be measured without operator intervention.
Walter’s 3D laser sensor heralds a step change in the fully automatic measurement and digitisation of tools by enabling tool scanning with four times the resolution than previously possible and the ability to process that data four times faster.
Ideal for inspecting high-performance tools where cutting edge geometry, pitch and spiral pitch vary widely, the 3D sensor can replace two separate machines traditionally used for measuring such tools - perhaps a combination of conventional and laser checking.
Easily and quickly programmed using wizard routines, with resulting short set-up times, the 3D sensor effectively ‘visualises’ the workpiece as a point cloud (in differing formats) and enables various measurements to be undertaken on the three-dimensional image. When the resulting image is ‘placed’ on the tool’s three-dimensional design drawings, or a master part, any deviations can be clearly seen (via the integrated 3D Viewer) as three-dimensional comparisons of point cloud and target model, including surface reconstruction.
In addition, Walter will also highlight the power – yet ease of use – of its ‘machine what you see’ Helitronic Tool Studio software, and there will be a designated area showcasing customer care services (available to all users of Walter and Ewag machines/technologies) as well as focusing on C.O.R.E. and United Grinding’s Digital Solutions – all designed to maximise users’ productivity and profit levels.