Abstract: The present invention discloses a cutting insert which can be mounted stably to the small-diametered cutter with a sufficient mounting surface and has a plurality of comer cutting edges. The cutting insert according to the present invention has a shape having an upper face and a lower face being opposite to each other, and two longitudinal side faces and two transversal side faces connecting the upper face and the lower face, with a through hole passing through each central part of the upper face and the lower face. The longitudinal side faces are opposite to each other and normal to the upper face and the lower face, and the transversal side faces are opposite to each other and normal to the upper face and the lower face. In addition, each of the upper face and the lower face is provided with two chip discharge grooves extended along both transversal side faces, and the two chip discharge grooves are inclined oppositely in the transverse direction so that each of the upper face and the lower face is provided with two comer cutting edges at diagonally opposite comers. Here, the longitudinal length of the cutting insert defined by the maximum length between the transversal side faces is longer than the transversal length defined by the maximum length between the longitudinal side faces.
□SPECIFICATION□
□Title of the invention□
Exchangeable cutting insert
□Technical field □
The present invention relates to a cutting insert, more particularly, to a small- sized cutting insert having a plurality of comer cutting edges and a sufficient clamping surface formed thereon.
□Backgrounds□
As a cutting process for a workpiece is performed by means of a cutting tool to which cutting inserts are mounted, a comer cutting edge of the cutting insert is worn away. For example, in a process of cutting the workpiece by a milling machine, a corner cutting edge of the cutting insert mounted to a cutter is worn away, and so the cutting insert having a worn comer cutting edge can not cut precisely the workpiece.
Thus, the user needs to replace periodically the cutting insert having a worn comer cutting edge with new one. However, it is not economically preferable to remove an expensive cutting insert having one worn comer cutting edge and mount new cutting insert to the cutter.
To extend the service life time of the cutting insert, a cutting insert on which a plurality of comer cutting edges are formed are in need. However, it is extremely difficult to form a plurality of comer cutting edges on a small-sized cutting insert to be mounted to a small-sized cutter, for example, a small-sized cutter having a diameter ((j)) of 16 to 40 mm.
In addition, it is difficult to form a clamping hole with a large diameter on the small-sized cutting insert and to form sufficient mounting surface on the small-sized cutting insert for stable mounting the cutting insert a pocket of the cutter.
□Disclosure of Invention□
□Technical Problem□
The present invention is conceived to solve the above problems of the small- sized cutting insert, an objective of the present invention is to provide a cutting insert which can be mounted stably to a small-diametered cutter with a sufficient mounting surface and has a plurality of comer cutting edges.
□Technical solution□
To achieve the above object, the cutting insert according to the present invention has a shape having an upper face and a lower face being opposite to each other, and two longitudinal side faces and two transversal side faces connecting the upper face and the lower face, with a through hole passing through each central part of the upper face and the lower face.
Here, the longitudinal side faces are opposite to each other and normal to the upper face and the lower face, and the transversal side faces are opposite to each other and normal to the upper face and the lower face.
In addition, each of the upper face and the lower face is provided with two chip discharge grooves extended along both transversal side faces, and the two chip discharge grooves are inclined oppositely in the transverse direction so that each of the upper face and the lower face is provided with two comer cutting edges at diagonally opposite comers.
Here, the longitudinal length of the cutting insert defined by the maximum length between the transversal side faces is longer than the transversal length defined by the maximum length between the longitudinal side faces.
The longitudinal side faces are preferred to be substantially parallel flat faces, and the transversal side faces are preferred to be convex-curved faces.
In particular, the upper face and the lower face are preferred to be substantially rotationally symmetric with respect to the longitudinal axis traversing the through hole and the transversal axis traversing the through hole. Also, each of the upper face and the lower face is preferred to be substantially 180-degree rotationally symmetric with respect to the axis of the through hole.
□Advantageous effects□
In the cutting insert according to the present invention as described above, a length of longitudinal side faces corresponding to the axial direction of a cutter to which the cutting insert is mounted is larger than that of transversal side faces corresponding to the radial direction of the cutter so that the cutting insert with a sufficient mounting surface can be stably mounted even to a small-sized cutter.
In addition, four (4) comer portions of eight (8) comer portions formed on the upper face and the lower face act as the comer cutting edge, and so the service life time of the cutting insert can be significantly extended.
Due to the rotational symmetricity of the cutting insert, although the cutting insert 100 is mounted to the pocket after the cutting insert detached from the pocket of the cutter is rotated by 180 degrees in any direction, the cutting insert can be mounted precisely in the pocket.
□ Brief description of the drawings □
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a cutting insert according to the present invention;
FIG 2, FIG. 3 and FIG 4 are plane view, front view and side view of the cutting insert shown in FIG. 1;
FIG 5 is a partial perspective view of a cutting tool to which the cutting insert shown in FIG. 1 to FIG 4 is mounted;
FIG 6 is a side view of FIG 5 and shows a relation between the cutting insert and a workpiece; and
FIG. 7 is a front view of FIG 5 and shows the cutting insert mounted in a pocket
of the cutter.
□Best mode for carrying out the invention□
Hereinafter, an embodiment of a cutting insert according to the present invention is described in detail with reference with the accompanying drawings. As one example of the cutting insert, a cutting inset for a milling utilized in a milling process will be illustrated.
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a cutting insert according to an embodiment of the present invention, FIG. 2, FIG. 3 and FIG. 4 are plane view, front view and side view of the cutting insert shown in FIG. 1.
A cutting insert 100 according to the present invention has an upper face 150 and a lower face 160 being opposite to each other, four (4) side faces 110,120,130 and 140 connecting the upper face 150 and the lower face 160 Here, a through hole 190 passes through each central part of the upper face 150 and the lower face 160 and acts as a clamping hole when the cutting insert 100 is mounted to a cutter (not shown).
The upper face 150 and the lower face 160 are flat faces placed on a pocket (not shown in FIG. 1 to FIG. 4) of a cutter and are substantially parallel with each other.
Four side faces of the cutting insert 100 are normal to the upper face 105 and the lower face 106, and paired into two longitudinal side faces 110 and 120 being opposite to each other and two transversal side faces 130 and 140 being opposite to each other.
Here, the longitudinal length defined by the maximum length between the transversal side faces 130, 140 is longer than the transversal length defined by the maximum length between the longitudinal side faces 110, 120. Referring to FIG.1,
the longitudinal length is the length of an insert along the longitudinal axis S2 traversing the center of the through hole 190 and centers of the two transversal side face 130 and 140, while the transversal length is the length of the insert along the transversal axis SI traversing the center of the through hole 190 and centers of the two longitudinal side faces 110 and 120.
As shown in FIG. 1 and FIG. 2, the first side face 110 and the second side face 120 are substantially flat surfaces, and the second side face 130 and the fourth side face 140 are curved (convex) surfaces. Respective border regions (comer portions) of the side faces 110,120,130 and 140 form curved faces with a certain curvature.
As shown in FIG 1 to FIG. 4, the upper face 150 is provided with two chip discharge grooves 153,154 extended along both transversal side faces 130,140. Here, the two chip discharge grooves 153, 154 are inclined oppositely in the transverse direction so that the upper face 150 is provided with two comer cutting edges 150-1, 150-2 at diagonally opposite comers, and with two chip exit portions 150-3, 150-4 at the other two diagonally opposite comers.
More particularly, the chip discharge groove 153 of the upper face 150 adjacent to one transverse side face 130 is composed of a downward inclined chip discharge groove 153-1 toward one longitudinal side face 110 and an upward inclined discharge groove 153-2 toward the other longitudinal side face 120 with respect to the longitudinal axis S2.
In addition, the chip discharge groove 154 of the upper face 150 adjacent to the other transverse side face 140 is composed of a downward inclined chip discharge groove 154-2 toward one longitudinal side face 120 and an upward inclined discharge groove 154-1 toward the other longitudinal side face 110 with respect to the longitudinal axis S2.
Accordingly, in the four comer portions 150-1, 150-2, 150-3 and 150-4 of the upper face 150 of the cutting insert 100, two comer portions 150-1 and 150-2 located on one diagonal line are protruded on the upper face 150 and the other two corner portions 150-3 and 150-4 located on the other diagonal line are retreated on the upper face 150.
Here, two comer portions 150-1 and 150-2 protruded on the upper face 150 act as the comer cutting edges.
In the meantime, the cutting insert 100 according to the present invention is rotational symmetric with respect to the transversal axis SI, the longitudinal axis S2 and an axis of the through hole 190.
In other words, when the cutting insert 100 is rotated by 180 degrees with respect to the transversal axis SI shown in FIG 1, although the upper face 150 and the lower face 160 are exchanged each other and two transversal side faces 130 and 140 are exchanged each other, the cutting insert 100 stays in a shape identical to that before rotation.
In addition, when the cutting insert 100 is rotated by 180 degrees with respect to the longitudinal axis S2 which passes through the center of the through hole 190 and centers of two transversal side faces 130 and 140, although the upper face 150 and the lower face 160 are exchanged each other and two longitudinal side faces 110 and 120 are exchanged each other, the cutting insert 100 stays in a shape identical to that before rotation.
In particular, when the cutting insert 100 is rotated by 180 degrees on the vertical axis of the through hole 190, although two longitudinal side faces 110 and 120 are exchanged each other and two transversal side faces 130 and 140 are exchanged each other, the cutting insert 100 stays in a shape identical to that before rotation.
This rotational symmetricity allows indexing of the cutting insert 100. That is, although the cutting insert 100 is mounted to the pocket after the cutting insert 100 detached from the pocket of the cutter is rotated by 180 degrees in any direction, the cutting insert 100 is mountable in the pocket.
According to the cutting insert 100 configured as described above, in four comer portions 150-1, 150-2, 150-3 and 150-4 of the upper face 150, two comer portions 150- 1 and 150-2 protruded above the average level of the upper face 150 act as comer cutting edges, and the other two comer portions 150-3 and 150-4 retreated below the average level of the upper face 150 become chip exit portion.
As described above, the lower face 160 has a structure which is rotational symmetrical structure relative to the structure of the upper face 150, and so a detailed description on a structure of the lower face 160 is omitted.
Thus, the cutting insert 100 according to the present invention has four (4) corner cutting edges 150-1,150-2 and 160-3,160-4.
FIG. 5 is a partial perspective view of a cutting tool to which the cutting insert shown in FIG. 1 to FIG 4 is mounted, and FIG. 6 is a side view of FIG. 5 and shows a relation between the cutting insert and a workpiece.
For example, the cutting insert 100 is mounted to a pocket 201 formed on a cutter of a milling machine by means of a clamping screw 210. Here, the lower face 160 is placed on a bottom face of the pocket 201, and one transversal side face (130 in FIG 6) contacts with a workpiece W. In the state shown in FIG 5 and FIG. 6, the corner portion 150-2 disposed among the upper face 150, one longitudinal side face 120 and one transversal side face 130 acts as the corner cutting edge.
As shown in FIG. 5 and FIG. 5, in the meantime, two longitudinal side faces 110 and 120 of the cutting insert 100 mounted in the pocket 201 of the cutter 201 are disposed in the axial direction of the cutter 200, and two transversal side faces 130 and 140 are disposed in the radial direction of the cutter 200.
Since the length of the longitudinal side faces 110 and 120 of the cutting insert 100 is larger than the length (width) of the transversal side faces 130 and 140, although the cutting insert is mounted to the small-diametered cutter, a sufficient seating surface can be secured between the cutting insert 100 and the pocket 210 of the cutter.
In the cutting insert 100 according to the present invention, in addition, any one transversal side face 130 (or 140), which is convex curved, becomes in contact with the workpiece W, and so a contact surface between the curved transversal side face 130 the workpiece W is minimized. Accordingly, a cutting resistance exerted to the cutting insert 100 can be minimized.
As described above, as a cutting process for the workpiece W is performed, the comer cutting edge (for example, 150-2) is worn away, so that the worn comer cutting edge 150-2 needs to be replaced with new one. To replace the comer cutting edge, the user separates first the clamping screw 210 from the cutter 100, and then rotates the cutting insert 100 by 180 degrees with respect to the transversal axis SI or the longitudinal axis S2, or rotates horizontally the cutting insert on the vertical axis of the through hole 190. Finally, the user secures the cutting insert 100 into the pocket 210 of the cutter 200 by the clamping screw 210.
In this state, one of the new comer cutting edges 150-lm 160-3 and 160-4 corresponds to the workpiece W.
FIG. 7 is a front view of FIG. 5 and shows the cutting insert mounted in a pocket of the cutter.
As shown in FIG. 7, in a state where the cutting insert 100 is mounted to the pocket 201 of the cutter 200, a diametral line of the cutter 200 and an inclined cutting edge (i.e., a cutting blade portion to be contacted with the workpiece W) of the upper face 150 make a certain angle C (approximately 13°) there between. In this structure, a chip generated by the comer cutting edge 150-2 is easily discharged and a cutting load can be significantly reduced.
Although the preferred embodiment has been described with reference to the preferred embodiment thereof, it should be understood that numerous other modifications and embodiments can be devised by those skilled in the art that will fall within the spirit and scope of the principles of this disclosure. More particularly, various variations and modifications are possible in the component parts and/or arrangements of the subject combination arrangement within the scope of the disclosure, the drawings and appended claims. In addition to variations and modifications in the component parts and/or arrangements, alternative uses will also be apparent to those skilled in the art.
□Claim1 □
A cutting insert having a shape having an upper face 150 and a lower face 160 being opposite to each other, and two longitudinal side faces 110, 120, and two transversal side faces 130, 140 connecting the upper face 150 and the lower face 160, with a through hole 190 passing through each central part of the upper face 150 and the lower face 160, wherein
the longitudinal side faces 110,120 are opposite to each other, and normal to the upper face 150 and the lower face 160;
the transversal side faces 130, 140 are opposite to each other, and normal to the upper face 150 and the lower face 160;
each of the upper face 150 and the lower face 160 is provided with two chip discharge grooves 153,154 extended along both transversal side faces 130,140, the two chip discharge grooves 153, 154 are inclined oppositely in the transverse direction so that each of the upper face 150 and the lower face 160 is provided with two corner cutting edges 150-1,150-2 at diagonally opposite comers, and
the longitudinal length of the insert is longer than the transversal length of the insert.
□Claim 2□
The cutting insert according to claim 1, wherein the longitudinal side faces 110 and 120 are substantially parallel flat faces, and the transversal side faces 130 and 140 are convex-curved faces.
□Claim 3□
The cutting insert according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the upper face 150 and the lower face 150 are substantially rotationally symmetric with respect to the longitudinal axis S2.
□Claim 4□
The cutting insert according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the upper face 150 and the lower face 160 are substantially rotationally symmetric with respect to the transversal axis S1.
□ Claim 5 □
The cutting insert according to claim 1 or 2, wherein each the upper face 150 and the lower face 160 is substantially 180-degree rotationally symmetric with respect to the axis of the through hole 190.
| # | Name | Date |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 6576-chenp-2010 form-5 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 2 | 6576-chenp-2010 form-3 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 3 | 6576-chenp-2010 form-2 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 4 | 6576-chenp-2010 form-18 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 5 | 6576-chenp-2010 form-1 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 6 | 6576-chenp-2010 correspondence others 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 7 | 6576-chenp-2010 pct 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 8 | 6576-chenp-2010 drawings 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 9 | 6576-chenp-2010 description(complete) 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 10 | 6576-chenp-2010 claims 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 11 | 6576-chenp-2010 abstract 14-10-2010.pdf | 2010-10-14 |
| 12 | 6576-chenp-2010 form-3 31-03-2011.pdf | 2011-03-31 |
| 13 | 6576-chenp-2010 form-1 31-03-2011.pdf | 2011-03-31 |
| 14 | 6576-chenp-2010 correspondence others 31-03-2011.pdf | 2011-03-31 |
| 15 | 6576-CHENP-2010-FER.pdf | 2017-01-30 |
| 16 | 6576-CHENP-2010-AbandonedLetter.pdf | 2017-08-09 |
| 1 | search_6576CHENP2010_04-11-2016.pdf |