|
|
|
Quality Gaging - Size May Matter, But Form Counts, Too
Cylindrical parts range from pop cans to bearings to bullets. Therefore,
measuring cylindricity has considerable value for manufacturers.
The measurement of cylindricity combines three separate geometric qualities:
roundness, straightness and taper. Roundness is a measure of radial error;
straightness, a measure of axial error; and taper, a measure of dimensional
error. A three-dimensional object can be straight and dimensionally stable but
not round; it can be round and dimensionally stable but not straight
(banana-like); or it can be round and straight but not dimensionally stable
(carrot-like). All manufactured cylinders exhibit roundness, straightness and
taper errors. Combining these qualities in a single cylindricity expression
gives manufacturers a means of assessing parts based on a specification of form,
rather than dimension.
I am frequently asked why this combined measurement of form has value when part
errors remain essentially dimensional. A look at some problems that arise with
the process will help to answer this question.
First, problems arise when manufacturers try to assess a part’s cylindricity by
measuring one or more of its qualities in isolation. For most manufacturers, the
first impulse is to measure roundness, incorrectly equating roundness with
cylindricity.
For example, some companies may use air gaging or other dimensional gaging to
measure the roundness of precision bores. An operator inserts a part onto the
air plug, notes the reading, then rotates the part by hand, watching to see if
the meter indication remains in the tolerance zone. This is repeated at varying
depths until the part is completely checked.
While this procedure may provide a quick go/no-go measurement, all it really
indicates is whether the part diameter has stayed within tolerance; no certainty
of roundness can be gained from measuring that. Such roundness data from air
gaging is almost useless. It cannot provide any straightness data; taper can
only be inferred; and lobing is difficult to detect and characterize.
Even when part diameters are in specification, part assemblies may not operate
as well as they were designed to do.
Manufacturers who recognize the shortcomings of only using roundness data to
assess cylindricity often supplement roundness data with straightness or taper
data. This solution is also inherently inefficient, as multiple checks are
required. These often involve multiple gages and multiple setups which are time
consuming and expensive.
For example, different setups may be required to measure roundness, straightness
and taper. Then, once this data is collected, the assemblies may still need to
be sorted and matched together.
On the other hand, a form system designed to measure cylindricity often “walks”
an operator through the entire process, including part setup, tilt and centering
adjustments, measurement, and data display and storage.
Roundness, straightness and taper are not equivalent expressions. Two cylinders
can have the same degree of cylindricity when one is round but banana-shaped,
and the other is out-of-round but straight. Regardless, cylindricity
measurements provide an overall assessment of conformance to dimensional
specifications. It can provide an “all clear” signal for roundness, straightness
and taper in a single expression from a single test. When a part doesn’t meet a
cylindricity spec, errors of shape, out-of-roundness or straightness can then be
found in the cylindricity data.
Manufacturers also collect cylindricity data using coordinate measuring machines
(CMMs), but circular geometry gages provide a number of advantages, including
ease and speed of use, simplicity of programming, accuracy, and suitability for
shopfloor use.
Geometry gages measure roundness more reliably than CMMs because geometry gages
capture more data. Although some CMMs are as accurate as precision gages, they
capture limited amounts of data—only several dozen points per diameter. A
geometry gage, by comparison, can capture thousands of points on a diameter and
up to 20 diameters on a part. With more data, a geometry gage can perform
statistical analyses, such as harmonic analysis, to predict performance or
identify lobing conditions to fine-tune the machining process.
With more data, a geometry gage system can generate detailed three-dimensional
traces of a part. A geometry gage enables detection of scratches, burrs and
other asperities that might otherwise be missed. Once these details can be seen,
we’re able to control them by improving our processes. The results are better
parts and assemblies.
Article courtesy of MMS Online.
Comment on this article
 |
|
|