Button bit
A button bit is disclosed of the type that is rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation (R) around a centre axis (C) and includes a number of spaced-apart peripheral buttons, which protrude forward from a front end surface to which an envelope surface connects having a rotationally symmetrical shape, the individual peripheral button being tilted partly in relation to the centre axis (C) of the drill bit, partly in the forward direction of rotation (R) in relation to the surface from which the button protrudes. The hole for the individual peripheral button mouths in a countersunk entering surface which is planar, ring-shaped and extends perpendicularly to the centre axis (C1) of the hole. By tipping the button in the forward direction of rotation, the same will operate aggressively and efficiently. Also, the peripheral button may be mounted in accurate drilled apertures which are simple to provide, despite the complex space geometry predicament.
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This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 and/or §365 to Swedish patent application No. 0602559-7, filed Nov. 29, 2006, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
FIELDThe present disclosure relates to a button bit intended for percussive rock drilling and of the type that is rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation around a centre axis, and comprises a number of spaced-apart peripheral buttons, which protrude forward from a front end surface to which an envelope surface connects having a rotationally symmetrical basic shape, the individual peripheral button is tilted partly in relation to the centre axis C, partly in the forward direction of the rotational direction R in relation to the surface from which the button protrudes.
BACKGROUNDIn the discussion of the background that follows, reference is made to certain structures and/or methods. However, the following references should not be construed as an admission that these structures and/or methods constitute prior art. Applicant expressly reserves the right to demonstrate that such structures and/or methods do not qualify as prior art.
Button bits can be realized in most varying embodiments depending on the specifics of the field of application. Thus, the different embodiments differ not only as a consequence of varying diameters of the holes to be drilled, but also depending on the nature of the rock or the soil type to be machined, e.g., in respect of the hardness thereof. However, common to previously known button bits is that they comprise a generally rotationally symmetrical basic body that is manufactured from steel or the like and equipped with a number of buttons of a material, e.g., cemented carbide, that has greater hardness and wear resistance than the material of the basic body. Said buttons are placed in different configurations on a front end surface, which via a circular borderline transforms into an envelope surface having a rotationally symmetrical basic shape, which partly tapers in the backward direction. More precisely, the front end surface is included in a head having a greater diameter than a shank behind, which may be in the form of a sleeve or skirt into which a drill rod can be inserted and interconnected with the drill bit. The head is strongly dimensioned in order to withstand above all considerable impulsive forces. The individual button is usually formed with a cylindrical base part and a tapering top or tip, which effects the proper machining of the rock. The button is permanently united to the drill bit by a shrink-fit joint, which is provided by inserting the base part of the button into a drilled, cylindrical hole in a heated drill bit, which is allowed to cool down in order to clamp the button in the hole. The button may also be applied by pressing into a cold steel body. The buttons are grouped centrally as well as peripherally along the front end surface of the drill bit. More precisely, a certain number of centre buttons are placed in different locations along a circular, central front surface, while a usually greater number of peripheral buttons are placed tangentially spaced apart along a peripheral, ring-shaped surface between the central end surface and the envelope surface. This peripheral ring surface is conical, having cone angles within the range of 90-140°, which means that the centre axes of the different peripheral buttons commonly meet the centre axis of the drill bit at equal angles of 20-45°.
Examples of known button bits of the kind in question are disclosed in SE 9001081-0, SE 8305048-4, SE 607972, FR 1514998 and FR 2646875.
Previously known rock-drilling equipment for top-hammer drilling allows machining of the rock at a relatively moderate rotational speed and moderate percussion frequency. Thus, the rotational speed has previously been limited to about 200 r/min (slightly more than 3 revolutions per second), and the percussion frequency to about 100 Hz (i.e., 100 percussions per second). Under these conditions, the individual button performs repeated forwardly directed impact motions, which results in rock being crushed, at the same time as the same slowly rotates around the centre axis of the drill bit, the entire drill bit fairly slowly being fed axially into the rock. Therefore, because the speed of rotation is moderate in comparison with the percussion frequency, the rock is in all essentials machined by crushing.
However, rock-drilling equipment has recently been developed that allows rotation of the drill bit at a considerably higher rotational speed and also at a higher percussion frequency. During drilling by means of such equipments, it has turned out that the rock is machined not only by being crushed as a consequence of the axial percussion motions of the button, but also by being cut into pieces as a consequence of the rotation of the button. In other words, the rock is disintegrated by a combination of percussive crushing and rotating, cutting machining.
FR 1514998 and FR 2646875 disclose drill bits. In practice such constructions are troublesome to produce, because the drilling of the individual hole must be performed in a geometrically complicated position in relation to a cone surface. Thus, the drill tip may easily glide along the cone surface during the initial drilling and thereby deviate from the determined entering point.
SUMMARYThe presently disclosed button bits aim at eliminating the above mentioned problems and at further developing previously known button bits so far that they are particularly suitable for drilling at high rotational speed and high percussion frequency. Therefore, one object is to provide a button bit having peripheral buttons that may be mounted in accurately drilled apertures which are simple to provide, despite the complex space geometry predicament. Another object is, by the utilization of the understanding that high-speed rotating buttons fragmentize the rock through a combination of percussive crushing and rotary cutting into pieces, to provide an efficiently and aggressively operating button bit, by means of which the times for the requisite drilling operation per hole meter are reduced. An additional object is to provide a high-speed rotating drill bit having long service life, in particular such as this is determined by the capacity of the peripheral buttons to resist wear.
The above mentioned objects are at least partly attained by a mouth of the hole for the individual peripheral button including a countersunk entering surface which is planar and ring-shaped and extends perpendicularly to a centre axis of the hole.
For example, an exemplary embodiment of a button bit that is rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation around a centre axis comprises a body, and a number of spaced-apart peripheral buttons each positioned in a hole, wherein the buttons protrude forward from a front end surface to which an envelope surface connects, wherein the body has a rotationally symmetrical shape, wherein at least one individual peripheral button is tilted partly in relation to a centre axis of the bit, and partly in a forward direction of rotation in relation to a surface from which the button protrudes, wherein a mouth of the hole for the individual peripheral button includes a countersunk entering surface which is planar and ring-shaped, and wherein the countersunk entering surface extends perpendicularly to a centre axis of the hole.
Another exemplary embodiment of a button bit of the type that is rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation around a centre axis comprises a body having a front end surface and an envelope surface rearward of the front end surface, and a number of spaced-apart peripheral buttons each positioned in a hole in the front end surface, wherein the buttons protrude forward from the front end surface, and wherein at least one individual peripheral button is tilted partly in relation to a centre axis of the bit, and partly in a forward direction of rotation in relation to a surface from which the button protrudes.
A further exemplary embodiment of a button bit of the type that is rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation around a centre axis comprises a body having a front end surface and an envelope surface rearward of the front end surface, and a number of spaced-apart peripheral buttons each positioned in a hole in the front end surface, wherein the buttons protrude forward from the front end surface, wherein at least one individual peripheral button is tilted partly in relation to a centre axis of the bit, and partly in a forward direction of rotation in relation to a surface from which the button protrudes, wherein the buttons have an apex at a first end, the first end exposed when mounted in the hole, and wherein a first generatrix from the apex to a rotationally leading end point along the hole edge has a first length and a second generatrix from the apex to a rotationally trailing end point along the hole edge has a second length, and the first length is less than second length.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory and are intended to provide further explanation of the invention as claimed.
The following detailed description can be read in connection with the accompanying drawings in which like numerals designate like elements and in which:
In
The basic body 1 comprises a front head 4 and a rear shank 5 that is thinner than the head and, in the example, is sleeve-shaped. The shape of the basic body is generally rotationally symmetrical so far that the envelope surface thereof comprises a cylindrical surface 7, which forms the outside of the shank 5, and a slightly conical clearance surface 8 on the head 4. Said cone surface converges in the backward direction and is spaced-apart from the cylinder surface 7 via a ring-shaped neck 9. A circular borderline 10 forms a transition between the clearance surface 8 and the front end surface of the head 4. Said front end surface comprises also two part surfaces, viz. a central front surface 12 and a peripheral cone surface 13. The clearance surface 8 is interrupted by a number of chipways 14. Furthermore, at least one flushing-liquid channel 15 terminates in the clearance surface 8. Other flushing-liquid channels 16 can terminate in the front surface 12.
The drill bit is rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation R, around a centre axis designated C.
From the enlarged end view in
The three outermost centre buttons 3 are equidistantly spaced-apart by a partition of 120°. The button 3a is placed in such a way inside a pair of outer centre buttons, that the areas swept by the buttons cover each other. Radially inside two pairs of outer buttons, there terminate two channels 16 for flushing liquid that can be flushed from the interior of the drill bit and has, among other things, the purpose of evacuating the debris broken off from the drill hole.
The number and arrangement of buttons, chipways and channels are non-limiting examples; other suitable numbers and arrangements of these features are within the scope of the disclosure.
As is seen in
Reference is now made to
In
As far as the shown drill bit has been described hitherto, the same is in all essentials previously known.
Reference is now made to
In
In
In such a way, a double inclination may be said to arise, which also may be described such that the imaginary plane (see
In order for the aggressiveness and efficiency of the buttons to increase in comparison with conventionally mounted buttons, the angle ε has of course to be greater than 0 (zero). In order to improve the effect of cutting into pieces upon rotation considerably, the angle ε should, however, amount to at least 5°. Upward from this limit value, the angle ε may vary most considerably. However, the same should not be more than 25°, because if a larger inclination would be chosen, risk arises that the button cracks or is damaged in the percussive phase of the operation. Suitably, the angle ε should be within the range of 10-20°. Thus, the same amounts to 15° in the embodiment shown in
If the button hole 20 terminates directly in the cone surface 13 (see
In addition to the individual peripheral button, as a consequence of the forwardly tipped position thereof, operating aggressively and efficiently during the rotating, cutting-machining phase, an increased service life of the same is also gained. In
In
The invention is not limited only to the embodiment described above and shown in the drawings. Thus, it is feasible to tilt only some of the peripheral buttons in the forward direction of rotation, instead of all, such as is shown in the preferred embodiment example. For instance, every second peripheral button could be tipped forward, but not the other ones. It is also feasible to tip forward different peripheral buttons at different angles. Within the scope of the invention, it is also feasible to tip forward one or more of the centre buttons. Neither is the invention limited to such bits that have the peripheral buttons mounted in an outer cone surface of the head. Thus, within the scope of the invention, it is feasible to mount the peripheral buttons in question in a substantially planar, ring-shaped surface, which extends perpendicularly to the centre axis of the drill bit. Neither is the invention limited to such bits that are composed of a basic body of steel and a number of separately manufactured buttons of another material. Thus, the invention envisages the possibility of integrating the buttons with at least the front head of the drill bit. This could be realized by forming button-like projections integrally with the rest of the head in accordance with the known MIM-technique (Metal Injection Moulding). Although such projections would come to lack geometrical centre axes in a proper sense, the same may, however, be tilted forward in the sense that a leading generatrix line a (see
Although described in connection with preferred embodiments thereof, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that additions, deletions, modifications, and substitutions not specifically described may be made without department from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Claims
1. A button bit of the type that is rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation around a centre axis, the button bit comprising:
- a body; and
- a number of spaced-apart peripheral buttons each positioned in a hole,
- wherein the buttons protrude forward from a front end surface to which an envelope surface connects,
- wherein the body has a rotationally symmetrical shape,
- wherein at least one individual peripheral button is tilted partly in relation to a centre axis of the bit, and partly in a forward direction of rotation in relation to a surface from which the button protrudes,
- wherein a mouth of the hole for the individual peripheral button includes a countersunk entering surface which is planar and ring-shaped, and
- wherein the countersunk entering surface extends perpendicularly to a centre axis of the hole.
2. The button bit according to claim 1, wherein the individual peripheral button has a centre axis tilted at an acute angle in relation to the centre axis of the bit and in that the countersunk entering surface is delimited by a cylinder surface, the depth of which decreases in a direction from a rotationally leading end toward a trailing end.
3. The button bit according to claim 2, wherein the individual peripheral button, in addition to a tapering tip, comprises a cylindrical base part that is fixed in a cylindrical hole, which mouths in a surface via a mouth opening having an oval shape.
4. The button bit according to claim 1, wherein the centre axis of the individual peripheral button is tilted not only at a primary tip angle (α) in relation to the centre axis of the bit, but also at a secondary tip angle (ε) in relation to a centre plane (MP), wherein the centre plane (MP) is oriented perpendicular to the surface from which the button protrudes and intersects the mouth of the hole halfway between the rotationally leading and trailing end points along a borderline of the hole.
5. The button bit according to claim 4, wherein the secondary tip angle (ε) is at least 5°.
6. The button bit according to claim 5, wherein the secondary tip angle (ε) is at most 20°.
7. The button bit according to claim 4, wherein all peripheral buttons are tilted at said primary tip angle (α) as well as at said secondary tip angle (ε).
8. The button bit according to claim 7, wherein the secondary tip angle (ε) is at least 5°.
9. The button bit according to claim 8, wherein the secondary tip angle (ε) is at most 20°.
10. The button bit according to claim 7, wherein the peripheral buttons are arranged along a ring-shaped, peripheral cone surface, the cone angle (β) of which is obtuse, and which is located between the envelope surface and a central front surface from which a number of centre buttons protrude forward, a part of the individual peripheral button protruding peripherally in relation to the envelope surface.
11. The button bit according to claim 10, wherein the individual peripheral button, in addition to a tapering tip, comprises a cylindrical base part that is fixed in a cylindrical hole, which mouths in a surface via a mouth opening having an oval shape.
12. The button bit according to claim 11, wherein the oval shape has a major axis extending tangentially along the cone surface and a minor axis extending radially along the cone surface.
13. The button bit according to claim 4, wherein the peripheral buttons are arranged along a ring-shaped, peripheral cone surface, the cone angle (β) of which is obtuse, and which is located between the envelope surface and a central front surface from which a number of centre buttons protrude forward, a part of the individual peripheral button protruding peripherally in relation to the envelope surface.
14. The button bit according to claim 13, wherein the individual peripheral button, in addition to a tapering tip, comprises a cylindrical base part that is fixed in a cylindrical hole, which mouths in a surface via a mouth opening having an oval shape.
15. The button bit according to claim 14, wherein the oval shape has a major axis extending tangentially along the cone surface and a minor axis extending radially along the cone surface.
16. The button bit according to claim 3, wherein the individual peripheral button, in addition to a tapering tip, comprises a cylindrical base part that is fixed in a cylindrical hole, which mouths in a surface via a mouth opening having an oval shape.
17. A button bit of the type that is rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation around a centre axis, the button bit comprising:
- a body having a front end surface and an envelope surface rearward of the front end surface; and
- a number of spaced-apart peripheral buttons each positioned in a hole in the front end surface,
- wherein the buttons protrude forward from the front end surface, and
- wherein at least one individual peripheral button is tilted partly in relation to a centre axis of the bit, and partly in a forward direction of rotation in relation to a surface from which the button protrudes.
18. The button bit according to claim 17, wherein a centre plane is defined by a plane orientated perpendicularly to the surface from which the button protrudes and intersects a mouth of the hole for the button at a point halfway between a rotationally leading end point along the hole edge and a rotationally trailing end point along the hole edge, and wherein a mass of material of the button situated rotationally in front of the centre plane is greater than a mass of material of the button situated rotationally behind the centre plane.
19. The button bit according to claim 18, wherein a centre axis of the individual peripheral button is tilted at a primary tip angle (α) in relation to the centre axis of the bit, and wherein the centre axis of the individual peripheral button is tilted at a secondary tip angle (ε) in relation to the centre plane.
20. A button bit of the type that is rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation around a centre axis, the button bit comprising:
- a body having a front end surface and an envelope surface rearward of the front end surface; and
- a number of spaced-apart peripheral buttons each positioned in a hole in the front end surface,
- wherein the buttons protrude forward from the front end surface,
- wherein at least one individual peripheral button is tilted partly in relation to a centre axis of the bit, and partly in a forward direction of rotation in relation to a surface from which the button protrudes,
- wherein the buttons have an apex at a first end, the first end exposed when mounted in the hole, and
- wherein a first generatrix from the apex to a rotationally leading end point along the hole edge has a first length and a second generatrix from the apex to a rotationally trailing end point along the hole edge has a second length, and the first length is less than the second length.
21. The button bit according to claim 20, wherein a mouth of the hole for the individual peripheral button includes a countersunk entering surface, and
- wherein the countersunk entering surface extends perpendicularly to a centre axis of the hole.
Type: Application
Filed: Nov 28, 2007
Publication Date: Jun 12, 2008
Applicant:
Inventor: Christer Lundberg (Sandviken)
Application Number: 11/987,214