Robotic applications Keeping pace with the move towards automation

Source: Toolcraft 3 min Reading Time

Related Vendors

Since launching its robotics business unit over ten years ago, Toolcraft has designed, programmed and implemented a large number of customised robot solutions. Now the medium-sized company has developed two new robot applications so that it can offer an even wider range of solutions to meet its customers’ increasingly extensive requirements.

The robotic system sets new standards in robot machining.(Source:  Toolcraft)
The robotic system sets new standards in robot machining.
(Source: Toolcraft)

With a new robot system, Toolcraft is using state-of-the-art technology to set new standards in robot machining. For example, robots can now be used to perform manufacturing steps such as milling, deburring, grinding and polishing components made from a wide range of materials, including metallic workpieces. For this project, the company’s robotics team played a key role in the development of a 6-axis robot from Autonox Robotics, which is even more rigid and therefore more precise.

Offline programming using CAM path planning allows the robot cell to be programmed efficiently and quickly in a similar way to a CNC machine tool and also enables movement patterns and reachability to be simulated. This means that machine operators who only have experience with traditional machine centres also find it easy to switch to using the robot.

The application can be extended by adding almost any number of tools, creating a flexible and efficient manufacturing process, since many different tools can be provided for automated running periods. A nominal reach of two metres combined with a simultaneously rotating machining table also allows larger components to be machined with just one or very few clamping setups. The rotating table has a load-bearing capacity of up to 5,000 kg. “The system can be extended as required. For example, we could add a chip conveyor, extraction unit or climate control system,” says Andreas Bauer, Robotics Business Unit Manager at Toolcraft.

All-rounder for laser metal deposition and milling

The second recent development from Toolcraft is a hybrid robot application that can be used for both additive and subtractive machining. The laser welding head can machine components using directed energy deposition (LMD/DED). This technique coats and adds new contours to existing components using selective material deposition. Damaged and worn components can also be repaired by depositing material where it is required, with the laser-based and intricate welding process transferring very little heat into the workpiece.

Besides saving costs, repairs use fewer materials than making new components and allow for combinations of materials that were not previously possible. The robot from Mabi Robotic has a machining radius of 2.25 metres, making it suitable for both small and large components. In addition to “traditional” laser-powder deposition welding, extreme high-speed laser application (EHLA) deposition can be used to coat rotationally symmetrical components very efficiently, e.g. with a hard or wear-resistant coating.

The adaptive motor spindle allows components to be pre-machined, welded and post-machined in a single clamping setup within the same robot system. The switch from welding to milling is also fully automated without the need for any manual intervention. This allows surfaces to be prepared for the welding process, reference surfaces to be produced during the manufacturing process and surface finishes to be machined in further steps. With reachability of around two metres combined with a rotating and swivel unit as the machining table, the robot can be used for flexible, 8-axis manufacturing of complex geometries.

Comprehensive Siemens NX offline programming allows movements to be simulated separately from the manufacturing process and to be programmed using extremely precise path planning.

(ID:49911730)

Subscribe to the newsletter now

Don't Miss out on Our Best Content

By clicking on „Subscribe to Newsletter“ I agree to the processing and use of my data according to the consent form (please expand for details) and accept the Terms of Use. For more information, please see our Privacy Policy. The consent declaration relates, among other things, to the sending of editorial newsletters by email and to data matching for marketing purposes with selected advertising partners (e.g., LinkedIn, Google, Meta)

Unfold for details of your consent