US1943720A - Method of casting brake drums - Google Patents
Method of casting brake drums Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US1943720A US1943720A US640793A US64079332A US1943720A US 1943720 A US1943720 A US 1943720A US 640793 A US640793 A US 640793A US 64079332 A US64079332 A US 64079332A US 1943720 A US1943720 A US 1943720A
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- United States
- Prior art keywords
- steel
- mold
- cast iron
- iron
- drum
- Prior art date
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B22—CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
- B22D—CASTING OF METALS; CASTING OF OTHER SUBSTANCES BY THE SAME PROCESSES OR DEVICES
- B22D13/00—Centrifugal casting; Casting by using centrifugal force
- B22D13/04—Centrifugal casting; Casting by using centrifugal force of shallow solid or hollow bodies, e.g. wheels or rings, in moulds rotating around their axis of symmetry
Definitions
- This invention relates to a method of lproducing compound brake drums for motor vehicles
- the drum is also useful for braking other rotating mechanism.
- the invention consists in making a drum as a compound casting, wherein the outer portion is of the proper grade of cast iron, there being combined the' strength and toughness of steel with the advantageous braking characteristics of cast iron, it being against an inner cast iron surface that the braking shoes operate.
- va particularly high grade of cast iron one which is firm and dense in structure and the necessity that lthe same shall be free of pits, blow-holes or the like'
- Fig. 1 is a fragmentary horizontal central vertical section illustrating an apparatus for centrifugally casting and producing the drum. Also vthe mold and a section of the brake drum of my' invention are shown within the mold, and
- Fig. 2 is a central vertical section of a brakedrum as produced by the method of my inven/ tion.
- suitable apparatus which may be similar in all essentials to that shown in my prior application for patent, Serial No. 573,949, filed .of contact engagement, particularly where the November 9, 1931.
- the parts of the apparatus j illustrated in connection with .the present in' vention comprise a ⁇ chuck housing 1, at the -end of a rotatable shaft 2, which is mounted for rotation in4 suitable bearings, not shown.
- the '30 chuck comprises a plurality of jaws, 3, which have inwardly extending arms'4 pivotally connected -to a head 5 located at the outer end of a rod 6.4
- Each jaw member 3 has an inwardly extending arm 7 pivotally connected to a radial arm 65 8 of a second head secured at the outer end of a hollow shaft 9 which extends through the main shaft 2, rod 6 passing through the shaft 9.
- this apparatus may be operated to project and open the jaws 3 of the chuck, or to draw the same inwardly and close the jaws as they bear against the inner tapered sides of the chuck housing 1.
- Each ofthe arms 4 of the chuck jaws 3 at its 'f5 inner side is formed with a flat surface 10, and all of the surfaces 10 on said arms, when the chuck is retracted into its housing. provide a back support for a mold.
- the mold 11 preferably is of baked sand similar to that used in a baked sand core, and may be formed Within an outer thin steel or sheet metal band 12.
- the mold is of annular cylindrical form and at each end has an inturned annular iiange 13; and the vback flange 13 ⁇ of the mold is what vcomes against the 85 surfaces 10 after the mold has been placed in the chuck and the chuck drawn into the housing to the position shown in Fig. 1.
- the apparatusdescribed after the mold 11 has been located within the chuck and the chuck drawn to closed position,l is ready to receive melted steel which ,forms the outer portion ofthe brake drum.
- the mold is rotated first at a relatively vslow speed, suiilcient that when melted vsteen is placed therein the steel win be distributed by centrifugal'force evenly over the inner surfaces of the mold and will enter the grooves formed at the inner side of the mold and thus vprovide the outer shell section 14 of the drum, with ribs 15 integral therewith and extending outwardly entirely around the same, said ribs being provided by forming the inner side of thei mold at therst instance 'with suitable grooves forl reception of the metal.
- the steel After the steel has been poured., andl has thus been uniformly distributed it is permitted to cool ⁇ until its temperature is below the melting temperature of the steel and at such temperature, the steel will be sufllciently congealed that it will not be penetrated and disrupted by the introduction of the molten iron lining band portion, but is ofv a sufilciently high temperature that when the melted cast iron at a proper high temperature is introduced into the rotating apparatus and the same stepped up in speed of rotation, a compiete fused ioinder of the steel and cast iron will taire place and an integral compound casting produced.
- Cast iron for brake drum purposes has to be oi? e. high quality and, when the drum is nished at its inner surface, present no flaws such as would come from trapped gas. have no dirt or scale permeating the same and lbe of a dense and herd quality.
- Cast iron of this character can be produced in a cupola furnace and will melt and new freely at 2400 F. but the temperature of the cast iron must be considerably in excess of this freely flowing melting temperature in the present invention.
- the melted cast iron is superheated several hundred degrees above its melted freely flowing stage. That is, in order to get a proper complete-minder of the iron and the previously cast but still a highly heated steel, there is ,a superheating of the melted cast iron to 2600" F. and preferably the temperature will be nearly reti? or 2900 P'.
- the apparatus which supports the mold is ro-v tion.
- a speed of 3500 lineal feet per minute of the brake drum will produce a continuous homogeneous structure of the two metals and the speed may be increased above this amount for example as high as 4500 lineal feet per minute.
- the lower limit sha be considered strictly as 3500 lineal feet per -minute as, depending upon Athe particular temperatures of the iron and 4steel when the same are brought together, there are variations-in the necessary and essential speeds of rotation such that a complete fusion between "the iron and ste'el would be obtainable at a lower rate of speed..
- a double width brake drum is shown as produced in a single operation, the casting made being divided midway between its two ends to produce two brake drums, one of which is shown in Fig. 2.
- the mold l1. may be provided with an inwardly extending annular rib half way between the two flanges 13 so thatthe two drums may be cast at one operation separate from each other.
- This, however. is a detail of apparatus and is not of importance in connection with the present invention which is more concerned in the practical and successful provision of brake drums in a compound casting of steel and cast iron, the steel at the outer portion and the cast iron at the inner portion, and the steel and cast iron homogeneously, continuously and intimately fused and connected together where the cast iron comes against the steel.
- the herein described method of producing brake drums which consists, in preparing a mold, rotating the mold, pouring molten steel into the mold while the same is rotating, cooling the steel until its inner surface is considerably less plastic than the .interior of the body thereof, pouring melted cast iron into the mold against the steel and then cooling the metals.
- the method of producing a composite brake drum which consists in preparing a refractory mold4 of comparatiw'elyl weak construction, rotating the mold relatively slow, depositing molten steel therein, said rotation being sumcient tocause equal concentric distribution of the said molten steel, cooling the said steel to a predetermined degree, pouring molten ironvagainst the steel before the steel has congealed, and then inl50 creasing the' speed of ythe mold lto cause vsai molten iron to fuse with the steel.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
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Description
L Jan m 19394 D. J. CAMPBELL 1,943,720
METHOD 0F cAsJTING BRAKE DRUMS Filed Nov. 2, 1932 iNvENToR ATTORNEY- Patented Jan. 16, 1934 lwl'rlain OFFICE.
I v1,943,720 ME'rnop or' CASTING BRAKE DRUMS Donaldl J. Campbell, Spring Lake Township, Ottawa County, Mich., assignor to Campbell, Wyant & Cannon Foundry Company, Muskegon Heights, Mich., a corporation of Michigan Application November 2, 1932. Serial No. 640,793
6 Claims.
This invention relates to a method of lproducing compound brake drums for motor vehicles,
used in conjunction with other braking mechanism for retarding and stopping such vehicles.
The drum is also useful for braking other rotating mechanism.
' It is an object and purpose of the present invention to produce brake drums of exceptional strength and resistance to fracture, and at the same time provide a frictional braking surface o f a high degree of eiliciency. More specifically the invention consists in making a drum as a compound casting, wherein the outer portion is of the proper grade of cast iron, there being combined the' strength and toughness of steel with the advantageous braking characteristics of cast iron, it being against an inner cast iron surface that the braking shoes operate.
By reason of the necessity of using va particularly high grade of cast iron, one which is firm and dense in structure and the necessity that lthe same shall be free of pits, blow-holes or the like',
and because of the difliculty in making proper joinder between cast iron and steel over al1 points body of cast iron is relatively small and the thickness of the cast iron band at the inner side of the drum is only approximately three-sixteenths of an inch or even less, the problem o'f producing such composite joinder of steel and iron is a diflicult one andv itis only after long experiment and trial that methods of properly andi` practically producing the same have been perfected.
An understanding of my invention whereby the complete, practical and successful attainment yof the objects above stated are secured, as well as others not at this time specifically enumerated,
may be had from the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawing,
in which,
Fig. 1 is a fragmentary horizontal central vertical section illustrating an apparatus for centrifugally casting and producing the drum. Also vthe mold and a section of the brake drum of my' invention are shown within the mold, and
Fig. 2 is a central vertical section of a brakedrum as produced by the method of my inven/ tion.
Like lreference characters refer to like parts in the figures of the drawing.
In practicingI the method of my invention, a
suitable apparatus is provided which may be similar in all essentials to that shown in my prior application for patent, Serial No. 573,949, filed .of contact engagement, particularly where the November 9, 1931. The parts of the apparatus j illustrated in connection with .the present in' vention comprise a `chuck housing 1, at the -end of a rotatable shaft 2, which is mounted for rotation in4 suitable bearings, not shown. The '30 chuck comprises a plurality of jaws, 3, which have inwardly extending arms'4 pivotally connected -to a head 5 located at the outer end of a rod 6.4 Each jaw member 3 has an inwardly extending arm 7 pivotally connected to a radial arm 65 8 of a second head secured at the outer end of a hollow shaft 9 which extends through the main shaft 2, rod 6 passing through the shaft 9. As shown in my prior application'for patent to which reference is made, this apparatus may be operated to project and open the jaws 3 of the chuck, or to draw the same inwardly and close the jaws as they bear against the inner tapered sides of the chuck housing 1. j
Each ofthe arms 4 of the chuck jaws 3 at its 'f5 inner side is formed with a flat surface 10, and all of the surfaces 10 on said arms, when the chuck is retracted into its housing. provide a back support for a mold. The mold 11 preferably is of baked sand similar to that used in a baked sand core, and may be formed Within an outer thin steel or sheet metal band 12. The mold is of annular cylindrical form and at each end has an inturned annular iiange 13; and the vback flange 13` of the mold is what vcomes against the 85 surfaces 10 after the mold has been placed in the chuck and the chuck drawn into the housing to the position shown in Fig. 1.
The apparatusdescribed, after the mold 11 has been located within the chuck and the chuck drawn to closed position,l is ready to receive melted steel which ,forms the outer portion ofthe brake drum. The mold is rotated first at a relatively vslow speed, suiilcient that when melted vsteen is placed therein the steel win be distributed by centrifugal'force evenly over the inner surfaces of the mold and will enter the grooves formed at the inner side of the mold and thus vprovide the outer shell section 14 of the drum, with ribs 15 integral therewith and extending outwardly entirely around the same, said ribs being provided by forming the inner side of thei mold at therst instance 'with suitable grooves forl reception of the metal. And at each end of the inner portion of the vmold. other grooves are made, such that when the melted steel enters it provides outwardly extending flanges 1'6 of steel. The rotative speed of the apparatus, when the steel is deposited and while it is being-centrifugally carried into place, cannot be excessive as 110 excessive speed would cause a detrimental effect upon the mold 11 but at a speed or rotation such that the peripheralspeed at which the steel is moving is approximately 600 lineal feet per minute, the steel evenly distributes itself under the centrifugal action and takes a form within the mold whereby it is of substantially uniform thickness except where the grooves are made for thebngesand outwardly extending ribs descri e The temperature of the steel when introduced into the mold is very high and may at times reach 3600" F. This excessive temperature is not neeessarily required but the temperature of the steel must be such that it is free flowing initially and is uid enough that it will spread evenly over the inner face of the mold and provide a substantially uniform cross section so far as the steel outer portion is concerned.
After the steel has been poured., andl has thus been uniformly distributed it is permitted to cool `until its temperature is below the melting temperature of the steel and at such temperature, the steel will be sufllciently congealed that it will not be penetrated and disrupted by the introduction of the molten iron lining band portion, but is ofv a sufilciently high temperature that when the melted cast iron at a proper high temperature is introduced into the rotating apparatus and the same stepped up in speed of rotation, a compiete fused ioinder of the steel and cast iron will taire place and an integral compound casting produced.
Cast iron for brake drum purposes has to be oi? e. high quality and, when the drum is nished at its inner surface, present no flaws such as would come from trapped gas. have no dirt or scale permeating the same and lbe of a dense and herd quality. Cast iron of this character can be produced in a cupola furnace and will melt and new freely at 2400 F. but the temperature of the cast iron must be considerably in excess of this freely flowing melting temperature in the present invention. The melted cast iron is superheated several hundred degrees above its melted freely flowing stage. That is, in order to get a proper complete-minder of the iron and the previously cast but still a highly heated steel, there is ,a superheating of the melted cast iron to 2600" F. and preferably the temperature will be nearly reti? or 2900 P'.
The apparatus which supports the mold is ro-v tion. A speed of 3500 lineal feet per minute of the brake drum will produce a continuous homogeneous structure of the two metals and the speed may be increased above this amount for example as high as 4500 lineal feet per minute. And it is not desired that the lower limit sha be considered strictly as 3500 lineal feet per -minute as, depending upon Athe particular temperatures of the iron and 4steel when the same are brought together, there are variations-in the necessary and essential speeds of rotation such that a complete fusion between "the iron and ste'el would be obtainable at a lower rate of speed..Y
The high speed when the cast iron is intro- =a practical standpoint necessary in order that gases, scale, dirt, air and the like may move -inposition.
wardly to the inner face of the cast iron. it being apparent that the differential in centrifugalv forces at the outerside of the molten iron as compared with the inner side of the molten iron, the melted iron having a limited thickness usually one-eighth to three-sixteenths of an inch, necessarily is small at low speeds and the speed must be sufficient to carry the lighter materials such as scale, gas, air and other undesirable material inwardly to the Iinner side of the molten iron; and the temperature of the molten iron must be that such scale, gases, air and the like maypass through the iron while it is still in a very fluid condition, whereby when the` casting is cooled the gaseous materials not wanted have escaped at the inner side of the cast iron and the scale. dirt or products from flux which may be used will evidence themselves as a scale at the inner side of the cooled cast iron bands 17 and which is removed on machining the drum on its inner side to provide a smooth braking surface.
In the illustration shown, a double width brake drum is shown as produced in a single operation, the casting made being divided midway between its two ends to produce two brake drums, one of which is shown in Fig. 2. It is of course apparent that the mold l1. may be provided with an inwardly extending annular rib half way between the two flanges 13 so thatthe two drums may be cast at one operation separate from each other. This, however. is a detail of apparatus and is not of importance in connection with the present invention which is more concerned in the practical and successful provision of brake drums in a compound casting of steel and cast iron, the steel at the outer portion and the cast iron at the inner portion, and the steel and cast iron homogeneously, continuously and intimately fused and connected together where the cast iron comes against the steel.
Having thus described my' invention, what I claim as new and wish to secure by Letters Patent is:
l. The herein described method of producing brake drums which consists, in preparing a mold, rotating the mold, pouring molten steel into the mold while the same is rotating, cooling the steel until its inner surface is considerably less plastic than the .interior of the body thereof, pouring melted cast iron into the mold against the steel and then cooling the metals.
2. A method asset forth in claim l in which the rotation of the mold is materially increased during or after the introduction oi the cast iron whereby centrifugal forces will act thereon to 33@ cause interlocking between the cast iron and the inner surface ofthe steel, the plastic interior of the body permitting such action.
3. A method as set forth in claim 1 in which the cast ironlis heated to a temperature above the inner surface of' the steel whereby the same transmits heat thereto to soften the same and render it more plastic, such softening action occurring after the `cast iron is in its concentric l i 4. The method of producing a composite brake drum which consists in preparing a refractory mold4 of comparatiw'elyl weak construction, rotating the mold relatively slow, depositing molten steel therein, said rotation being sumcient tocause equal concentric distribution of the said molten steel, cooling the said steel to a predetermined degree, pouring molten ironvagainst the steel before the steel has congealed, and then inl50 creasing the' speed of ythe mold lto cause vsai molten iron to fuse with the steel.
5. A method as set forth in fclaim 4 in which the molten iron is superheated to a temperature' above the melting point: ot the steel in order to form a safety factor'.
6. A method of producing a brake drum from two metals having diierent melting points, said 'alsl metaihaving the higher meltingrpomi: also mwr ing the greater density, which consists in, providf ing a rotating mold, melting and pouring the cooling the drum.
the mold'and then l DONALD J. CAMPBELL.
ros
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US640793A US1943720A (en) | 1932-11-02 | 1932-11-02 | Method of casting brake drums |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US640793A US1943720A (en) | 1932-11-02 | 1932-11-02 | Method of casting brake drums |
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US1943720A true US1943720A (en) | 1934-01-16 |
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US640793A Expired - Lifetime US1943720A (en) | 1932-11-02 | 1932-11-02 | Method of casting brake drums |
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Cited By (9)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2479039A (en) * | 1944-11-06 | 1949-08-16 | United Aircraft Corp | Cast disk for turbine rotors |
US2710997A (en) * | 1952-06-13 | 1955-06-21 | Campbell Wyant & Cannon Co | Method of producing bimetal castings |
DE937024C (en) * | 1949-08-31 | 1955-12-29 | Goetzewerke | Gray cast iron cylinder liner manufactured using the centrifugal casting process |
US3073290A (en) * | 1958-07-03 | 1963-01-15 | Daimler Benz Ag | Cylinder liner construction particularly for internal combustion engines |
US3414044A (en) * | 1966-05-12 | 1968-12-03 | Beloit Corp | Method of making bimetallic tubular article |
US3414045A (en) * | 1965-12-20 | 1968-12-03 | Gen Motors Corp | Method for centrifugal casting |
US3455375A (en) * | 1968-02-15 | 1969-07-15 | Gen Motors Corp | Apparatus for centrifugal casting |
US4106408A (en) * | 1975-08-13 | 1978-08-15 | Addressograph Multigraph Corporation | Duplicator cylinder construction |
EP1178235A3 (en) * | 2000-08-03 | 2004-01-07 | ArvinMeritor Technology, LLC | Long life brake drum and rotor |
-
1932
- 1932-11-02 US US640793A patent/US1943720A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Cited By (9)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2479039A (en) * | 1944-11-06 | 1949-08-16 | United Aircraft Corp | Cast disk for turbine rotors |
DE937024C (en) * | 1949-08-31 | 1955-12-29 | Goetzewerke | Gray cast iron cylinder liner manufactured using the centrifugal casting process |
US2710997A (en) * | 1952-06-13 | 1955-06-21 | Campbell Wyant & Cannon Co | Method of producing bimetal castings |
US3073290A (en) * | 1958-07-03 | 1963-01-15 | Daimler Benz Ag | Cylinder liner construction particularly for internal combustion engines |
US3414045A (en) * | 1965-12-20 | 1968-12-03 | Gen Motors Corp | Method for centrifugal casting |
US3414044A (en) * | 1966-05-12 | 1968-12-03 | Beloit Corp | Method of making bimetallic tubular article |
US3455375A (en) * | 1968-02-15 | 1969-07-15 | Gen Motors Corp | Apparatus for centrifugal casting |
US4106408A (en) * | 1975-08-13 | 1978-08-15 | Addressograph Multigraph Corporation | Duplicator cylinder construction |
EP1178235A3 (en) * | 2000-08-03 | 2004-01-07 | ArvinMeritor Technology, LLC | Long life brake drum and rotor |
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