BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] Field: The invention relates to cutting inserts used in cutting operations, particularly
indexable cutting inserts for mining applications. The illustrated embodiment of the
invention is an indexable cutting insert for chain saws used in the quarrying of natural
stone.
[0002] State of the Art: Tools used in natural stone quarries for the cutting of stone have
generally been known for many years. Traditionally, stone has been cut by large channel
machines and wire saws in commercial stone quarry operations. Approximately two decades
ago, large carriage mounted chain saws which ride on tracks were introduced into stone
quarries. The basic component of the stone quarry chain saw are a power unit, such
as an electric, gas or hydraulic motor, which rotates a hardened steel chain around
an arm. The hardened steel chain has cutter links interposed along its length which
house cutting inserts.
[0003] Typically, the cutting insert is brazed to a holder which is attached to the cutter
link. When the cutting insert becomes dull, broken or fractured, the cutting insert
can be debrazed from the holder and replaced by brazing a new cutting insert to the
holder, or the cutter link is removable from the chain saw chain so that the cutter
link and attached holder and cutting insert can be replaced, or, if the wearing or
damage is extensive, the entire chain saw chain can be replaced. The cutting inserts
are usually grouped in sets along the chain, each set comprising a multiplicity of
cutting inserts having an increasing kerf width.
[0004] These prior art chain saw cutting insert arrangements are relatively expensive to
maintain and operate. When the cutting inserts need replacement, it necessitates the
shutting down of the chain saw and quarrying operation for an extended period of time
to replace the cutting inserts by the above stated methods. Also required for maintenance
is an extensive inventory of cutting inserts of varying kerf width so that the appropriate
cutting insert which has become dull, broken or fractured can be replaced. To minimize
down time, inventories of entire chain saw chains are often maintained so that an
entire chain can be replaced.
[0005] It is well known in the prior art to use carbide or tungsten carbide cutting inserts.
However, carbide or tungsten carbide cutting inserts have been primarily useful in
quarrying limestone, marble, slate and travertine, and have been found unsuitable
for abrasive stone such as sandstone and some highly abrasive limestone. The highly
abrasive materials cause excessive wearing of the carbide or tungsten carbide cutting
insert, thereby resulting in short tool life and excessive down time in the quarrying
operation for cutting insert replacement.
[0006] In recent years new materials have been developed which replace the carbide or tungsten
carbide or at least the cutting surface of mining and drilling tools. Through the
use of high pressure, high temperature technology, superabrasive materials such as
polycrystaline diamond compacts, commonly known as "PDC," and polycrystaline cubic
boron nitride compacts, known and sold by General Electric Company under the trademark
"BZN@ Compacts," have been produced for use as the cutting surfaces in drilling and
mining tools. PDC materials which are useful for these purposes are disclosed in U.S.
Patent No. Re 32,380 which teaches a PDC material which is sold by General Electric
Company under the trademark STRATAPAXO, U.S. Patent No. 4,224,380 which teaches a
thermally stable PDC, and U.S. Patent No. 4,738,689 which teaches a coated thermally
stable PDC, the latter materials being sold by General Electric Company under the
trademark GEOSETO. BZN@ Compacts are disclosed in U.S. Patent Nos. 3,767,371 and 3,743,489.
The foregoing General Electric Company patents are assigned to the same assignee as
the present invention, and are incorporated herein by this reference.
[0007] In the prior art the superabrasive material is typically formed in a thin section
having a narrow dimension and a broad dimension. The cutting surface is usually the
surface along the broad dimension. The superabrasive material is typically bonded
to a metallic substrate, with the metallic substrate oriented to support the cutting
surface and minimize stress on the metallic substrate- superabrasive material joint.
[0008] In prior art chain saw cutting inserts, the superabrasive material is usually backed
by and bonded to a metallic substrate which is manufactured of a harder material than
the hardened steel of the cutter links. If the superabrasive material is bonded to
the metallic substrate in the manufacturing process, the metallic substrate is then
brazed to a carrier which is secured to the cutter link. Alternatively, the superabrasive
material may be brazed to a carrier which is secured to the cutter link. The metallic
substrate or the carrier is typically oriented to provide mechanical support for the
superabrasive material to reduce fracturing thereof and to reduce stress on the superabrasive
material- metallic substrate bond or superabrasive material- carrier braze joint.
Metallic substrate materials which have been used in the past are carbide or a hard
cemented metal such as cemented carbide. The prior art superabrasive material cutting
inserts are also typically arranged in sets of increasing kerf widths. This also requires
an inventory of superabrasive material cutter inserts of various widths to maintain
the chain saw.
[0009] Square PDC blanks have been used as cutting inserts for chain saws in the prior art.
Each of the corners of the PDC blank is a cutting surface. The PDC blank is brazed
to a holder which is attached to the cutter link of the chain saw chain. After one
corner of the PDC blank becomes worn, the PDC blank is debrazed from the holder, rotated
ninety degrees and rebrazed to the holder. This operation is repeated until all four
corners of one side of the PDC blank have been used as cutting surfaces. The PDC blank
is then rotated one hundred eighty degrees to the opposite side and this process repeated.
In this process, the PDC blank is repeatedly subjected to elevated temperatures and
potential thermal damage. Since only the corners of the PDC blank are used as cutting
surfaces, the remaining portions of the PDC blank is waste material.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0010] Objectives: It is an objective of the invention to provide a cutting insert which
utilizes a superabrasive material for the cutting surface and which is uniform in
size. Further objectives of the invention are to provide a cutting insert which has
an increased tool life and is less expensive to manufacture over prior art cutting
inserts which utilize superabrasive materials through a decrease in the cost of tool
fabrication through utilizing less superabrasive material and lower fabrication costs.
Further objectives of the invention are to provide a cutting insert having multiple
cutting surfaces which may be quickly indexed to a new cutting surface with minimal
down time of the cutting operations and without multiple brazing to minimize elevated
temperatures and potential thermal damage to the superabrasive material. Final objectives
of the invention are to provide a cutting insert which utilizes a relatively thin
section of superabrasive material oriented such that a small surface area of the superabrasive
material is the cutting surface, which cuts through a slicing action, and which has
the larger surface area of the superabrasive material bonded or brazed to a metallic
substrate to minimize stress on the superabrasive material-substrate joint and optimize
retention of the superabrasive material to the metallic substrate.
[0011] Features: In the accomplishment of the foregoing objectives, the invention is a cutting
insert having a support member made of a metallic substrate which is bonded to a cutting
member made of a superabrasive material, wherein the cutting member is shaped in a
thin section and oriented such that at least one surface of the thin dimension of
the cutting member is the cutting surface and the cutting action is that of slicing.
It is also preferable that the thin section of cutting member be set into a pre-cut
slot in the support member. Preferably the cutting insert has a multiplicity of cutting
surfaces and a means for allowing consecutive indexing of each of the cutting surfaces
into the cutting position as a cutting surface becomes dull, fractured or broken.
In the illustrated embodiment, the cutting insert has eight cutting surfaces which
are indexed into the cutting position through the loosening of a mounting bolt, rotating
of the cutting insert to the new cutting surface and retighting of the mounting bolt.
[0012] Preferably the support member is either carbide or a cemented hard metal such as
cemented carbide. The superabrasive material is preferably either a PDC of polycrystalline
diamond, thermally stable polycrystaline diamond or coated thermally stable polycrystaline
diamond, which are manufactured by General Electric Company and sold under the trademarks
STRATAPAXO and GEOSETO; or a BZN@ Compact. The PDC or BZN@ Compact is preferably bonded
to the support member by brazing, and it is also preferable to create a strong bond
between the PDC or BZN@ Compact and support member through the use of a high temperature
brazing alloy. The use of a high temperature brazing alloy can be accomplished if
the PDC which is utilized is the coated thermally stable PDC material as taught in
recently issued U.S. Patent No. 4,738,689. Alternatively, the use of a high temperature
brazing alloy can be accomplished through the brazing techniques and materials taught
in General Electric Company's U.S. Patent Nos. 4,850,523, issued July 25, 1989, and
4,899,922, issued February 13, 1990. The foregoing General Electric Company patents
are assigned to the same assignee as the present invention, and are incorporated herein
by this reference.
THE DRAWING
[0013]
Fig. 1 is a perspective sideview of the cutting insert;
Fig. 2 is an exploded sectional view taken on line 2-2 of Fig. 1; and
Fig. 3 is a vertical section taken on line 3-3 of Fig. 1.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENT
[0014] Referring to Fig. 1, Fig. 2 and Fig. 3, cutting insert 10 has a support member 11
and at least one cutting member 12 attached to the support member 11. Preferably,
there are more than one cutting member 12 attached to the support member 11 and each
cutting member 12 has more than one cutting surface. The support member 11 is the
portion of the insert 10 which allows for indexing and removable attachment of the
insert 10 onto a cutting tool, such as a mining or drilling machine or a chain saw
used in a stone quarry. Depending upon the type of cutting tool, the support member
11 may be of a variety of shapes to accommodate the attaching mechanism of the particular
cutting tool. For a chain saw used in quarrying stone, a preferred shape of the support
member 11 is a box having a first square surface 13, a second square surface 14 opposite
the first square surface 13, and four rectangular sides 15.
[0015] Associated with the support member 11 is an attachment means for indexing and removably
attaching the insert 10 to the cutting tool. A preferable attachment means is an attachment
hole 16 extending through the support member 11 between the first square surface 13
and the second square surface 14 and which is positioned in the center of the square
surfaces 13 and 14. Typically a bolt (not illustrated) extending through the attachment
hole 16 is used to attach the support member 11 to the cutting tool such that the
planes in which the first square surface 13 and second square surface 14 lie are substantially
perpendicular to the direction of the cut being made by the cutting tool.
[0016] The cutting member 12 has at least one cutting surface. The plane in which the cutting
surface lies is substantially perpendicular to the direction of the cut being made
by the cutting tool. Preferably, the cutting member 12 has a first cutting surface
17, which lies substantially parallel to the first square surface 13, and a second
cutting surface 18, which lies substantially parallel to the second Square surface
14. The cutting member 12 is attached to the support member 11 such that the first
cutting surface 17 is the leading portion of the insert 10 which comes into initial
contact with material being cut when the first square surface 13 is the leading surface
of the insert 10, and the second cutting surface 18 is the leading portion of the
insert 10 which comes into initial contact with material being cut when the second
square surface is the leading surface of the insert 10.
[0017] The cutting member 12 is shaped in the form of a thin section having a width which
is substantially less than its depth. The edge of the thin section form the cutting
surfaces, preferably with the longitudinal axis of the cutting member 12 oriented
between the first cutting surface 17 and the second cutting surface 18. The cutting
member 12 is of sufficient length such that the first cutting surface 17 is substantially
in the plane in which the first square surface 13 lies and the second cutting surface
18 is substantially in the plane in which the second square surface 14 lies. Preferably,
the longitudinal axis of cutting member 12 is substantially parallel to the direction
of the cut being made by the cutting tool. For a chain saw insert it is preferred
that the cutting member 12 be a thin rectangular box.
[0018] It is preferred that the cutting member 12 be mated to a pre-cut slot 20 in the support
member 11. For a chain saw insert, the pre-cut slot 20 is located diagonally on one
of the corners of support member 11. The setting of the cutting member 12 into the
pre-cut slot 20 in the support member 11 allows for strong bonding between the support
member 11 and cutting member 12 because of the increased surface area between the
cutting member 12 and the support member 11, and for additional mechanical support
which is provided by the partial encasement of the cutting member 12 in the support
member 11.
[0019] If the shape of the insert 10 is a box, it is preferable to have four cutting members
12 mated into four pre-cut slots 20 located diagonally on each of the four corners
of support member 11. This configuration results in four first cutting surfaces 17
and four second cutting surfaces 18 on insert 10. Assuming that the first square surface
13 is the leading surface of the insert 10, when one of the first cutting surfaces
17 becomes dull, the bolt (not illustrated) extending through attachment hole 16 is
loosened and the insert 10 rotated 90 to a new first cutting surface 17 which is adjacent
to the dull first cutting surface 17. After the four first cutting surfaces 17 have
been used, the bolt extending through attachment hole 16 can be removed, the insert
10 rotated 180° and the bolt replaced so that the second square surface 14 is now
the leading surface of the insert 10, thereby allowing for the utilization of the
four second cutting surfaces 18 by the same 90° rotation process described above.
[0020] The support member 11 is made of a metallic substrate and the cutting member 12 is
made of a superabrasive compact. The metallic substrate used in the support member
11 is preferably carbide or a cemented hard metal, such as cemented carbide. If the
metallic substrate is cemented carbide, it is preferably selected from the group consisting
of cemented tungsten carbide, cemented titanium carbide, cemented tungsten-molybdenum
carbide, and cemented tantalum carbide.
[0021] The superabrasive compact used in the cutting member 12 is preferably a PDC or a
BZN@ Compact. If the superabrasive compact is a PDC, it is preferably selected from
the group consisting of polycrystaline diamond, thermally stable polycrystaline diamond,
and coated thermally stable polycrystaline diamond.
[0022] Preferably, the cutting member 12 is bonded to the support member 11 by brazing using
a brazing alloy 19. One such method of brazing is disclosed in General Electric Company's
U.S. Patent No. 4,850,523, issued July 25, 1989, which has been incorporated herein
by reference. That patent teaches a method for bonding a thermally stable PDC or a
BZN@ Compact to a carbide substrate wherein the carbide substrate is placed in thermal
contact with a neat sink and the thermally stable PDC is placed in thermal contact
with a heat source during the brazing operation. Such fabrication technique avoids
the residual stresses which otherwise would result by virtue of the differential of
the coefficients of thermal expansion between the carbide substrate and the thermally
stable PDC. This brazing technique also takes advantage of the high thermal conductivity
of the thermally stable PDC.
[0023] Another useful brazing technique is disclosed in General Electric Company's U.S.
Patent Serial No. 4,899,922, issued February 13, 1990, which has been incorporated
herein by reference. That patent teaches the brazing of a thermally stable PDC to
a carbide substrate using a brazing alloy having a liquidus above about 700 C and
containing an effective amount of chromium, with the proportion of chromium ranging
between 1% to 20% and advantageously being between 5% and 20% by weight of the braze
alloy composition. In this brazing technique, a thermally stable PDC can be bonded
to a carbide substrate by disposing the chromium-containing braze alloy between the
thermally stable PDC and carbide substrate and furnace brazing the composite. In this
technique, the chromium braze alloy may be placed between the thermally stable PDC
and carbide substrate through the use of a disk, wire, or foil; or, in the alternative,
either the surface of the thermally stable PDC which is to be mated with the carbide
substrate or the entire thermally stable PDC can be coated with the chromium braze
alloy through the use of known deposition technology.
[0024] Kerf width can be obtained using the insert 10 by utilizing a group of the inserts
10 aligned on the longitudinal axis of the cut such that the cutting members 12 of
each successively aligned insert 10 are slightly offset from one another. By arranging
the inserts 10 in this manner, a uniform size of insert 10 can be utilized to obtain
varying kerf widths. This reduces the amount of parts inventory required to maintain
the cutting tool, thereby reducing the cost of the cutting operation. Also, forming
the cutting member 12 in a thin section reduces the cost of manufacture by using less
material than in prior art superabrasive material inserts. The use of the removable
attachment means for attaching the insert 10 onto the cutting tool, such as the described
bolt hole, provides for ease in indexing cutting surfaces or changing inserts with
relatively low down time of the cutting tool and cutting operation, and without repeatedly
exposing the insert to elevated temperatures and potential thermal damage.
[0025] Whereas this invention is here illustrated and described with specific reference
to an embodiment thereof presently contemplated as the best mode in carrying out such
invention, it is to be understood that various changes may be made in adapting the
invention to different embodiments without departing from the broad inventive of concepts
disclosed herein and comprehended by the claims that follow.
1. A cutting insert comprising:
(a) a support member; and
(b) at least one cutting member attached to the support member, the cutting member
having at least one cutting surface and comprising a superabraslve material being
formed such that the cutting member has a width substantially less than its depth
and attached to the support member such that the width is the cutting surface.
2. A cutting insert as recited in Claim 1 wherein the insert has a means for indexing
the insert to different cutting surfaces.
3. A cutting tool as recited in Claims 1 or 2 wherein the superabrasive material is
selected from the group consisting of cubic boron nitride, polycrystaline diamond,
thermally stable polycrystaline diamond and coated thermally stable polycrystaline
diamond.
4. A cutting tool as recited in Claims 1 or 2 wherein the metallic substrate is a
cemented metal carbide.
5. A cutting tool as recited in Claim 4 wherein the cemented metal carbide is selected
from the group consisting of cemented tungsten carbide, cemented titanium carbide,
cemented tungsten-molybdenum carbide and cemented tantalum carbide.
6. A cutting tool as recited in Claims 1 or 2 wherein the support member and the cutting
member are attached to each other by brazing.
7. A cutting insert comprising:
(a) a support member having at least one pre-cut slot therein; and
(b) at least one cutting member attached to the support member, the cutting member
having at least one cutting surface and being formed as to mate to the pre-cut slot
and comprising a superabrasive material being formed such that the cutting member
has a width substantially less than its depth and attached to the support member such
that the width is the cutting surface.
8. A method for making a cutting insert, which comprises attaching a support member
to at least one cutting member, the cutting member having at least one cutting surface
and comprising a superabrasive material being formed having a width substantially
less than depth and attached to the support member such that the width is the cutting
surface.
9. A cutting insert consisting essentially of:
(a) a support member; and
(b) at least one cutting member attached to the support member, the cutting member
having at least one cutting surface and comprising a superabrasive material being
formed such that the cutting member has a width substantially less than its depth
and attached to the support member such that the width is the cutting surface.