BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] Although the pistons used in reciprocating type internal combustion engines are nominally
"cylindrical," they'have in practice been contoured or profiled to take into account
the differential thermal expansion that takes place in normal operating conditions.
The head of a piston becomes heated to a significantly higher temperature than the
skirts, and there is thus a temperature gradient along the length of the piston which
means that the piston " grows" to different extents in different axial parts. Moreover,
there are differentials in the growth of the piston at different circumferential locations.
Accordingly, it is common to either grind or machine a piston to a selected circumferential
profile and a selected axial profile to provide desired profiles after the piston
grows due to thermal expansion in operation.
[0002] By far the most common way of forming the desired axial and circumferential profiles
on pistons is by cam-grinding. Cam-grinding involves the use of a grinding stone which
is dressed to an axial profile conforming to the desired axial profile to be put on
the piston. The desired circum- ferential profile is provided by moving the piston
toward and away from the grinding stone (or vice versa) in coordination with the rotation
of the piston, the piston being translated toward and away from the stone (or vice
versa) by a cam having a circumferential profile that matches the desired circumferential
profile formed on the piston (hence, the name "cam-grinding"). Cam-grinding is an
expensive operation in terms of labor time and tooling costs, and it is difficult
to control tolerances because the stone wears at different rates in different places.
Good control over tolerances requires frequent dressing of the stone.
[0003] A small proportion of the total number of pistons produced are finished to the desired
axial and circumferential profiles by machining. Most of the machining techniques
involve the use of a master cam having circumferential and axial profiles matching
the desired profile to be machined on the piston and rotated in one spindle. The workpiece
rotates in another spindle at the same speed, and a cutting tool is guided under the
control of the stylus that follows the master cam, either by a direct mechanical linkage
between the stylus and the tool or by a hydraulic tracing system that is under the
control of the cam. Machine profiling is also expensive, slow, and difficult to control
with precision.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0004] There is provided, in accordance with the present invention, apparatus for simultaneously
forming selected circumferential and axial profiles on a workpiece, the apparatus
being intended primarily for use in a manufacture of pistons but being susceptible
of adaptation to any operation in which it is desired to form different, mutually
perpendicular contours on an object. The apparatus involves rotating the workpiece
about a fixed axis and moving a cutting tool along an axis parallel to that axis of
rotation, the movements of the tool toward and away from that axis to form the profiles
being controlled by a circumferential cam having a circumferential cam surface matching
the desired circumferential profile and a separate axial cam having an axial cam surface
conforming to the axial profile to be ' formed on the workpiece.
[0005] More particularly, the apparatus comprises a carrier that is mounted for movement
toward and away from the workpiece and carries a cutting element for engagement with
the workpiece. The carrier is pushed toward the workpiece by a spring (or an equivalent
device, such as a pneumatic piston that exerts a force but yields) to engage the cutting
element with the workpiece. A suitable drive moves the carrier along an axis parallel
to the axis of rotation of the workpiece. An elongated cam follower bar is mounted
on the carrier for movement relative thereto solely along an axis parallel to and
spaced from the axis of rotation of the workpiece. A circumferential cam is mounted
for rotation conjointly with the workpiece about the axis of rotation thereof, and
an axial cam is mounted on the follower bar, which also carries a circumferential
cam follower that engages the surface of the circumferential cam. Hence the follower
bar tracks the circumferential cam and moves the carrier, and therefore the cutting
element, toward and away from the axis of rotation of the workpiece to form the selected
circumferential profile on the workpiece. An axial cam follower engages the axial
cam and is interposed in series with the circumferential cain follower so that the
carrier also tracks the axial cam. Thus the axial profile is superimposed on the circumferential
profile.
[0006] In the embodiment described in detail below and shown in the drawings, the axial
cam is mounted on a holder that in turn is mounted on the carrier for movement relative
to the carrier toward and away from the workpiece, and the spring or its equivalent
pushes the holder into engagement with the workpiece. In that embodiment the follower
bar tracks the circumferential cam, as described above, and the axial cam on the holder
causes the holder to track the axial cam relative to the follower bar. Thus the movements
of the cutting element are actually a combination of movements originating separately,
first, with the circumferential cam follower on the follower bar which transmits the
circumferential profile to the follower bar and the carrier and, second, with the
axial cam follower which transmits the axial profile from the axial cam to the holder.
[0007] In a mechanically and functionally equivalent variation of the arrangement of the
embodiment shown in the drawings, the axial follower is interposed between the circumferential
follower and the follower bar, and the holder is omitted. In such an arrangement the
path of forces generating movements of the cutting element to form the desired profiles
originates with the circumferential cam follower, which tracks the circumferential
cam and moves the axial follower, which in turn works against the axial cam on the
follower bar. The follower bar in turn moves the carrier and the cutting tool toward
or away from the workpiece. The series relationship between the circumferantial and
axial cams thus automatically the axial and circumferential profiles on the movements
of the cutting tool, as in the embodiment shown in the drawings.
[0008] The apparatus, according to the present invention, may be constructed as a device
that can be attached to commercially available, general purpose machine tools, such
as_ lathes or automatic chuckers, and the embodiment shown in the drawings is indeed
so constructed. On the other hand, the apparatus can be integrated into a machine
that is specially designed for profiling pistons.
[0009] Another aspect of the invention involves a modification of the apparatus to make
it capable of providing different circumferential profiles in different parts of the
piston. For example, the piston head may have a circumferential profile different
from that of the skirts. The modification of the apparatus involves, in one form,
the use of a circumferential cam having two circumferential cam surfaces side by side
and means for shifting the circumferential cam follower from one of such cam surfaces
to the other in coordination with the movement of the carrier parallel to the axis
of rotation of the piston. For example, the absolue position of the follower bar may
be shifted by a guide that is moved parallel to the axis of the follower bar relative
to the circumferential can and a gear or other drive for shifting the guide in coordination
with movement of the machine carriage. In such an arrangement, the movement of the
carriage controls the movement of the follower bar transversely along the circumferential
cam to shift the circumferential cam follower from one of the cam surfaces to the
other. Essentially, the same apparatus can.be used with a circumferential cam that
has several different circumferential cam surfaces or that has a circumferential profile
that varies continuously in the axial direction, thus to vary the circumferential
profile as some function of the axial movement of the carrier in the course of machining
the piston.
[0010] Among the preferred features of the apparatus embodying the present invention are
the following:
1. the carrier is mounted on needle bearings so that it moves smoothly and precisely;
2. the spring pusher applies a force that is substantially parallel to the axis of
movement of the cutting element at a point closely adjacent to such axis of movement,
thereby to minimize any tendency for cocking of the holder due to an eccentric pushing
force;
3. the circumferential cam follower is mounted on the folower arm for adjustment radially
of the circumferential cam so that the diameter of the workpiece can la pre-established
very precisely by setting the proper dimensional relationship between the cutting
element and circumferential cam follower.
[0011] The invention may be better understood by consideration.of the following description
of an exemplary embodinent,taken conjunction with the figures of the accompanying
drawings.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012]
Fig.1 is a front elevational view of apparatus embodying the invention,
Fig. 1a is a fragmentary front elevational view of the apparatus of Fig. 1 on a larger
scale than Fig. 1;
Fig. 2 is a top view partly in full and partly in section of the .apparatus, the plane
of the section being represented generally by the lines 2-2 of Fig. 1;
Fig. 3.iS an end view of the apparatus of Fig. 1 shown partly.in section, and partly
in elevation, as represented by the lines 3-3 of Fig. 1;
Fig. 4 is an end cross-sectional view of a part of the apparatus, the view being taken
generally along the lines 4-4 of Fig.1 and in the direction of the arrows; and
Fig. 5 is a top view in schematic form showing a modification of the apparatus of
Figs. 1 to 4 that permits different circumferential profiles to be formed in different
portions of the cells of a piston.
DESCRIPTION OF AN EMBODIMENT
[0013] The embodiment of the invention shown in Figs. 1 to 5 is an attachment that can be
mounted on a commercially available automatic chucker, the chucker being shown schematically
in the drawings. The chucker includes a spindle 10, a drive, which is enclosed within
a housing 12, for rotating the spindle about a-fixed axis, and a thread- chasing head
14 having a key-shaped slot 16 in which any of a variety of accessory tools can be
mounted in a selected position. The head 14 is mounted on a bar 18 which is moved
axially by a drive (not show along an axis parallel to the axis of rotation of the
spindle. The speed of such movement can be changed by shifting a transmission in the
drive system, and the head 14 and shaft 18 are driven by the drive system in one direction
(to the left in Figs. 1 and 2) and returned in the other direction by a spring return.
The head 14 and shaft 18 are also coupled to a hydraulic mechanism which automatically
lifts them up at the end of a machining operaton, disengages the drive, and rapidly
returns the chasing head in the other direction to the starting point where it is
ready to begin another machining operation on another workpiece.
[0014] It will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art that the present invention
can be.adapted to any sort of machine tool constructed to rotate a workpiece about
a fixed axis and to move a tool along an axis parallel to and spaced from the axis
of rotation of the workpiece, the latter component of such a machine being referred
to herein as a "carriage" and being any mechanically or hydraulically driven revice
capable of moving a cutting element," such as a cucting pit or grinding stone or wheel,
along a path parallel to the exis of rotation of a workplace. The apparatus shown
in Figs. 1 to 4 and described thus far is not, per se a part of the present invention,,
but such components (i.e., a device for rotating a workpiece about a fixed axis and
a device. for moving a cutting element along a path parallel to the akis of rotation
of the workpiece) are necessary for the use of the apparatus of the invention. The
following description that apparatus, which, for convenience, will be referred co
hereinafter as a compound profiling tool, exemplifies the invention in the context
of a commercially available automatic chucker of the type shown schematically in the
drawings
[0015] The compound profiling tool 20 comprises a mounting base 22 which, as viewed in front
elevation (Figs. 1 and 2). is generally rectangular and which includes at the right
end (as viewed frcom the front) a portion 22a that is generally triangular in cross
section and at the left end a portion 22b that is rectangular in cross section. The
back face of the portion 22a is inclined to the vertical to match the inclined aront
face 14a of the chasing head 14. The base 22 is adapted to be mounted on the chasing
head 14 by a bar of "T"-shaped cross section 26 (a T-bar) that slides into the matching
T'slot 16 on the chasing head 14 and is pulled tightly into.,.. engagement with the
cverhanging flanges of the T-slot 16 by bolts 28. A flange 30 projects from the back
face of the base 22 and engagest a lateral surface on the chasing head 14 the flange
30 serving to align the tool with respect to the axis of rotatior. of a workpiece
mounted in the machine, spindle (the drawings illustrating a piston P mounted in the
spindle 10)
[0016] The front face of the base 22 is formed with a wide,shallow vertical slot 32, and
a carrier 34, which is mounte, in the slot 32 for movement vertically, thereby to
move along an axis that lies in a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the
piston P. The carrier 34 is mounted on four sets of needle bearings, one set being
located in each of four vertical races 36, 37, 38 and 39, two of which (37 and 38)
are located in the back face and two of which (38 and 39) are located in oblique side
walls (see particularly Fig. 3). The carrier is held and guided in the slot 32 by
a fixed-position retainer 40 fastened by screws 42 in the left side of the slot and
an adjustable retainer 44 fastened by screws 46 in the right side of the slot. A pair
of adjusting screws 48 threaded through bosses 50 on the base 22 work against the
adjustable retainer 44 and facilitate adjusting the retainer to provide smooth and
precise vertical movement of the carrier relative to the base 22. The top and bottom
walls of the carrier 34 receive bearing retainer plates 52 and 54 which are fastened
by screws 56 and 58 to the carrier 34. The extent of vertical movement of the carrier
34 in the slot 32 is limited by stop screws 60 installed on the base 22 at the top
and bottom of : the slot 32 with their heads projecting from the wall of the slot
for engagement with the end walls of recesses formed in the back wall of the carrier
34. The stop screws 60 are provided merely to retain the carrier in the slot when
the tool 20 is removed from the machine or when it is partly disassembled while on
the machine.
[0017] Itwill be recalled from the foregoing that the chasing head 14 is lifted-up at the
end of each stroke hence an adjustable stop 62, consisting of a screw 64 threaded
into the top end of the carrier 34 and an adjustable collar 66, is provided to prevent
the carrier from shifting downwardly in the slot to a position where the cutting bit
will engage the piston on the return stroke after the piston has been machined and
the head 14 lifts and returns to the right. ;
[0018] As may best be seen in Fig. 3, the front part of the carrier 34 stands out from the
base 22 of the tool, and, as best appears in Figs. 2 and 4, is provided with a horizontal
slot 68. The slot 68 receives with a sliding fit a follower bar 70 of T-shaped cross
section which is retained in the slot and receives guiding-support from a pair of
retainer plates 72 and 74 which are fastened by screws 76 and 78 to the carrier 34.
The follower bar is thus mounted on the carrier solely for movement relative to the
carrier along an axis parallel to the axis of rotation of the piston. An axial cam
80 having a cam surface 82 formed in its upper edge, which surface matches the axial
profile to be formed on the piston T, is fastened by screws 84 to the front face of
the follower bar 70. The axial cam 80 is precisely positioned, relative to the longitudinal
axis of the follower bar 70, by locating pins 86.
[0019] The carrier 34 also has a vertical slot 88 which receives with a sliding fit a holder
90. The holder is adopted to receive a chip-type triangular cutting bit 92 at its
lower end; and an axial cam follower roller 94 carried by a bracket 96 is mounted
at the upper end of the holder 90 by a pair of screws 98.
[0020] The upper end of the holder 90 is engaged by the output plunger 100 of a spring mechanism
102 that is mounted by way of a bracket 104 secured by bolts 106 to the chasing head
14. The spring-driven plunger 100 pushes the holder downwardly,thereby to engage the
roller follower 94 with the axial cam surface 82. As will be more apparent from the
description below of the mode of operation of the tool, it is the spring mechanism
102 which applies the acting force to the tool to push the cutter 92 against the workpiece,
i.e., the piston P,and to keep the followers in tracking engagement with the cams.
[0021] The left end of the follower bar, 70 carries a follower assembly 108, which.includes
a follower roller 110 that engages the circumferential cam surface of a circumferential
cam 112. The cam surface of the cam 112, which is an annular member suitably attached
to a special holder mounted in the machine spindle 10, has a profile that matches
the desired profile to be formed on the piston. The follower assembly 108 includes
a bracket 112 that is affixed to the follower bar .70 and a movable follower roller
carrier 114 that is adjustable vertically with respect to the bracket 112 by an adjusting
screw 116 that bears against the lower end of the rolier carrier 114 and is locked
in position by a set screw 118 The follower assembly 108 is thus adapted for precise
adjustment of the roller relative to the axis of movement of the follower bar 70.
Accordingly, the position of the tip of the cutting tool 92 can be set precisely with
respect to the circumferential cam 112, thus to set up the tool to the precise diameter
of the piston. In practice . this is done by positioning the various components with
the cam followers at predetermined positions, setting a height gauge between the bed
of the machine and the cutting bit 92, and then adjusting the circumferential follower
110 using the adjusting screw 116 to position the bit 92 at the known height above
the bed for the diameter in question.
[0022] In the embodiment of Figs. 1 to 4, the follower bar 70 remains stationary in the
horizontal direction throughout the operation of the apparatus. It is held in that
position by a spring mechanism 118 which consists of a housing 120 secured by screws
122 to the right end of the base 22 and containing a spring 124 which pushes against
the right end of the follower bar 70 by means of a drive pin 126 which projects out
through an axial slot 128 in,the housing 120 and into a groove or hole 130 in the
back wall of the follower bar 70. The spring mechanism 118 yieldably pushes the following
bar 70 to the left, relative to the base 22 of the tool, against a guide roller 132
that is rotatably mounted on a bracket 134, which is, in turn, bolted to the housing
of the automatic chucker machine, and that bears against the circumferential follower
assembly 108.
[0023] Figs. 1 to 4 show the tool part way through a profiling'operation conducted on a
piston P. The operation may be considered to begin when the drive of the chasing nead
14 engages and the chasing head starts to move from right to left. At the beginning
of the operation the base 22 carrier 34 and holder 90 of the tool are positioned somewhat
to the right of the positions shown in the drawings, thus to have the cutting tool
92 positioned a short distance clear to the right of the head end of the piston. The
spring mechanism 118, however, holds the follower bar 70 in the position shown with
the circumferential follower assembly 108 in engagement with the guide roller 132,
thus to retain the circumferential follower 110 in proper tracking position in engagement
with the circumferential cam 112.
[0024] Upon engagement, the chasing head drive moves the chafing head from right to left,
thereby moving the base 22, carrier 34, and holder 90 to the left. The cutting tool
92 is spring-loaded by the spring mechanism 102 downwardly to enqage. the axial follower
94 with the axial cam 80. The vertical position of the axial cam at any instant is
a function of the vertical position of the follower bar 70, which position is under
the control of the position of the circumferential cam follower 110. In other words,
as the base 22, carrier 34 and. holder 90 translate to the left, the vertical position
of the cutting tool 92 is under the control of (1) the circumferential cam by virtue
of the vertical movement as a unit of the : lower assembly 108 and the follower bar
70, and also (2) the axial cam , by virtue of vertical movement of the holder 90 relative
to the carrier as the axial follower 94 tracks the axial cam 80. The holder 90 follows
the axial cam 80 by moving relative to the carrier 34, and the holder 90 and carrier
34 both move with the follower bar 70 as the circumferential cam follower 110 tracks
the circumferential cam 112. Thus, the axial profile is superimposed on the circumferential
profiles as established. respectively, by the axial cam 80 and the circumferential
cam 112. Throughout the profiling operation the follower bar 70, and, therefore, the
circumferential follower mechanism 108, remain horizontally stationary by virtue of
the spring force applied by the spring mechanism 118 between the base 22 (and the
chasing head 14) and the follower bar 70. None- theless, the spring mechanism 118
is inherently a lost-motion device, the spring 124 being loaded progressively as the
chasing head moves to the left.
[0025] At the end of the profiling operation the chasing head 14 and the shaft 18 on which
it is mounted are lifted hydraulically, thereby disengaging the chasing head drive
and enabling the spring return device on the machine to push the chasing head and
the base, carrier and holder of the tool rapidly back to the starting position. When
the chasing head 14: lifts up, it lifts with it the base 22, but the carrier 34, and
therefore the follower bar 70 and cam follower assembly 108, are driven relatively
downwardly by the spring drive 102. The stop assembly 62 on the carrier 34 limits
the amount of downward movement of the parts just referred to. Return of the chasing
head 14 to the starting position ends a cycle of operation.
[0026] The compound profiling tool shown in the and described above is inherently backlash
free; the spring mechanism 113 maintains precise tracking of the roller 110 on the
cam 112, and the drive spring mechanism 102 always pushes down on the holder, which,
in turn, pushes down on the axial cam 80, the follower bar 70, and the circumferential
follower assembly 108. The unidirectional force system, which involves springs that
always act in one direction, assures precise repeatability from piece to piece; all
deflections and movements are ultimately under the influence of the unidirectional
drive springs. Inasmuch as ; the cam surfaces of the tool are, at least in the embodiment
shown in Figs. 1 to 4, curved in only one direction, they are very much less expensive
than the one-to-one master cams used in previously known apparatus for machining compound
. profiles on pistons. The tool of the present invention also permits changing separately
either the circumferential cam or the axial cam with other cams having different profiles,
thus making it very easy to set up the machine to make different pistons.
[0027] Fig. 5 of the drawings illustrates a modification of apparatus embodying the present
invention, the modification being shown schematically and involving only the replacement
of the fixed guide roller 132 which holds the circumferential follower assembly in
tracking position on the circumferential cam and the-substitution of different circumferential
and axial cams for the ones depicted in Figs. 1 to 4 of the drawings.
[0028] More particularly, instead of having the cirocum- ferential follower assembly 108
and the follower bar 70 remain axially stationary throughout the profiling operation,
a mechanism 200 for moving the follower bar is substituted for the fixed guide 132.
The mechanism comprises a spring-loaded plunger 202 which engages the follower head
14 (or it can engage the base 22 of the profiling tool) and has a rack gear 204 located
adjacent one end. The rack gear drives a larger pinion gear 206 which, in turn, drives
a smaller pinion gear 208, the two pinion gears constituting a reducer gear train.
A second spring-loaded plunger 210 having a rack gear 212 meshing with the smaller
pinion gear 208 carries a guide roller 214 which engages the circumferential follower
assembly 108.
[0029] The device 200 shown in Fig. 5 is used in conjunction with a circumferential cam
216 which has two or more circumferential cam surfaces in different adjacent bands,
each such surface being shaped to match a selected circum- ferential profile to be
formed in a selected axial part of the piston. The cam 216 may, alternatively, have
a surface formed with a profile that varies along its axial extent, thus to vary continuously
the circumferential profile along the axial extent of the piston. The operation of
the modified structure of Fig. 5 is very similar to that of the embodiment shown in
Figs. 1 to 4, the only difference being that the guide 214 moves to the left in a
proportion established by the gear ratio in the mechanism 200 in response to the movement
of the chasing head in the course of the profiling operation, During the first part
of the operating cycle the circumferential profile of the right part of the cam 216
(as -viewed in Fig. 5) is formed on the head end of the piston, and for the remainder
of the cycle, the circumferential profile of the left portion of the circumferential
cam 216 : is formed on the piston. The transition between the two profiles can occur
at a ring groove.
[0030] It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous variations and modifications
of the compound profiling tool shown in the drawings can be made without departing
from the spirit and scope of the invention. One such modification involving relocation
of the axial cam and cam follower so that they are located between the circumferential
cam follower and the follower bar has been described in the section entitled "Summary
of the Invention" hereof. Another modification is the elimination of the spring mechanism
118 which holds the circumferential follower assembly 108 and the follower bar assembly
70 in the desired position in tracking relation to the circumferential cam 112 or
the modified assembly shown in Fig. 5 and the substitution therefor of a vertical
guide assembly associated with the circumferential follower. For example, such an
assembly may involve a pair of guide rollers substituted for the rollers 132 or 214,
one such guide roller being located on either side of the follower assembly 108 to
hold it in the desired fixed or movable position axially-(with respect to the follower
bar 70) while permitting it to track the cam radially relative to the axis of rotation
of the piston.
1. Apparatus for simultaneously forming a selected circumferential profile and a selected
axial profile on a workpiece mounted for rotation about a fixed axis comprising a
carrier mounted for movement toward and away from the workpiece and carrying a cutting
element for engagement with the workpiece; means for yieldably pushing the carrier
toward the workpiece to engage the cutting element therewith for work thereon; means
for moving the carrier along an axis parallel to the axis of rotation of the workpiece;
an elongated cam follower bar mounted on the carrier for movement relative thereto
solely along an axis parallel to and spaced from the axis of rotation of the workpiece;
a circumferential cam mounted for rotation conjointly with the workpiece .about the
axis of rotation of the workpiece and having a circumferential cam surface - matching
the circumferential profile to be formed on the workpiece; an axial cam mounted on
the follower bar' and having an axial cam surface matching the axial profile to :
be formed on the workpiece; a circumferential cam follower engaging the circumferential
cam surface and interposed between the circumferential cam and the follower bar and
therefore the carrier tracks the circumferential cam thereby to move the cutting element
toward and away from - the axis of rotation of the workpiece and form the selected
circumferential profile: thereon; means for controlling any movement of the follower
bar along its axis relative to the circumferential cam; and an axial follower engaging
the axial cam surface and interposedé, in series with the circumferential cam follower
between the axial cam and the cutting element such that the cutting element tracks
the axial cam and the axial profile is superimposed on the circumferential profile
in the movement of the cutting tool parallel to the workpiece thereby to form the
axial profile on the workpiece simultaneously with the circumferential profile.
2. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the carrier includes a holder that is mounted
thereoin for movement relative thereto solely in a direction toward and away from
the workpiece, the cutting element being mounted on the holder, wherein 'the' holder
carries the axial cam follower, and wherein the means pushing the warrier toward the
workpiece engages the holder which in turn pushes the follower bar and the carrier
toward warkpiece the workpiece.
3. A tool for use in a machine which has means for mutating a workpiece- about an
axis and a carriage for wing tool along a path parallel to that axis, the ol being
adapted to cut simultaneously in a workpiece placed in the machine at least one selected
circumferential profile and at least one selected longitudinal profile and comprising
a carrier for a cutting element having a base part adapted to be affixed to the tool
moving means of machine and a movable part mounted on the base part movement toward
and away from the workpiece along an axis lying in a plane substantially perpendicular
to, the axis of rotation of the workpiece; a circumferential cam; having a circumferential
cam surface shaped to match the selected circumferential profile to be formed on the
workpiece and being adapted to be connected to said means for rotating the workpiece
for rotation conjointly with the workpiece about the axis of rotation thereof; a follower
bar mounted in a guideway on the movable part of the carrier along a longitudinal
axis relative to the carrier parallel to and spaced from the axis of rotation of the
workpiece and having a cam follower thereon positioned to engage the circumferential
cam surface; means for controlling any movement of the follower bar along said longitudinal
axis relative to the circumferential cam while permitting the follower bar to move
transversely of said axis and parallel to the direction of movement of the movable
part of the carrier and thereby track the circumferential cam; a longitudinal cam
having a cam surface matching the- selected longitudinal profile to be formed on the
workpiece and mounted on the follower bar with the can. surface oriented relative
to the axis of the workpiece to match the selected longitudinal profile to be formed
thereon; a holder mounted in a guideway on the movable part of the carrier for movement
along an axis lying in a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the workpiece
and adapted to receive a cutting elemen and having a cam follower thereon positioned
to engage the longitudinal cam surface; and means engaging the holder for yieldably
pushing the holder toward the workpiece and for thereby maintaining the cam follower
thereon in tracking, engagement with the longitudinal cam and the cam follower on
the follower bar in tracking engagement with the circumferential cam.
4. A tool according to claim 3 wherein the means for controlling the axial movement
of the follower - bar includes a guide located in a fixed position relative to the
circumferential cam and spring means acting between the base part of the carrier and
the follower t bar for yieldably pushing the follower bar into engagement with the
guide while the carrier moves with the machine carriage and relative to the follower
bar.
5, A tool according to claim 3 wherein the profile of the circumferential cam is different
in different circumferential bands thereof, thus to provide different circumferential
profiles on the workpiece in different longitudinal parts thereof in correspondence
to the circumferential cam profiles, and wherein the means for controlling movement
of the follower bar includes a guide mounted for movement parallel to the axis of
the follower bar relative to the circumferential cam, means responsive to movement
of the machine carriage for moving the guide along said parallel axis thus to change
the track of the circumferential follower on the circumferential cam surface from
one such band to another, and spring means acting between the base part of the