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Robots at die-casting machine for vehicle transmission

 
Starting point / Task definition
 

Development work and series start-up for castings tie up machine capacity which would otherwise be available for actual production. Diecasting Technologies Center (DTC), located in Dohna near Dresden, was founded to provide a way around this problem. The company takes on outsourced tasks, doing everything necessary to ready aluminum and magnesium die-cast parts for series production. By outsourcing the very time-consuming and labor-intensive development and series start-up phase from their own plants to DTC, customers save a large amount of time and money. In the course of a planning phase, DTC was looking for an automatic handling solution for the die-casting machine in its own production shop.
 
 
Implementation / Solution
 
Robots at die-casting machine for vehicle transmission
Robots at die-casting machine for vehicle transmission

The choice fell on three KUKA KR 125 robots, which remove parts, spray molds with parting agent, and load thixocasting billets. Through the use of these robots, DTC transformed an “ordinary” casting cell into a fully-automated manufacturing island. This makes it possible to verify the suitability for series production of the entire process, including unloading, cooling and trimming; further optimization is also possible if necessary.

As soon as the die-casting machine opens, the corresponding KR 125 removes the casting. It grips the product on its sprue, meaning that it can handle practically any part, even very large ones. In the next step the robot positions the part in front of sensors, by means of which the controller checks whether it is complete, or whether it is there at all. The robot then immerses the casting, which has a temperature of 300 to 350 °C, into a quenching bath of about 30 °C. It then transfers the part to a trimming press. Also integrated into the sequence is a turnover station, where the part is rotated if necessary before being loaded into the trimming press.

The KR 125 mounted on top of the machine sprays the mold with water-soluble parting agent as soon as the previous part has been released by the controller. This procedure ensures that the next casting can be removed from the mold just as easily.

DTC employs the third KR 125 for the thixocasting process, in which the molten aluminum which is otherwise used is replaced by a billet. The robot picks up a shell in which the billet rests, and then slides the billet out of the shell and into the filling chamber of the machine, or else it takes a free-standing billet from a platform, holding it along its entire length and round its full circumference so as not to deform it, and places it in the chamber.

 
 
System components / Scope of supply
 

  • Three KUKA KR 125 robots
  • Gripper for the thixo billets
  • Various jaws, used to grip the casting either on the sprue or directly on the contours of the part
  • Spray head, which uses high-pressure air to apply water-soluble parting agent
  • PC-based KUKA robot controllers, including control panel with Windows interface
  • The complete customer-specific automation equipment for the die-casting cell
  • Robot programming
  • Stamping press
  • Conveyor system
  • Commissioning

Supplied by the KUKA systems partner FKS Maschinenbau GmbH, Berlin.

 
 
Results / Success
 

  • Resistant to high temperatures

    In order to handle the hot castings, the KR 125 in question was fitted with a so-called foundry wrist, which is resistant to particularly high temperatures.


  • Space-saving

    In order to take up as little space as possible, one of the robots was even mounted in a slanted position, although it was already saving space by being installed on top of the die-casting machine.


  • Very user-friendly

    The Windows interface on the control panel of the PC-based KUKA robot controller makes programming markedly simpler.


  • Higher quality

    The six-axis jointed-arm robot applies the parting agent more selectively than is possible with two-axis linear units. This allows problem areas to be sprayed reliably, for example. The KR 125 is also more economical with the parting agent.


  • Additional benefits

    KUKA robots provide short cycle times, high acceleration capacity, repeatability and an availability of nearly 100 percent.
 
 
 
 
 
Number of report
 
R 178
 
Industry
 
Foundry
Metal products
 
Application
 
Handling, loading and unloading
Metal casting machines, foundry plants
Other handling operations
Machining
Machining
Other machining operations
 
Product
 
Robots
High payloads (80-270 kg)
Foundry robots
Controller
KR C (Robot Controller)
 
Customer
 
Diecasting Technologies Center GmbH (DTC), Dohna, Germany
 

 
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