Notes
on the Construction and Design of Instruments and Apparatus
Source:
Procedures in Experimental Physics
by John
Strong
The cutting of
metals. In essence, the cutting of metal in the lathe, the milling
machine, and so forth, amounts to the continuous driving of a hard-metal
wedge, the tool, under the surface layer of the work. Fig. 1 illustrates
a typical tool. In the lathe the work moves and the tool is stationary,
while in the milling machine the opposite is the case. This difference,
however, is immaterial. The important factors are the cutting angle, the
rake, the clearance, and the speed and feed with which the cutting operation
is carried out.
Fig. 1.
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The cutting angle
is illustrated in Fig. 1. For hard and brittle metals it is best to have
this angle large; for soft tenacious metals it is best to have the cutting
angle small. For example, the cutting angle usually varies from 75
for I brass and cast iron to 40
for steel and even less for copper and aluminum. Thin, keen tools with
a small cutting angle will not stand up under severe cutting conditions
as well as the blunt ones, because the blunt tools conduct heat away from
the tip more effectively.
The rake angle is
illustrated in Figs. 1 and 2. The dimension of the rake angle determines
the amount of deformation or cold working of the metal chip removed. This
cold working is diminished, and the heat generation is also diminished
when the rake angle is increased. With large rake angles the forces acting
between the chip, or turning, and the tool are more tangential than normal.
It is desirable to diminish normal forces when cutting soft tenacious
metals which tend to stick to the tool. For brass, the rake angle should
be nearly zero-it may be even a little less than zero. (See Fig. 2.)
Fig.
2.
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In the lathe the
clearance angle is the angle included between the inner surface of the
tool and the direction of relative motion at the tip of the tool. (See
Fig. 1.) It is important, especially for boring, to have this angle great
enough to prevent the heel of the tool from riding on the work. Clearance
angles vary from 35 for soft
tenacious metals to 10
for cast iron and brass.
The higher speeds
of the lathe should be used for cutting brass except when turning castings
or using the cutting-off tool. Unless the proper speed is used with the
cutting-off tool, it will chatter. The proper speed and feed for this
tool depends upon the size of the work, but in general these factors are
to be determined by trial. A wooden plug inserted in a tube lessens chattering
when the cutting-off tool is used. Fig. 3 shows a method of shaping a
cutting-off tool which minimizes chattering. In this tool, side rake is
balanced against asymmetry of the end so that the tool cuts squarely into
the material. The point of the tool is ground on the side of the tool
adjacent to the piece on which a finished edge is desired. The other piece
may exhibit a slight burr.
Fig. 3. Cutting-off
tool
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For cutting steel,
the speed should be as fast as the tool will stand without burning. For
final cuts, however, a moderate speed gives a better finish.
Tools with a round
nose give smooth finish cuts. Fig. 4 shows such a tool having about 10
clearance for cutting either brass or cast iron. The tool shown here has
a slight double side rake, and it will cut in the direction of either
the headstock or the tailstock. The function of a lubricant in cutting
metals is in most cases primarily to cool the chip and tool to prevent
sticking. Brass, bronze, and cast iron may be machined dry, (except in
the operations of tapping, knurling, and polishing, for which machine
oil is used). Soluble oil or lard oil is used for tenacious metals such
as steel. Kerosene or turpentine is often used for aluminum. Milk may
be used for copper. Lead and babbitt are turned dry, but they are oiled
for filing, drilling, and threading.
Fig.
4. Finishing tool
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The lathe.
The lathe is by far the most versatile machine in the shop. It can accomplish
nearly all the operations that are done on other machines, such as the
miller, the shaper, the grinder, the drill press, and so forth, besides
the many operations which it alone can do. For this reason it seems
right that we should devote some space to a discussion of its properties.
The essential parts
of the lathe are the spindle, tailstock, saddle (or carriage), ways,
slide rest, and compound rest. The spindle is supplied with power and
rotates in close-fitting bearings, which constrain it to turn on a single
fixed axis. The tailstock is a socket, the axis of which is supposed
to coincide with the axis of rotation of the spindle. It is mounted
on guides in the ways so that its distance from the end of the spindle
may be fixed to suit the work at hand. The saddle, or carriage, is used
primarily to support a cutting tool and to allow it motion parallel
to the axis of rotation of the work. The ways are metal guides on which
the carriage and tailstock move. They are formed on the bed, or framework
of the lathe, and are supposed to be parallel to the axis of the spindle.
The slide rest consists of ways with a slide. Its ways are supposed
to be perpendicular to the axis of rotation. It is mounted on the saddle,
and serves to adjust the distance of the tool from the axis of the spindle.
The compound rest also consists of a set of ways with a slide. It is
mounted on the slide rest and can be adjusted to move the tool that
it carries in any horizontal direction with respect to the axis of the
spindle.
Lathes are usually
equipped with two chucks, one with three jaws and the other with four.
In the three-jawed chuck the jaws are moved by the rotation of a spiral
or scroll within the body of the chuck. This system is mechanically very
poor. The jaws never approach the center at the same rate. As a consequence,
round objects mounted in it are seldom accurately centered. If the chuck
will center work within 0.003 of an inch, it is about all that can be
expected. The three-jawed chuck is good only for work in which all the
surfaces are to be turned at one setting, the work then being cut off.
Once the work is removed from the chuck it is practically impossible to
replace it concentric with the surfaces already done.
In the four-jawed
chuck the jaws are capable of independent adjustment. Therefore the accuracy
of the centering of the work in a four-jawed chuck will depend upon the
skill of the mechanic. With a dial indicator, and a little practice, work
can be centered within 0.0002 of an inch in 5 or 10 minutes. The four-jawed
chuck can also be used for holding eccentric or irregular work.
A dial indicator
is a measuring device which can be mounted on the tool post in such a
way that a projecting 1 inch lever or plunger will bear against the work
as it turns. The dial then indicates the eccentricity of the work directly
in thousandths of an inch. It can be supplied with attachments for reaching
into holes. It is sometimes desirable, however, to center a piece of work
on a prick-punch mark. In this case a pencil with a rubber eraser in its
end may be used. The tip is inserted in the prick-punch mark, and the
eraser is placed in the tailstock. The indicator is then placed to bear
against the pencil, and as the work is rotated, it shows the eccentricity
of the punch mark.
Fig. 5.
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The primary operation
which a lathe can perform is to execute a truly circular cut on a piece
of material. This operation is accomplished by mounting the work directly
on the spindle, or by mounting it between the spindle and the fixed bearing
in the tailstock, so that it can be rotated against the tool. The perfection
of roundness of the work depends in either case upon the perfection of
the spindle bearings. If the spindle wobbles, the tool cut is, of course,
not true.
The tool is mounted
so that it can be moved in a horizontal plane passing nearly through the
rotation axis. As the work rotates, the moving tool makes a continuum
of circular cuts. These generate, in general, a conical surface. Of the
possible cones two are of special interest in machine work: one, that
of zero taper, is the cylinder, and the other, that of infinite taper,
is the flat surface produced by a facing cut. All others come under the
head of taper cutting.
Generation of a cylindrical
surface is possible if the tool moves truly parallel to the axis of rotation
of the work. In practice this is never the case, although in good lathes
the error is usually negligible. When the work is mounted on the spindle,
this parallel motion of the tool in respect to the axis is possible only
if the ways of the carriage are parallel to the spindle, and if the ways
themselves are straight. They are usually quite straight in the horizontal
sense, but in the vertical sense the wearing of the ways tends to make
them concave, with the result that the carriage moves up and down as it
travels. For this reason it is always desirable to have the tip of the
tool at the same height from the ways as the axis of rotation, for the
error introduced by its up and down motion is then minimized.
Fig.
6.
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If the work is mounted
on dead centers, that is, if it is supported on conical points between
the spindle and the tailstock and is turned by a dog bearing on the face
plate, then truth of the work depends upon parallelism of the ways to
a line between the two points, or centers. The tailstock is usually in
error. It may be out of line laterally, a fault that one can usually correct
by taking a trial cut, measuring the two ends, and setting the tailstock
over again, using the adjusting screws which are usually provided. If
the tailstock center is too high or too low, there is little to be done
except to keep the tool at the average height of the two centers, thus
minimizing the errors. Sometimes the ram, or plunger, in the tailstock
which carries the center does not move parallel to the axis of the spindle.
Thus, it may be well centered when the ram is retracted but not when the
ram is extended. Sometimes the tip of the dead center, that is, the center
in the tailstock, is bent or worn, in which case the remedy is obvious.
If the live center, the one in the spindle, is untrue, it makes no difference
unless the work is to be reversed and further machined. The live center
is usually of soft steel, and for nice work it is common practice to true
it by turning down its tip before mounting the work.
One way to turn a
cylinder of uniform diameter is to lash the work to the face plate with
thongs and to support it with a follower rest mounted on the carriage
directly opposite the tool. This practice will insure uniformity of diameter
but will not insure the straightness of the work. Sometimes in machining
slender objects, one end of the work is held in a chuck while the other
end is supported by the tailstock. This is bad practice, for the removal
of the material from the work may relieve internal stresses, especially
in cold-rolled steel and in rolled or drawn brass. As a result, when the
work is removed from the lathe, it is found to be bent, the tailstock
having supported the work in a flexed condition. The better practice is
to support the work between centers, using a follower rest to prevent
flexure. Occasionally, a second tool is mounted on the opposite side of
the work and in an inverted position. This serves to preserve the uniform
diameter of the work. In thread cutting it can also serve to reduce the
drunkenness of a long screw thread, but it obviously requires very accurate
setting of the two tools.
Fig. 7.
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In boring cylindrical
holes, if the work is mounted on the spindle, the truth of the work is
solely dependent upon the truth of the ways. If the work is mounted on
the carriage, however, a boring bar can be threaded through the rough
bored hole and mounted between dead centers. A tool mounted on this bar
describes a very nearly perfect circle, and as the work is fed over it,
a hole of uniform diameter is automatically generated. The straightness
of the ways determines the straightness of the hole, but parallelism (or
the lack of it) of the ways to the axis of the spindle or to the axis
of the boring is of no moment. For short holes a fly cutter may be mounted
on the spindle, and the result will be the same as with a boring bar.
In most work which can be mounted on the spindle the hole is bored to
almost the required size, and then a reamer is passed through it to bring
it to size and uniform diameter.
In turning long tapers,
a taper attachment should be used, if one is available. If not, the work
is mounted on dead centers, and the tailstock is set over the proper amount.
The angle of taper is a function of both the amount of the setover and
the length of the work. Since the length of the work, that is, the distance
between the points where the axis of the work intersects the axes of the
headstock and the tailstock, cannot be accurately measured, it is impossible
to predetermine the exact angle of the taper which will be cut. Consequently,
the amount of setover of the tailstock must be determined by trial.
Fig.
8. See Wright, W.H., Pub. Lick Obs., 9, 50 (1907).
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The compound-slide
rest is used to cut short tapers. It is usually the least accurate feature
of the lathe, so that high precision with it is not to be expected. The
graduations l which are used to determine the angle of motion are generally
very inaccurate and should be regarded only as something on which to base
an estimate. The slide, because of its shortness, is usually not straight.
It can nevertheless be used successfully for turning and boring short
tapers to match, such as for lug valves and stopcocks, since the errors
of curvature can be made to match. The female part is first mounted on
the spindle, and the tapered hole is bored with the boring tool cutting
on the far side of the hole, the lathe running backwards. When this is
done, the face plate or chuck holding the piece should be removed bodily
from the lathe, leaving the work undisturbed. This will permit the replacing
of it for further operations, if necessary, without having to recenter
the work. The male taper is then mounted, preferably between dead centers,
and turned, the compound rest being used as it was set for boring, thereby
insuring that the tapers will match. If the slide is not straight, the
tool should be set so that its tip overhangs the slide as much as did
the boring tool for the female part. If the same part of the slide is
used, the errors in one taper will match those of the other. The male
part, being on dead centers, may be removed from the lathe and tried in
the female part and replaced for further machining, until the desired
fit is obtained. For the final fit they should be lapped together with
Bon Aim or some other suitable abrasive. (See Fig. 5.)
We cannot go into
the arts of filing and scraping. They are treated in many of the standard
works on machine practice and tool making. Filing and scraping afford
the machinist opportunity for the fullest display of his manual skill.
Both are, like the figuring of an optical surface, a process of delicate
testing alternated with the careful manual removal of metal in order to
obtain the desired surface. In filing, the testing is usually executed
with the ordinary measuring instruments-the straightedge, the square,
and the calipers. In scraping, the testing is done with Prussian blue,
and always the two parts are scraped until an intimate and complete contact
between them is obtained. Testing flats are made three at a time. The
three plates are each scraped until any one of them will make satisfactory
contact with either of the other two.
From the above discussion
it will be noted that the limits of accuracy characteristic of the different
operations can be roughly classified. There are, on the one hand, operations
such as the generation of a circular cut, or the fitting of a taper to
a cone by lapping, which are automatically accurate to a high degree.
There are other operations which depend upon the truth built into the
machine, for example, the cutting of a straight cylinder in a lathe or
the milling of ways. Finally, there are those operations which depend
upon the skill of the machinist. Examples are the mounting of work in
the machine in order to have new cuts consistent with former ones, and
the execution of filing operations to a line. There are many opportunities
for the machinist to use his ingenuity to advantage in the attainment
of precision. We have already mentioned examples in which the cuts on
work in the three-jawed chuck are all done at one mounting, and in which
the same part of the compound-slide ways are used for cutting male and
female tapers, and so forth.
Fig. 9. Moments
of inertia of other sections can be found in mechanical-engineering
handbooks.
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Soft soldering.
Good soldered joints require thorough cleaning and, in addition, the use
of a so-called "flux." The function of the flux is to etch the surface
free of contamination and protect it, as well as the solder, from oxidation.
The most useful flux
for soft soldering is made from a mixture of 2 parts zinc chloride to
1 part ammonium chloride dissolved in a minimum amount of water. This
flux is often spattered about when the soldering copper is applied, and
unless it is thoroughly removed, it promotes corrosion, especially on
iron. If the work is washed with soda solution, the corrosive action of
zinc chloride and acid flux is, in large measure, neutralized. In addition
to corrosion, the spattered flux may also give rise to electrically conducting
surface layers on parts of the apparatus where high insulation is required.
For such work, a solution of rosin in alcohol is an excellent nonconducting
flux (for soldering copper wires). Also, so-called- noncorrosive pastes
are available at most hardware stores. These are made from vaseline (90
per cent) and ammonium chloride (10 per cent).
Three things are
needed for successful soldering. In addition to cleanliness and flux,
sufficient heat is required. Some soldering is done entirely with a flame,
while some is done entirely with a soldering iron. However, the nicest
jobs are done with a combination of these, especially when the work is
on complicated apparatus and when several relatively large parts are to
be joined together. A soft flame played over the surface of the whole
work supplies basic heat, keeping the work at a temperature of 125
to 150C.
The higher temperature that is required for soldering is then obtained
locally by the application of the hot soldering copper. This soldering
procedure minimizes the danger of melting off parts previously joined,
a possibility to contend with when a flame alone is used. Also, the amount
of solder added and the extent to which the solder flows is more easily
controlled with the soldering copper than with a flame alone. On the other
hand, the use of a flame to supply basic heat facilitates heating with
the soldering iron and increases the effectiveness with which the molten
solder can be made to wet the work and flow as desired.
A seam to be soldered
is first "tinned" at a high heat, and then at a lower temperature a fillet
is made with the help of the soldering copper. The purpose of the fillet
is to insure that the solder does not draw away and allow an opening to
form in the seam as it cools. Fig. 6 shows how a recess cut in an inconspicuous
place will serve the same purpose as a fillet.
Fig.
10. Timoshenko, S., Theory of Elastic Stability. New York:
Mcgraw-Hill Book Company, 1936. See also "Proposed Rules for
the Construction of Unfired Pressure Vessels Subjected to External
Pressure," Mechanical Engineering, April, 1934. Graphical
solutions are given in this reference for short as well as long
tubes.
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Many of the alloy
steels, as well as cast iron, magnesium, aluminum, tungsten, and molybdenum,
cannot be easily soft-soldered.
Hard soldering.
Although there are some intermediate solders which melt at temperatures
between the melting temperatures of soft solder and silver solder, they
have never had wide use. These solders may be useful in special cases,
but for general work they do not have the reputation of silver solder,
which, for strength, ductility, wetting power, penetration, and resistance
to corrosion, is unsurpassed.
The heat for silver
soldering is obtained with the oxyacetylene torch for large work and with
an air-gas or oxygen-gas torch for small work. The metal to be soldered
is preheated, with the application of the flame favoring those parts which
are most massive and which have the highest heat conduction. A general
preheating of the whole work prevents warping and also facilitates the
intense final heating of the joints that are to be brazed.
The regions to be
wet and joined by the silver alloy are painted with a thin paste mixture
of 5 to 10 parts of powdered borax, 1 part powdered boracic acid, and
water. Dry borax can also be used. The use of paste has the advantage
of neatly defining the areas which will be wet with the alloy. The alloy
will spread over the surface only to the extent that it has been brushed
with the paste. The flux for stainless steel is made from 1 part borax
and 1 part boracic acid, and these powders are wet with a saturated zinc
chloride solution.
For large work the
silver solder is applied in the form of wire or rod after the work is
well fluxed and has attained the proper temperature. The solder wire should
also be coated with flux. For small work small pieces of silver solder,
either short lengths of wire or bits of sheet solder, may be applied,
together with flux, before the work is heated. When the parts to be joined
fit together neatly, only a film of the silver solder is needed to give
a good joint. The use of more solder is wasteful. Charcoal (medicated
so that it does not burn) and asbestos blocks can be used for holding
the work and for proper positioning of the parts to be joined. (See Fig.
7.)
Fig. 11.
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After the joint is
made, the flux is best removed by quenching the work in cold water. This
procedure is not recommended for large parts or for those requiring high
accuracy, since some warping is always produced by quenching. Borax flux
will dissolve slowly in hot dilute sulphuric acid in cases in which such
treatment can be applied.
Fig.
12.
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Spot welding.
Another much-used method of joining metals in the laboratory is spot welding
with an electric current. Ordinarily, the spot-welding apparatus obtains
its electric energy from a transformer with a capacity of 1 or 2 kilowatts.
The primary winding is connected to the alternating-current supply and
it is equipped with taps or is connected in series with a rheostat to
control the welding current. The secondary winding is usually a few turns
of heavy copper wire on rod (about 5/32 inch in diameter), with the winding
ratio such that the secondary delivers about 6 volts. The heavy copper
winding terminates at two copper electrodes, which serve to apply the
potential to the joint to be welded. The welding is effected by the Joule
heat generated between the metal surfaces to be welded when the current
is passed in the primary of the transformer for a fraction of a second.
The heating produced is regulated by the rheostat and by the length of
the time that the switch is closed. The electrodes are brought in contact
with the work, and a definite pressure is applied, usually by means of
a foot pedal. The pressure and duration of the current are important.
Inadequate pressure results in burning and "spitting" at the joint, while
too much pressure decreases the joint resistance and consequently the
heating action.
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Metals which weld
together best are those of similar melting temperature .
and heat conduction K. Table I shows the relative spot-welding
characteristics of the different laboratory metals as determined by Espe
and Knoll. Wires with different melting temperatures and heat conductivities
weld together best when their diameters d are related as follows:
.
(1)
Instrument design.
Defections. The subject of instrument design is one to which a
great many authors have given
their attention. We will treat of the general aspects of the subject,
such as the application of the principle of kinematical design and the
calculation of deflections and flexures as they pertain to instruments.
Fig. 13.
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When an element of
an instrument is subjected to varying forces that are due to uneven friction
between the moving parts, the designer must be able to determine the effect
of these variations.
Such problems are
often difficult to solve precisely, owing to the complex geometry involved.
However, it is often sufficient for the designer to know the answer to
within 50 or 100 per cent. Estimations to this accuracy are often possible
if one makes an ingenious choice of a simple geometric shape whose deflection
may be taken as a first approximation to the deflection of the part in
question. The formulas for determining the deflections of the simple geometrical
shapes, variously loaded and supported, are given in Fig. 8. The moments
of inertia of the cross section of beams about the axis passing through
their center of gravity are required for these calculations. The moments
of inertia for rectangular bars, rods, tubes, and I-beams are given
in Fig. 9.
Fig.
14.
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Fig. 10 gives the
formulas for calculating the collapsing pressures for spherical and cylindrical
shells and plane circular plates loaded with an external pressure. These
formulas are useful for designing vacuum tanks.
In making apparatus,
the physicist seldom needs, for reasons of economy, to limit the mass
of the instrument. Accordingly,
for the construction of spectrometers and other instruments, which require
very accurate relative positioning of the various elements, the physicist
often uses an I-beam of generous proportions and excessive strength.
If the instrument is a spectrometer, one or more of the faces of the I-beam
are planed to afford a base for the mounting of lenses, slits, and a prism
or grating table.
Kinematical design.
The different ways in which the principle of kinematical design
may be used for positioning the various elements of an instrument are
illustrated by Figs. 11 to 23.
Fig. 15.
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According to the
principle of kinematical design, a body must have at least (6-n)
points in contact with a second reference body if it is to have only n
degrees of freedom, relative to the reference body. Fig. 11 shows a spherical
ball held in a trihedral cavity in a plate by the force of gravity. Relative
to the plate, the center of the ball is uniquely defined by the three
contacts with the plate. There remain three degrees of freedom of rotation
for the ball about three mutually perpendicular axes.
Fig.
16.
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The principle of
kinematical design is further illustrated by Fig. 12, which shows a tripod
with a ball at the extremity of each of its legs. The plate on which the
tripod rests has a V-groove and a trihedral cavity in its surface.
One ball rests in the cavity, the second in the groove, and the third
on the plane surface of the plate. When one of the balls is in the trihedral
cavity, then, as far as translations are concerned, the tripod may be
regarded as fixed by the three points of bearing between the ball and
the sides of the trihedral cavity. If, however, a second foot rests in
the V-groove, there are two more point contacts between the ball
and the sides of the groove. The tripod is now restrained by five point
contacts and has, accordingly, one degree of freedom, which is a rotation
about an axis passing through the centers of the constrained balls. The
tripod's position is finally completely determined when the third leg
comes to rest on the plane, giving the sixth point of contact.
Fig. 17.
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Fig. 13 shows another
way in which the tripod may have its position uniquely defined relative
to a base plate. Here the terminal balls of the tripod legs rest in radial
grooves machined in the plate. Each ball makes two contacts with the base
plate, making a total of six contacts.
These applications
of kinematical design are often useful, as, for example, when the base
plate is attached to an instrument and the tripod carries some element
which must be repeatedly removed and replaced in exactly the same position.
The application shown in Fig. 13 has the advantage over the one shown
in Fig. 12 that the centers of the table and the base plate have the same
relation to each other laterally, independent of difference in their temperature
expansion.
Fig.
18.
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Fig. 14 shows a case
in which one degree of freedom, that is, of translation, is achieved by
placing two balls in V-grooves, with the third on a flat surface.
Five contacts between the plate and the tripod are involved.
Other examples of
the achievement of one degree of freedom by five appropriate contacts
are shown in Figs. 15 to 19. The method shown in Fig. 15, and especially
Fig. 16, is often used for typewriter carriages.
Figs. 17 and 18 are
more or less self-explanatory. In Fig. 17 gravity acts as the so-called
locator. The locator, as its name implies, insures that the bearing points
remain in contact. The arrangement shown in Fig. 18 is used by the Leitz
Company for the vertical motion of their microscope tube.
Fig. 19 shows a simple
and easily constructed device used to move a Foucault testing knife edge.
Its design is kinematical.
Fig. 19.
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In most of the examples
given here the contacting areas are small. Accordingly, the wear on them
may be great. Often, in practice, point contacts are extended to line
contacts as shown in Figs. 20, 21, and 22. Or, point contacts may be extended
to surface contacts, as shown in Fig. 24. Even so, one still retains substantially
all of the virtues of the more rigorous type of design, where contact
areas are small. And, in addition, wear is materially reduced.
Fig. 20 shows how
one degree of freedom is achieved for focusing the reading microscope
of the Cambridge Instrument Company's comparator. Fig. 21 shows a type
of support which might be used for an optical bench. For example, with
it a lens holder may be moved back and forth along two horizontal rods
and clamped at any desired position.
Fig.
20
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Fig. 22 illustrates
how one degree of rotation may be obtained. The rod involved here may
also translate along its axis unless a constraint is applied, as, for
example, a fixed ball in contact with the end of the rod.
Fig. 23 shows how
geometrical design may be applied to a tangent screw.
Generally, the construction
of an instrument is easier if the design follows the kinematical principle
than it is when constructed in accordance with the practices of conventional
machine design. Conventional designs, in which one uses cones, ways, and
lapped journals to achieve one degree of freedom, either lead to overconstraint
in the position of the 3 parts or they are not uniquely defined. Only
five contacts are required to constrain the parts as desired; any more
are redundant, like the fourth leg of a stool.
Fig. 21.
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Although one degree
of translation is achieved easily by following the kinematical principle,
as we have seen in Figs. 14 to 21, the conventional cone, when properly
lapped, affords a better construction for the achievement of one degree
of freedom of rotation.
One feature of the
kinematical design which distinguishes it is exemplified by the figures
illustrating one degree of translation, such as Fig. 17; although the
motion may not be straight, owing to imperfect construction, still it
is possible to predict the deviation from straightness from the measured
errors of construction.
Fig.
22.
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Steel balls are often
used in kinematical design. They are obtainable matched in size to 0.00005
inch, and in addition they are truly spherical to this accuracy. Precision
balls can be obtained which are spherical to within a tenth of the limit
mentioned above.
Fig. 25 shows a good
design of an adjustable mirror cell. It will be noted that this cell has
four adjusting screws. Because it facilitates the making of the adjustments,
this number is recommended instead of three, in spite of the fact that
one of the screws is not needed, and its use leads to strain in the cell.
Vibrationless
supports. Many delicate instruments, and particularly high-sensitivity
galvanometers, must be protected from the vibrations produced by automobiles
in the street, elevators, machinery in the basement, and vibrations from
other sources which are always present in a building. In most cases, the
vertical components of these vibrations are harmless and can be ignored.
Although the effect of the horizontal components on an instrument such
as a galvanometer may be small, especially if the moving system is dynamically
balanced on its suspension fiber, it is, however, necessary for the most
delicate work to eliminate these horizontal components as far as possible
by mounting the instrument on a vibrationless support.
Fig. 23. Here
a locator (not Shown) will be required to maintain the contacts.
A better construction would have the plane, which controls the orientation
of the nut, on the opposite side of the screw.
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The problems involved
in obtaining a suitable support are similar to some of the problems encountered
in designing a seismograph, and anyone planning to develop a special vibrationless
support of his own design will find the literature on seismographs helpful.
Briefly, all vibrationless supports can be considered as an oscillating
system loosely coupled mechanically to the walls, ceiling, or floor of
the room. The shielding effect of the support is determined by the resonance
between it and the wall. For example, if the natural period of oscillation
of the support is long compared to that of the vibrations of the wall,
it will be so far out of resonance that its response will be feeble. It
is, of course, necessary that the support be damped so that its own natural
oscillations will be suppressed. Also, it must be protected from air currents.
Naturally, one selects the most stable place for mounting the vibrationless
support. A pier which has a separate foundation from the rest of the building
is ideal.
Fig.
24. Semi-kinematical design of the support for the base plate of
the instrument. See
The Design and Use of Instruments and Accurate Mechanisms.
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A modification of
the Julius suspension has been designed by R. Müller. This suppresses
only the horizontal vibrations. A simplified construction of his design,
which has been used successfully by the author, is shown in Fig. 19, "Vacuum
Thermopiles and the Measurement of Radiant Energy". The support is
loaded so that it has a period of about 2 seconds. This support uses the
internal friction of oil in pie pans to dampen it. Light oil is used,
and the pans are filled to the height which is observed to produce maximum
damping of the natural oscillations of the system. The advantages of this
support over a Julius suspension are that it can be mounted on a shelf
in the corner of the room and easily boxed in to protect it from air currents,
whereas a Julius suspension must be hung from the ceiling. It is more
difficult to make adjustments of the galvanometer with the Julius suspension
than with this support because the Julius suspension is not easily clamped.
The Muller support can easily be clamped for making adjustments of the
galvanometer by dropping two tapered pins in the holes indicated in the
figure.
Fig. 25.
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One type of vibrationless
support is made by placing a large mass, say a slab of stone, on a pile
of newspapers. Here the shearing friction in the papers damps horizontal
oscillations. Another method involves supporting the machine by steel
springs wound with friction tape for damping.
Other methods of
eliminating vibrations involve supporting apparatus on tennis balls or
sponge rubber. These are particularly useful for stopping vibrations near
their source, as, for example, preventing vibrations from vacuum pumps
from being transmitted into the walls and floor of the building. The damping
in this case is due to the internal friction of the rubber.
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