Versatile and easy to use, cylinder hones can deburr and clean out passages or provide bores with a smooth finish free of cut, torn, or folded metal. They can also be used for edge blending, plateau honing, polishing, and chamfer operations.
Scored valve bores
For Elmar Industries, Depew, N.Y., a company that designs and manufactures filling machines for the food, beverage, petrochemical, personal care, and pharmaceutical industries, a flexible cylinder hone saved its customer $30,000 in damaged valve housings after unexpected damage was caused prior to production. Elmar offers a variety of models, including rotary piston, bottom fill, gravity and pocket for filling liquids, high viscosity and solid particulates into plastic, glass, composite or metal containers.
The rotary piston models have a large, rotating bowl for product with six to 72 filling stations. Each station is built with a valve housing and rotary valve that dispenses a metered quantity of product. The tolerance between valve and housing must be within 0.001 in. Elmar’s customer used a 45-station piston filler, used for packaging applesauce and other food products.
The food processor had recently taken delivery of the new equipment. However, construction continued within the facility, one floor above. As a result, a small amount of concrete and metal shavings fell into the filling bowl. When the equipment was started, the concrete particles and metal chips moved from the rotating bowl into the rotary valves, scarring the housings and damaging valve plugs. The damage was significant enough that each of the 45 valve housings and plugs had to be replaced. The estimated cost for replacement: $60,000.
“In this case, the machine hadn’t even run its first product yet,” explained Thomas Dahlquist, special projects manager for Elmar. “When you have a capital improvement project, and the customer is looking at an expensive bill for replacement parts before production even begins, they want a quick solution that is cost-effective.” Unfortunately, the valve plugs were damaged beyond repair. This comprised approximately half the estimated replacement costs.
However, Dahlquist suggested an alternative solution. By honing each cylinder to remove any raised lips or high points, then inserting new valve plugs, the customer could save half the cost--approximately $30,000.
Elmar was familiar with cylinder hones, having used them in the past for manufacturing valve bodies. From time to time, they used the Flex-Hone, from Brush Research Mfg. Co., Los Angeles, in the field to hone out undersized or out-of-tolerance cylinders. The Flex-Hone is an abrasive tool characterized by small, abrasive globules permanently mounted to flexible filaments. Versatile and easy-to-use, the cylinder hone can deburr and clean out passages or provide bores with a finish free of cut, torn, and folded metal. It can also be used for edge blending, plateau honing, polishing, and chamfer operations.