Honeycomb red background with HAINBUCH logo
Published

Rotary Grinding Table

Share

According to the company, users can convert surface grinders for rotary work in seconds with the Bowers inclinable rotary grinding table. This table features a built-in sine table that locks into any position from 0 to 45 degrees to convert a surface grinder to circular work. The company says the table is reliable and durable and permits highly accurate setups for precision work. The locking sine table, says the company, ensures flatness in the horizontal plane. The table can be equipped with a variety of chucks or tables. The rotary grinding table features a 0 to 160 rpm, 1/4-hp motor that is said to provide fully filtered DC power for cool operation and maximum smoothness of rotation. Solid state circuitry converts AC line voltage to DC power, with automatic correction for changes in load and incoming voltage. Features include an overload protection fuse that also permits the desired preset speed to remain set in position during off periods. The motor is dynamically balanced and noise tested. A standard pilot light indicates when the AC power is on. A separate motor control is standard. This table is useful for production and prototype applications including grinding discs and rings; hollow grinding of cutters; grinding the front rake on circular gear cutters; grinding angles, chamfers and radii; grinding tungsten carbide and other non-magnetic materials; and more.

Related Content

  • Moving To Magnets Doubles Productivity

    Moving from hydraulic to magnetic fixtures enabled this shop to reduce setup time, improve rigidity and eliminate manual operations. As a result, productivity doubled.

  • An Additive Manufacturing Machine Shop

    Finish machining additively manufactured implants requires different pacing and workflow than cutting parts from stock — different enough for an experienced manufacturer to warrant a dedicated machine shop.

  • Lean Approach to Automated Machine Tending Delivers Quicker Paths to Success

    Almost any shop can automate at least some of its production, even in low-volume, high-mix applications. The key to getting started is finding the simplest solutions that fit your requirements. It helps to work with an automation partner that understands your needs.

MAXXOS mandrel, bushing, & gears on red background
World Machine Tool Survey
SolidCAM
Koma Precision
Techspex
Gravotech
Mazak Multi-Tasking: Your Parts Multiplier.
Hurco
MAXXOS mandrel, bushing, & gears on red background