Sintered ball valve

4118009
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Inventors

Chmura, William J.

Application #

774024

Filed

Mar-3-1977

Published

Oct-3-1978

Current US Class

251/315.04
251/315.14
251/368
403/139

International Classes

B21D 053/10; B21K 001/02; F16C 011/06; F16D 001/12

Field of Search

29/148.4 104/148 251/315 251/368 308/72 308/241 403/122 403/139

Assignee

Textron Inc. (Providence, RI)

Examiners

Makay; Albert J.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Hopgood, Calimafde, Kalil, Blaustein and Lieberman

US Patent References

3948480   Rotary ball valve
4026657   Sintered spherical...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
Sintered articles characterized by a surface of revolution, such as truncated spherical balls and spherical ball valves, e.g., plain spherical bearing balls, are provided made by the powder metal compaction and sintering of blanks followed, in the case of ball elements, by densification of the outer spherical surface by mechanical working, such as by roll-forming, the balls so produced being characterized by improved sphericity and dimensional tolerance and improved wear resistance combined with optimum resistance to corrosion. The spherical surface of the ball is substantially free of pores, has a work hardened structure and has a density at and adjacent the surface of at least about 95% of the theoretical density of the metal, the density substantially below the surface being less and ranging to as low as at least about 70% of theoretical density.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A ball valve comprising a cooperating element with a curved surface held substantially in contact with a spherically conforming truncated ball element formed from sintered powder metal blank to permit relative motion between said elements, said ball element having a porous structure and having a bore passing therethrough,

substantially the entire spherical surface of said ball element being characterized by a mechanically worked surface of high density of at least about 95% of the theoretical density of said metal with the pores at the surface thereof substantially closed,

the density of said spherical ball element in cross section decreasing inwardly from a highly dense zone adjacent said spherical surface to a porous zone of lower density below said dense zone and extending to the bore, the average density of said porous zone ranging from about 70% to less than 95% of the theoretical density of said metal.



Description
This invention relates to the production of sintered powder metallurgy articles characterized by a surface of revolution, for example, truncated balls, such as spherical bearing balls and to self-aligning spherical bearing assemblies produced therefrom. The invention also relates to a powder metallurgy method of producing low-cost spherical bearings.

State of the Art

It is known to produce truncated spherical balls by machining rough blanks from metal tubing or bar stock for use in bearing assemblies, ball valves and the like. In one method, the bore of the blank is filled with a low-melting lead-base alloy (e.g. an alloy known in the trade as Cerrobase), the prepared ball blanks ground en masse to the desired sphericity, the lead-base filler alloy being thereafter removed from the bore by melting and the bore than finish ground. Truncated balls produced in this manner are costly and the method employed somewhat time-consuming. Moreover, there is considerable waste of material due to machining.
 
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