Z Notch Grinding on
Turbine Compressor Blades
Customer:
Major Aircraft Engine Overhaul Facility
Background:
An aircraft gas turbine engine has many expensive
parts that are frequently rebuilt during an engine
overhaul. Some of the most common items are the
turbine compressor blades. The blades are forged
from difficult to machine high temperature alloys
such as Inconel and Hastelloy. The blades have
'Z' shaped edges that match the adjacent blades
as they are arranged in a ring to form a compressor
fan. When the 'Z' area (or 'Z' notch) wears out,
the blades are removed and sent for repair. The
typical repair procedure is to build up the worn
area with a Stellite weld and then regrind the
'Z' form to the proper shape.
Manufacturing Challenge:
Form grinding the 'Z' notch using conventional
abrasive grinders presents a number of challenges.
Since Stellite does not grind freely, the grinding
wheel needs frequent dressing, sometimes twice
per blade. Conventional abrasive grinding is a
slow process requiring multiple light cuts to
prevent heat buildup. Excess heat from grinding
can crack the weld causing the repair to fail.
The customer had multiple hand feed surface grinders
in use to reshape the 'Z' form after welding.
The process was expensive because of excessive
wheel dressing and frequent grinding cracks in
the weld repairs. Cycle time on each blade was
approaching 12 minutes each. Frequent wheel dressing
was costing the company over $40,000 in grinding
wheel costs alone.
Solution:
The Everite Electrochemical Grinding Equipment surface grinders cut without
generating any heat or burrs. The Electrochemical Grinding Equipment process
can grind up to 150 blades between wheel dressings
and all cuts are done in no more than 2 passes.
The process is fast, efficient and reduces the
chance of scrap. Since the wheel life is so high
the cost of operation is low. The Electrochemical Grinding Equipment process
is also used widely for grinding the knife-edge
air seals on the shroud end of turbine blades
after weld repair. The customer purchased three
Everite EG618 grinders and reduced the cycle time
to 3 minutes per blade. Wheel cost was cut to
under $2,500 per year and rework on cracked blades
dropped to almost zero.
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