Ballscrews drive positioning stages for assembling small parts. Ballscrews control the Z axis in robots and the ram in electromechanical assembly presses. With their high stiffness, low settling Arial and fast travel speeds, ballscrews can be seen in many electronics assembly machines, including magazine loaders, paste printers, dispensers, and placement and insertion equipment.
Like Acme screws, ballscrews convert rotary motion into linear motion. But unlike Acme screws, ballscrews have concave helical threads, and ball bearings ride between the screw and nut in a recirculating raceway. This arrangement dramatically minimizes mechanical wear and enables a ballscrew to convert more than 90 percent of the motor’s torque into thrust.
The threads on a ballscrew can be ground or rolled. Ballscrews with ground threads are more accurate than those with rolled threads, but they are also more expensive, says John Ertel, engineering manager for NSK Precision America Inc. (Bloomingdale, IL).
Like Acme screws, ballscrews have a minute amount of backlash, or relative axial motion between the screw and the nut when the motor isn’t turning. In both ballscrews and Acme screws, backlash typically starts at 0.006 inch. However, as an Acme screw wears, the amount of backlash increases. This doesn’t happen in a ballscrew, because of its low-wear operation.
Whether backlash is a concern depends on the application, says Rick Christyson, chief engineer at Nook Industries Inc. (Cleveland). For example, in a vertical motion application, the load constantly pushes down on the nut, so backlash is not an issue.
One way to eliminate backlash is to use a preloaded nut. "Preloaded means that the interface between the balls and the grooves is prestressed, so there’s no clearance in the raceway," Ertel explains. "The position of the nut is entirely a function of the rotational position of the shaft. Preloading also increases the stiffness of the system."
The support bearings on each end of the ballscrew should not be overlooked. These are specified as simple, fixed or free. Simple supports, such as ball bearings, offer good radial stiffness, but no axial stiffness. Fixed supports, such as pairs of angular contact bearings, provide stiffness in both directions. A free support is just thatno support at all.
"How well you support the ballscrew determines how fast you can spin the screw and how much of a load you can put on it," says Christyson.
When specifying ballscrews, engineers should provide as much application information as possible, says Tom Corey, president of Specialty Motions Inc. (Yorba Linda, CA). This information should include the expected loads, directions, cycle Arial, strokes and lifecycle. "Even environmental conditions are important, because they can affect the bearing seals," he says.
Corey advises engineers to know the difference between accuracy, repeatability and resolutionand to avoid specifying more accuracy than they really need. "Increasing accuracy is extremely expensive in a screw," he says. "Increasing repeatability is the difference between a standard nut and a preloaded nut. It’ll cost more, but not nearly as much as more accuracy. Increasing resolution is cheap and easy."