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Claims  |
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Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to
secure by Letters Patent is:
1. A drillhole centerline determining interposer, for use in robot probe
locating and orienting of drillhole axes with respect to the coordinates
of a master part, comprising:
(a) a planarization platform having a continuous platform surface defining
a platform plane, with a central physical feature with a characteristic
shape having an included point derivable from the characteristic shape;
and
(b) mounting means to affix said planarization platform to the master part
with said planarization platform surface orthogonal to a desired drillhole
axis and with the included point lying on the drillhole axis.
2. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 1, in
which the physical feature is a cavity.
3. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 1 in
which said mounting means is a pin affixed normal to said planarization
platform, in which the central physical feature is circular in sections
parallel to the platform surface with all section centers on the drillhole
axis and the axis of the pin on the drillhole axis.
4. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 3,
further comprising compliant means on the contact surface opposite said
planarization platform.
5. The drillhole centerline determining interposer to claim 3, in which the
central physical feature is a conical cavity.
6. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 5, in
which said conical cavity is larger below the platform surface than at the
platform surface.
7. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 1,
further comprising means for sensing proximity of interposer and probe.
8. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 7, in
which said proximity sensing means is contained in the interposer.
9. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 8, in
which said proximity sensing means comprises force sensors in the
interposer.
10. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 1,
further comprising means for sensing contact between interposer and probe.
11. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 10,
in which said contact sensing means is electrical contact sensing.
12. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 10,
in which said contact sensing means is contained in the probe.
13. The drillhole centerline determining interposer according to claim 12,
in which said contact sensing means comprises force sensors in the probe.
14. The method of teaching a probe-trainable drill robot coordinates
corresponding to a part, comprising the following steps:
positioning in the work envelope of a drill robot a master part with one or
more centerline determining interposers, affixed by mounting means, each
interposer having a planarization platform having a planarization surface
orthogonal to the related drillhole centerline, and having a central
physical feature coaxial with the axis of the drillhole;
prepositioning the robot probe in an initial position above the central
physical feature of a drillhole centerline determining interposer;
determining the plane of the surface of said drillhole centerline
determining interposer;
positioning the probe to an orientation vector orthogonal to the plane of
said drillhole centerline determining interposer, said vector being
parallel to the as yet undetermined desired drillhole centerline;
moving the probe to a point related to said central physical feature;
examining said central physical feature to find the epicenter;
calculating drill coordinates for the drillhole centerline parallel to the
orientation vector passing through the epicenter.
15. The method of claim 14, further comprising the additional step of
moving the probe along the drillhole centerline axis until the point of
the probe contacts the central physical feature surface of the drillhole
centerline determining interposer and calculating the scribe crosspoint on
the surface of the master part, whereby both drillhole centerline and
scribe crosspoint on the surface of the master part are determined.
16. The method of teaching a probe-trainable drill robot coordinates
corresponding to a part, comprising the following steps:
positioning in the work envelope of a drill robot a master part with one or
more centerline determining interposers, affixed by mounting means, each
interposer having a planarization platform having a planarization surface
orthogonal to the related drillhole centerline,
and having a central physical feature coaxial with the axis of the
drillhole;
prepositioning the robot probe in an initial position above the central
physical feature of a drillhole centerline determining interposer;
determining the plane of the surface of said drillhole centerline
determining interposer;
positioning the probe to an orientation vector orthogonal to the plane of
said drillhole centerline determining interposer, said vector being
parallel to the as yet undetermined desired drillhole centerline;
moving the probe to a point related to said central physical feature;
examining said central physical feature to find the epicenter;
calculating drill coordinates for the drillhole centerline parallel to the
orientation vector passing through the epicenter;
in which the central physical feature is a cavity having a rim, and
examining the cavity to find the cavity epicenter comprises probing the
rim of the cavity to determine the cavity configuration, and calculating
from the cavity configuration its epicenter.
17. The method of teaching a probe-trainable drill robot coordinates
corresponding to a part, according to claim 16, comprising multiple
iterations of probing actions to increase accuracy.
18. The method of teaching a probe-trainable drill robot coordinates
corresponding to a part, according to claim 17, in which the probe is a
drill bit.
19. The method of teaching a probe-trainable drill robot coordinates
corresponding to a part, according to claim 16, in which the probe is a
drill bit.
20. The method of teaching a probe-trainable drill robot coordinates
corresponding to a part, comprising the following steps:
positioning in the work envelope of a drill robot a master part with one or
more centerline determining interposers, affixed by mounting means, each
interposer having a planarization platform having a planarization surface
orthogonal to the related drillhole centerline, and having a central
physical feature coaxial with the axis of the drillhole;
prepositioning the robot probe in an initial position above the central
physical feature of a drillhole centerline determining interposer;
determining the plane of the surface of said drillhole centerline
determining interposer;
positioning the probe to an orientation vector orthogonal to the plane of
said drillhole centerline determining interposer, said vestor being
parallel to the as yet undetermined desired drillhole centerline;
moving the probe to a point related to said central physical feature;
examining said central physical feature to find the epicenter;
calculating drill coordinates for the drillhole centerline parallel to the
orientation vector passing through the epicenter;
in which the central physical feature is a cavity having a rim, and
examining the cavity to find the cavity epicenter comprises probing the
rim of the cavity to determine the cavity configuration, and calculating
from the cavity configuration its epicenter;
in which the cavity cross-section is circular and examining the cavity
comprises:
moving said probe sideways along a chord selected by the computer until the
probe contacts the lip of the cavity;
returning the probe along the chord until the probe locates the opposite
lip of the cavity at the other end of the chord;
returning the probe to the midpoint of the chord whose midpoint lies on a
diameter of the circle formed by the lip of said cavity, said diameter
being orthogonal to the chord;
moving the probe along the diameter until the probe contacts one lip of the
cavity;
returning the probe along the diameter until the probe locates the opposite
lip of the cavity;
returning the probe to the midpoint of the diameter which is the point
where the drillhole centerline axis intersects the plane of the drillhole
centerline determining interposer.
21. The method of teaching a probe-trainable drill robot coordinates
corresponding to a part, according to claim 20, comprising multiple
iterations of probing actions to increase accuracy.
22. The method of teaching a probe-trainable drill robot coordinates
corresponding to a part, according to claim 21, in which the probe is a
drill bit.
23. The method of teaching a probe-trainable drill robot coordinates
corresponding to a part, according to claim 20, in which the probe is a
drill bit.
24. The method of calibrating a probe-trainable robot with respect to a
part, comprising the following steps:
positioning in the work envelope of the robot a part with a plurality of
centerline determining interposers, affixed by mounting means, each having
a planarization platform with a planarization surface and a central
physical feature coaxial to an axis orthogonal to the planarization
surface, the interposers having been positioned in known relationship to
the part;
examining by multiple probing the planarization platforms and the central
physical features of said interposers to determine information related to
coordinates of location and orientation and calculating coordinates for
each of said interposers for said plurality interposers; and
calculating the coordinates of the part from said coordinates of location
and orientation of said interposers. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention pertains to apparatus and methods for teaching a robot the
position and orientation of drillhole centerlines, by examination of
drillholes in a master part, so that the robot can perform a drill
sequence in additional workpieces so as to produce production parts
corresponding to the master part.
Techniques for programming a robot to carry out a drill sequence based upon
numeric control information are well known, but it is time consuming and
somewhat difficult even for a skilled person to develop such control
information mathematically, especially when the position and orientation
of the holes relative to the master part are not available in
computer-readable form. Techniques also have been worked out for teaching
a robot a drillhole configuration based upon manual sequencing of probing
actions on a master part. During a single pass through the drill sequence
under control of the human operator, the robot learns the sequence, and
can thereafter duplicate the sequence. The drawback of this procedure is
that it requires a skilled operator a significant period of time to go
through the proper drill sequence. Under certain circumstances the
operator will not be able to view the master part properly or have the
dexterity in control required to locate the drillholes properly and
particularly may not have the capability to provide the proper pitch and
yaw coordinates to match the drillhole in the master part.
Most drillholes are drilled normal to the tangential plane of the hole or
its approximation at the point of entry, which may be termed the "scribe
crosspoint."
In a typical robot hole drilling application, it is important that the
robot orient the drill along the desired centerline of the drillhole and
move the drill along the centerline while drilling the hole. Improperly
locating the drill bit will cause the hole to be drilled in the wrong
place; misorientation of the drill relative to the drillhole centerline
will cause the hole to be misdirected; misorientation of the drill bit
relative to the surface being drilled might cause the hole to be
misshapen. The drill bit must contact the surface of the workpiece at a
predetermined scribe crosspoint having determinable X, Y, Z coordinates in
relation to the workpiece, and the drill axis must be controlled in pitch
and yaw to follow the desired centerline orientation. In most drilling
operations, the depth of the drillhole is not critical.
In order to use a robot drilling system, data is necessary to determine the
scribe crosspoint surface position and centerline orientation of each hole
to be drilled. If this data is unavailable in a design data base, then the
data must be derived through some form of teaching. Furthermore, teaching
may be necessary, even when design data is available, in order to
compensate for positional inaccuracies in the robot itself.
Sophisticated programmable robots are capable of using drillhole
coordinates relative to the coordinate system of the workpiece to be
drilled. Sensory data and calibration software are then used to locate the
workpiece and to compute how to position the robot's joints so as to
provide proper juxtaposition of the workpiece and the drill bit. A
teaching session for such robot drilling systems involves the following
steps:
(1) Set up a master part at the robot drilling station.
(2) Calibrate the master part coordinate system.
(3) Teach the coordinates of each drillhole relative to the master part and
store these coordinates for future playback.
The standard method of teaching drillhole coordinates is to operate the
robot as a teleoperator, positioning the drill manually at each hole to be
drilled. This procedure has a number of disadvantages as follows:
(1) It is tedious and time consuming.
(2) Its accuracy is limited, especially for determining drillhole
centerline orientation.
(3) It may be necessary for the person doing the teaching to place his head
inside the work envelope of the robot in order to see the precise relation
of the drill bit to the drillhole in the master part. This may constitute
a safety hazard.
Techniques in the prior art have been developed using special targets to
ascertain the coordinates of the desired drillhole axis, by multiple
contacts with a multiple probe under computer control, after an initial
approximate orientation is made by manual control. D. M. Lambeth, "An
Approach to Tactile Feedback Programming for Robotic Drilling," Robot VI
Conference, Society of Manufacturing Engineers (MS82-120), Mar. 2-4, 1982.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention provides a drillhole centerline determining interposer having
a pocket, and a method using the drillhole centerline determining
interposer to provide for relatively quick and efficient teaching of the
position and orientation of drillhole centerlines to the robot by probing
the interposers without actually contacting the master part. The advantage
of the invention is that rough positioning can be made to the central
pocket in the interposer, and exact positioning of the probe can be made
with respect to the pocket accurately at a greater speed than with
previously available methods and without danger of injury to the operator
or damage to the master part through contact from the probe.
Another advantage is that the drill bit can be used as the probe, and that
the same probing actions can be used both to calibrate the part and to
locate and orient the drillholes.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a semischematic isometric view of a representative master part,
the drillhole centerline determining interposer in place within a
drillhole in the master part and the probe at an initial position above
the approximate center of the drillhole centerline determining interposer.
FIG. 2 is an explanatory diagram of the drillhole centerline determining
interposer, its platform plane and its contact plane.
FIG. 3 is an elevation cutaway view of the drillhole centerline determining
interposer (in position in the master part) for teaching a robot the
position and orientation of desired drillholes.
FIG. 4 is a composite drawing (FIGS. 4.1, 4.2, 4.3 and 4.4) showing the
method of using the drillhole centerline determining interposer in
teaching the robot.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
The drillhole centerline determining interposer configuration and method
according to the invention provide a simple and inexpensive
multidimensional locating technique for a teachable robot drilling
apparatus.
The technique of this invention combines simple sensors with programmable
robot control to improve the teaching of drillhole coordinates, making use
of a central cavity in each drillhole centerline determining interposer.
The same location technique is usable both to calibrate the coordinates of
the part (master part or workpiece) and to locate and orient the
drillholes.
FIG. 1 shows a typical apparatus for use in teaching drillhole coordinates
for a drilling application. In FIG. 1, master part 1 is located in a work
envelope 2 in an orientation which may be fixed as shown in FIG. 1 on
support pedestals 3 or may be variable but teachable to the robot. The
location technique described in this invention may also be used to locate
the part. With master part 1 fixed in place (or determined in space by
coordinates known to the robot computer) it is desirable to train the
robot. The robot includes a computer 4, positioning mechanism 5 and probe
6. Prior to the teaching operation a drillhole centerline determining
interposer 7 according to this invention is placed in each of the several
drillholes in the master part 1 for which it is desired to teach the robot
the drillhole position and orientation information. Alternatively, a
single interposer may be placed into each drill hole, in turn, before that
hole is taught. Interposer 7 provides all necessary information to the
probe 6 so that probe 6 need never actually contact master part 1.
Depending on the requirements of the probe, interposer 7 may provide a
fixed object for mechanical probing or, in the case of electrical probing,
interposer 7 is provided with suitable electrical connection such as
connection 8 to the computer. The interposer is held in place by a
suitable mounting means such as mounting pin 9 so as to present a platform
10 which is normal to the drillhole axis, which is also the axis of pocket
11.
FIG. 2 shows the drillhole centerline determining interposer 7 in greater
detail. Interposer 7 is generally a mushroom shape with its head forming a
planarization platform and with its stem formed by mounting pin 9. Pin 9
is located perpendicular to the top surface of planarization platform 10.
Planarization platform 10 has a central cavity 11, with the center of
cavity 11 being on the centerline of pin 9 and by inference on the
centerline of the drillhole, once pin 9 is inserted snugly into the
drillhole of the master part. The drillhole centerline axis (shown by
broken line 12) is perpendicular to the surface plane of planarization
platform 10 of interposer 7, which platform plane is shown by broken lines
13. A second plane parallel to platform plane 13 is identified by broken
line 14. Plane 14 is parallel to platform plane 13 and at a known distance
below it so as to rest on the surface of master part 1. Plane 14 may be
designated the contact plane. The bottom of the cavity is parallel to
platform plane and at a known distance. Coordinates identifying interposer
platform plane 13 relative to the master part and coordinates identifying
the position of the center of the interposer pocket relative to the master
part, thus fully define the (XYZ) location and the (pitch and yaw)
orientation of the drillhole. Compliant material 15, while not always
necessary for proper operation, helps to hold the interposer in position
and helps to protect the master part and the probe from damage. The
pin-in-hole contact provides a very good centerline determination where
the master drillhole in the master part is deep enough to align precisely
the interposer mounting pin 9 with drillhole centerline 12. For thin
materials, or shallow holes, contact by the compliant material determines
the contact plane. In certain situations, pinless interposers may be used,
cemented or held magnetically in place, by mounting means alternative to
mounting pin 9.
FIG. 3 shows in semidiagrammatic form a cutaway of interposer 7 in place in
a drilled hole in master part 1 and in position for a teaching operation.
Robot probe 6 is shown in phantom. Pin 9 is in place, positioned snugly in
the hole in the master part, and backed by compliant material 15 so as to
define rigorously the position of the desired drillhole. Planarization
platform 10 of interposer 7 fully determines platform plane 13. The key is
to locate the interposer with the cavity centered over the drillhole
centerline and the contact plane perpendicular to the centerline axis.
Cavity 11 is a conical section, circular in cross-section so as to present
sides undercut as shown in FIG. 3. The conical section is not critical for
most operations. The cavity may be cylindrical or tapered, but the
inverted conical section is preferred. With the inverted conical section,
when probe 6 is inserted and searches sideways, the probe contacts the
side of the cavity unambiguously in platform plane 13. Interposer 7, when
positioned as shown in FIG. 3, provides a rigorous location of the
drillhole centerline and surface scribe crosspoint position. Any surface
normal vector to platform plane 13 is parallel to the drillhole centerline
axis. The orientation vector thus is parallel to the orientation vector
for the drillhole, even though it may be at a finite distance from the XY
location of the drillhole centerline axis.
Compliant material 15 is selected from rubber or a similar pad material
which exhibits quick recovery time and low hysteresis, so as to minimize
the introduction of errors into the drillhole centerline axis calculation.
Voltage input circuit 16 provides computer 4 with contact information.
ALTERNATIVES
The drillhole centerline determining interposer does not demand that any
particular form of sensing be used. Contact or proximity sensing may be by
any number of alternatives such as strain gauges, ultrasonic probes,
electrical continuity, capacitance, etc, which may be generically
described as means for sensing proximity, proximity in its wider meaning
including both actual touching and near approach. For ease of
understanding only, interposer 7 is shown grounded by lead 8, in an
electric contact sensing digital input point on the robot controller. The
other input is attached to the probe lead of the robot. Contact between
probe 6 and the surface 10 of interposer 7 completes the circuit. That is,
the robot controller senses contact between probe 6 and platform 10 of
interposer 7 and converts this sensing information to positional
coordinates.
The interposer may be mounted in place on the master part by adhesive or
magnets as mounting means, even though no hole has been drilled in the
master part, and still determine the drillhole. In this case, the
drillhole orientation is determined by the contact plane 14.
The contact sensing mechanism may be located in the probe or in the
interposer (for example, by mounting a piezoelectric strain gauge between
the platform surface and the contact surface with electrical leads to the
computer) or may involve both the probe and the interposer.
A probe-sensible physical feature other than cavity 11 (for example, a mesa
on top of the planarization platform) can replace the cavity, with
complementary probing actions, but more care must be taken, and a cavity
is preferred. The probe-sensible feature must include an epicenter
derivable from probing actions ascertaining its periphery.
METHOD
This invention provides a means by which programmable robots can learn
drillhole coordinates and store these coordinates relative to the
coordinate system of the workpiece. Sensory data and calibration software
are then used to locate the workpiece and to compute how to position the
robot's joints so as to position the drill. A teaching session involves
the following steps:
1. Set up a master part within the robot work envelope.
2. Calibrate the master part coordinate system.
3. Teach each drillhole.
4. Compute coordinates of each drillhole relative to the master part and
store the coordinates for future playback in drilling workpieces to match
the master part.
Coordinates and vectors are automatically taken during each probing action
and suitable data is preserved to define all probing actions.
FIGS. 4.1-4.4 diagram the method of teaching each drillhole using the
drillhole centerline determining interposer and method of this invention.
Step 1. Preparation
A master part is placed in the work envelope of a teachable robot and
fitted with one or more drillhole centerline determining interposers. The
coordinate system of the master part is determined. The teaching method of
this invention may be used to determine the coordinate system of the
master part by locating selected holes on the part or on the fixture
holding the part.
Step 2. Initial Axis Selection
The coordinate system of the master part having been determined, the
operator positions the robot on an initial axis manually or through
numeric control. The operator selects an initial axis in which the probe
is approximately aligned with the centerline axis of the selected
drillhole centerline determining interposer and in which the probe tip is
located in or above the pocket of the selected drillhole centerline
determining interposer. This establishes an initial probe position at the
approximate position and orientation of the desired drillhole centerline.
Step 3. Planarization
Three probing actions grouped around the initial axis determine plane 13.
Each such probing action consists of the following substeps:
(a) An approach line is calculated. This approach line is parallel to the
initial axis and chosen so that it unambiguously intersects the top
surface of planarization platform 10, and not the inside of the cavity.
The preferred embodiment selects approach lines 2.5 times the cavity
radius from the initial axis, and uses a platform radius equal to 5 times
the pocket radius. The specific ratios and geometry should be chosen in
accordance with the maximum expected initial misalignment, the geometry of
the master part, and the precision of the robot.
(b) Keeping orientation, the probe tip is moved to a point on the approach
line that is high enough to be unambiguously clear of planarization
platform 10.
(c) Keeping orientation, the probe is moved downward along the approach
line until it contacts planarization platform 10.
(d) Keeping orientation, the probe is backed off a short distance and then
moved at low speed along the approach line for a second, more accurate
contact. Alternatively, the probe may be backed off slowly until contact
is broken. This substep may be omitted if the latency between actual
contact and response is extremely short.
(e) Substeps a-d are repeated for a sufficient number of probing actions to
provide a satisfactory determination of the platform plane of platform 10
of the drillhole centerline determining interposer 7. Three points
determine the plane, but additional probing action iterations improve
accuracy through use of statistical parameter estimation techniques.
Step 4. Orientation Vector Calculation
The direction of the orientation vector perpendicular to interposer
planarization platform 10 is computed from the three or more contact
points determined by the probing action substeps of step 3. This vector is
parallel to the drillhole centerline axis and passes through the platform
plane at the point where the initial axis intersects the platform plane,
ensuring entry into the pocket.
Step 5. Reorientation
The probe is reorientated to the orientation vector parallel to the
undetermined drillhole centerline axis. If desired, steps 3-5 may be
repeated using the new orientation to verify that the correct orientation
has been determined.
If this orientatation involves a large change in orientation, steps 2-5 are
reiterated. This iterative procedure results in finding three or more new
contact points, and the surface determination is repeated. This iterative
procedure reduces the likelihood that imperfections in the probe tip will
cause erroneous readings. This is especially important if a drill bit is
used as the probe.
Step 6. Repositioning
The probe is oriented to the orientation vector and moved along its own
axis to a point unambiguously within the pocket 11 of drillhole centerline
determining interposer 7.
Step 7. Cavity Probing
The probe then is directed to take probing actions to search for contact
points between the sides of the probe and the lip of the cavity. The
search pattern includes the following substeps:
(a) Keeping orientation, move in the plane perpendicular to the drillhole
centerline axis until the probe contacts the cavity lip.
(b) Keeping orientation, move in the opposite direction until the probe
contacts the cavity lip. These two actions (7a and 7b) define a chord of
the circle formed by the cavity lip in the platform plane of the surface
of planarization platform 10.
(c) Keeping orientation, move the probe along the chord to the midpoint of
the chord and repeat the two searches within the same plane and
perpendicular to the chord. These actions define a diameter of the circle
formed by the lip of the cavity. The midpoint of this diameter is on the
drillhole centerline axis.
(d) Iterate a, b, c for better precision.
Step 8. Bottom Finding
Keeping orientation, move the probe along the drillhole centerline axis
downward, searching along the drillhole centerline axis until the probe
contacts the bottom of the cavity. This point lies on the drillhole
centerline at a known distance above the surface of the master part.
Alternatively, the drillhole surface scribe crosspoint coordinates may be
calculated from the drillhole centerline axis determined in steps 1-7 and
the contact plane located in steps 3-4. Calculations derived from these
probing actions rigorously define the XYZ location (surface scribe
crosspoint) at which the drill bit is to contact the workpiece and also
rigorously define the pitch and yaw coordinates required to duplicate the
orientation.
* * * * *
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Description  |
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