BMccarthy81
Mechanical
- Jun 14, 2005
- 28
I've had an incident at my office, we were running a 20" by 8" ceramic grinding wheel on a #2 cincinnati grinder, and the wheel, for lack of a better word, exploded. The wheel was from a new company, and was to be used on a trial basis. It wasn't too soft or too hard, it was very much like a green norton wheel. As far as we could tell, before the wheel was placed into the machine, there were no visible cracks on the OD or on the ID. It was placed in the machine for well over a week, ran wonderful parts, regularly dressed, and had coolant running on it.
The day the wheel cracked and "exploded", it had ran parts during the morning. The wheel ran for a time afterwards, meaning that it wasn't grinding parts or had coolant running on it for a good 3-4 hours. The operator then turned the coolant back on, began his setup and walked away from the machine to check on something. He said the sound the wheel made sounded like a shotgun blast. The wheel was in chunks that ranged from grit and pebbles, to grapefruits. The top of the machine was encased by tough plastic, for a mist collector, and without a few people would have been greatly hurt.
My question is what could have been the cause of this? The company that I contacted, I won't say the name for bad press, stated that the wheels crack if they are over tightened. We've used many wheels before, and we never had a wheel explode in our machine. We have seen many different cracks in many wheels that were caused by shipping or being dropped, and we are very meticulous about the wheels that we recieve.
What could be a cause of this situation? Any input is greatly appreciated.
The day the wheel cracked and "exploded", it had ran parts during the morning. The wheel ran for a time afterwards, meaning that it wasn't grinding parts or had coolant running on it for a good 3-4 hours. The operator then turned the coolant back on, began his setup and walked away from the machine to check on something. He said the sound the wheel made sounded like a shotgun blast. The wheel was in chunks that ranged from grit and pebbles, to grapefruits. The top of the machine was encased by tough plastic, for a mist collector, and without a few people would have been greatly hurt.
My question is what could have been the cause of this? The company that I contacted, I won't say the name for bad press, stated that the wheels crack if they are over tightened. We've used many wheels before, and we never had a wheel explode in our machine. We have seen many different cracks in many wheels that were caused by shipping or being dropped, and we are very meticulous about the wheels that we recieve.
What could be a cause of this situation? Any input is greatly appreciated.