Ringspann Offers Safe and Easy Assembly for Shrink-Discs
If you want to identify one trend in the field of shaft-hub-connections, this is it: The use of frictional shrink discs is gaining traction in mechanical and plant engineering. The main reason for this is probably that - in contrast to positive shaft-hub-connections with a keyway - considerably higher torques can be transmitted and many designs can therefore be made smaller. This correlates with the desire of many users for increasingly compact drives. A more detailed analysis also reveals that at present it is primarily shrink discs in a two-part design that have caught the eye of designers of industrial drive systems.
Marvin Raquet, product manager for shaft-hub-connections at Ringspann, knows the reason: "If the two-part shrink discs are high-quality solutions like those of our RLK 608, RLK 608E and RLK 606 series, users benefit from a very high degree of connection reliability, usability and ease of assembly. That is because, in addition to their excellent workmanship, these shrink discs at Ringspann always offer the advantage of distance-controlled assembly." What Raquet is hinting at is proving to be a tangible efficiency factor in practice - both for plant manufacturers in their role as OEM, and for fitters and maintenance technicians.
Distance instead of power to save time
With the principle of distance-controlled assembly, Ringspann’s RLK 608, RLK 608E and RLK 606 series two-part shrink discs enable the user to considerably simplify and speed up handling when mounting or installing. Since they do not have to keep an eye on the torque, there is no need to use a heavy torque tool. All they need is a simple ring spanner to tighten the clamping screws evenly arranged in rows until the face of the (outer) stepped conical ring of the shrink disc is flush with the face of its (inner) stepped conical bush. Once this state is reached, the worker can be sure that the frictional connection between the hollow shaft and the shaft is established and that the values for the torques and axial forces listed for this purpose in the Ringspann technical product tables are guaranteed to be transmitted.
"The prerequisite for distance-controlled assembly is the exceptionally high precision that we employ to manufacture the individual steel components of our two-part shrink discs. Low-cost products cannot keep up and still have to be assembled with pre-set torque tools," Raquet said.
No clamping without lubrication