Centerless grinding machine
Centerless Grinding Machine | High-Precision Cylindrical Grinding for Mass Production
- Grinding wheel – performs the cutting and material removal
- Regulating wheel – controls the rotation and feed rate of the workpiece
- Work rest blade – supports and locates the part from below
Centerless grinding is a high-precision cylindrical grinding process where the workpiece is not clamped between centers or held in a chuck.
Instead, the part is supported and driven by three key elements:
This unique three-point support allows centerless grinding to process small, slender, or long cylindrical parts with excellent stability, repeatability, and production efficiency. It is widely used in high-volume manufacturing where tight tolerances and consistent quality are required.
Main Types of Centerless Grinding
Through-Feed Centerless Grinding
Through-feed centerless grinding is a continuous process:
- The workpiece is fed from one side and passes straight through the grinding and regulating wheels.
- Best suited for straight, cylindrical parts without shoulders or steps.
- Typical applications: pins, shafts, tubes, rods, and rollers in large quantities.
Infeed (Plunge) Centerless Grinding
Infeed, or plunge centerless grinding, is used when the workpiece has a more complex geometry:
- The part is positioned between the wheels and remains in place while the grinding wheel feeds radially into the workpiece.
- Ideal for stepped shafts, parts with shoulders, heads, grooves, or other interruptions.
- Typical applications: automotive components, tool shanks, hydraulic parts, and special precision shafts.
End-Feed Centerless Grinding
End-feed centerless grinding is used for parts that require grinding at a specific location or with a taper:
- The workpiece is fed into the wheels until it reaches a fixed stop.
- Suitable for tapered parts and specific profile sections that cannot be processed by standard through-feed methods.
- Why Choose Centerless Grinding?
Why Choose Centerless Grinding?
1. High Productivity for Mass Production
- No need for centers or chucks, which reduces setup and loading time.
- Perfectly suited for automatic loading, unloading, and in-line measurement systems.
- Supports continuous operation and 24/7 production for large batches.
2. Excellent Accuracy and Roundness
- The three-point support design minimizes deflection and vibration, even for slender parts.
- With proper setup, centerless grinding can achieve very tight diameter tolerances, high roundness, and good surface finish.
- Ideal for components where dimensional stability and repeatability are critical.
3. Flexible for Many Materials and Industries
Centerless grinding can be applied to:
- Materials: carbon steel, alloy steel, bearing steel, stainless steel, copper, aluminum, special alloys, and hard materials.
- Industries: automotive, motorcycle, bearing, hydraulic and pneumatic systems, power tools, medical devices, and precision machinery.
Typical Parts for Centerless Grinding
Centerless grinding is commonly used for:
- Axles, shafts, and cylindrical pins
- Rollers and bearing components
- Hydraulic and pneumatic piston rods
- Linear motion shafts and guide rods
- Precision tool shanks and medical instrument components
If your parts are:
- Cylindrical or bar-shaped
- Produced in large quantities
- Required to meet strict tolerances on diameter, roundness, and straightness
then centerless grinding is likely the most efficient and cost-effective solution.
How to Select the Right Centerless Grinding Solution
To choose the best centerless grinding setup for your production, the following factors should be considered:
- Workpiece size and material
- Diameter, length, and material type (e.g. bearing steel, stainless steel, alloy steel).
- Required tolerances and surface finish
- Target diameter tolerance, roundness, straightness, and surface roughness.
- Production volume and cycle time
- Daily or monthly output and target cycle time per part.
- Process flow and previous operations
- Pre-grinding processes (forging, turning, heat treatment) and post-grinding requirements.
- Level of automation
- Manual operation, semi-automatic systems, or fully automated centerless grinding lines with loading/unloading, gauging, and feedback control.
With this information, it is possible to determine:
- Whether through-feed or infeed centerless grinding is more suitable
- The optimal machine configuration and wheel specifications
- The need for customized automation or integration into an existing production line
