NASCAR Team Speeds Production with
3-D Imaging
As the operations staff at Richard Childress Racing will
tell you, NASCAR racing begins long before the actual event.
From the time the checkered flag is waved until the next
race, RCR engineers are not only racing against time, but
they're also competing to find the best technologies that
will gain their professional drivers -- Kevin Harvick, Robby
Gordon, Jeff Green, Johnny Sauter and Jay Sauter -- the
next win.
"What we do Monday through Friday really determines what
happens over the weekend on the track," says Lenny Batycki,
vice president of operations at RCR. "We have to know far
ahead how our engines are going to perform."
Performance is the RCR Research and Design Lab's business.
State-of-the-art CAD/CAM software, computer-numerically
controlled machines, coordinate measuring machines and 3-D
photography software from Raindrop Geomagic are just some
of the tools of the trade.
Inside the lab, the Chevrolet Monte Carlo race car engines
are built from the ground up. After each race, they're taken
apart, inspected and rebuilt. Some parts come from Chevrolet;
others are built in the lab. All parts are retooled to give
cars maximum performance within NASCAR regulations. Engines
are tested at full throttle with dynamometers to ensure
they will withstand a grueling five-hour race.
Engineers at RCR are trained to deal with some of the
most powerful engines in the automotive industry. The V-8
Winston Cup engine runs at about 750 horsepower, with speeds
as high as 200 mph. It has a 12.5:1 compression ratio with
a maximum 358 cubic inches. A Busch series engine runs at
about 500 horsepower with a 9.5:1 compression ratio and
a maximum of 358 cubic inches.
There are several ways to make a race car engine gain
more horsepower, but one of the most difficult is cylinder
head porting. "The cylinder head port is the heartbeat of
the engine," says Greg Jones, design engineer at RCR. "It's
pivotal to the success of the car. Except for the cam shaft,
cylinder head porting is the most guarded secret in an engine
department."
Cylinder head ports allow air and fuel to travel through
the cylinders. The more cylinders there are in a car, the
more power it has. Cylinder head porting involves engineers
reshaping the ports to remove flaws and improve efficiency.
It also reduces restrictions in the engine's intake and
exhaust tracts, allowing more air and fuel into the cylinders,
thus increasing horsepower. "We've gone through six cylinder
head designs in six months," says Jones. "We're constantly
searching for better performance."
For years, cylinder head porting at RCR was done through
a labor-intensive hand-grinding process. It took about 40
hours to complete just one cylinder head. "It would take
a total of two weeks to complete a pair of heads," remembers
Jones. "This is not acceptable with the current racing schedule,
and any small bit of human error from port to port could
decrease the horsepower."
Raindrop Geomagic Studio 3-D photography software, working
in conjunction with other technologies, has been implemented
at RCR to create a process that delivers a precisely made
cylinder head in less time. Geomagic Studio makes it possible
for engineers to take output from 3-D data, capture the
texture and shape of the cylinder heads and transform the
information into models that can be used again and again.
Geomagic Studio provides a complete solution for 3-D photography,
the process of capturing output from 3-D scanners, rapidly
processing color, shape and texture information, and automatically
creating 3-D digital models for customized manufacturing
and computer graphics applications. It supports all 3-D
digitizers, cameras and scanners in native or XYZ/ ASCII
format and handles ordered and unordered, surface and volume
data.
"Geomagic allows us to take the model from its digitized
state and surface it," says Jones. "We can visualize it
a lot quicker and it allows us to make alterations right
there on the screen. Visualization is important because
we can determine if there are any glitches in our data that
will be machined in the CAM package."
The cylinder heads are first digitized with a CMM. The
data is pulled into Geomagic Studio, converted into a polygonal
model, then to a NURBS model, and finally exported into
a water-tight surface that can be manufactured within 0.001
in. of the original model.
"In this business, you have to be very accurate," says
Jones. "Any fraction off can mean the difference between
winning and losing a race. Geomagic Studio is as accurate
as I've ever seen."
RCR engineers use Pro-NC software from Parametric Technology
Corp. to complete the design process. The digital design
model is then sent to the RCR manufacturing division, where
an Okuma CNC machine produces the finished product. The
entire process of porting two cylinder heads, which used
to take up to 80 hours, now only takes 12.
"Everything is based on performance in this industry,"
says Jones. "Geomagic helps make optimum performance possible.
The beauty of it is that we only have to make one model,
then we can copy it. This saves us a tremendous amount of
time in production."
Raindrop Geomagic's Geomagic Studio
Benefits
- Automatically creates 3-D digital models
- Supports all 3-D digitizers, cameras and scanners
- Points, polygon and NURBS modeling
www.geomagic.com
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