Remote laser welding systems can usually focus a laser beam to diameters of 0.1 mm. Therefore, high quality clamping and precise teaching is needed in order to achieve appropriate process tolerance for a sound weld. This brings reservation in the field of small series and user-customized manufacturing, where product individualization requires flexible and adaptive systems as workpiece geometry is not exact due to manufacturing tolerances and thermal deformations during welding. The preparation for welding is therefore often time-consuming. To solve this, we have developed an innovative system, which enables in-line adaptive 3D seam tracking. The system consists of an industrial robot (Yaskawa MC2000), a scanning head (HighYag RLSK; working area 200 mm × 300 mm × 200 mm) with optical triangulation feedback and a fiber laser (IPG, YRL-400-AC; 400 W). A feed-forward loop was used to achieve positioning accuracy of under 0.05 mm during on-the-fly welding. Experimental results show that between welding speeds of 25 and 150 cm/min, average tracking deviations are 0.043 mm and 0.276 mm in y and z directions, respectively. Moreover, teaching times for a specified seam can be shortened for more than 10 times due to the fact that only rough seam teaching is required. The proposed system configuration could be adapted to other classical welding processes.
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