In sectors that require large components with tight tolerances, the control of machine thermal deformations as a result of ambient temperature variations, motor consumption, and heating of moving components is essential. There are many alternatives for modelling and trying to compensate for this deformation, but structural components are rarely analysed independently to study their influence on positioning errors. This study analysed component temperature and deformation measurements using 49 thermocouples and 14 integral deformation sensors (IDS) installed on a large-scale machine tool. The effect of each heat source on component deformations was studied and those with a predominant effect were identified. The results can ease thermal effect prediction models development and new machine design process to maximise accuracy by focusing effort on the most critical components and most important heat sources. It was found that ambient temperature variations lead to greater but more uniform deformations than internal heat sources, reaching a 60% of total deformations with smaller temperature changes (8.7 °C, against 15–35 °C due to internal heat sources). These deformations are localized mainly in the machine bed (100 μm in X direction and 170 μm in the Y direction) and column (150 μm in the Z direction) and in the axis ball screw bearings (reaching 55 °C). Consequently, it is concluded that improving bearing and motor refrigeration could significantly reduce thermally-induced deformations.
García et al. (Fri,) studied this question.