Method of Fastening a Fastener
20230052007 · 2023-02-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
B21J15/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D39/031
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21J15/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23P19/064
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B23P19/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D39/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A clinch-in fastener with a cylindrical body having a top, a bottom, sides and an axial internal bore. The fastener has a single shank at the bottom end of the body having a top surface orthogonal to the bore and a chamfer tapering to the bottom of the body. The top surface of the shank is adapted for receiving the cold flow of material surrounding a receiving hole of a workpiece. The shank may have a plurality of notches in its outermost edge that extend through both the top surface of the shank and the chamfer. The bore of the fastener extends completely through the fastener body from top to bottom and may be threaded. A fastener installation system having a tool with means for affixation to a rotary and vertically reciprocal element of an industrial machine. The tip of the tool has a distal end face with at least one arcuate displacer adapted for deforming a workpiece as the tool rotates and is pressed against the workpiece. A bore within the tip holds a fastener installed by the tool. The displacer is vertically and radially tapered along an arcuate ridge centered about the axial bore. The width of the displacer is also tapered to a point.
Claims
1. A method of clinch-in fastening a fastener into a blind hole of workpiece, comprising the steps of: a. providing a workpiece; b. providing a fastener; c. inserting the fastener into a blind hole in the workpiece; and, d. displacing workpiece material surrounding the blind hole against the fastener by: i. applying a localized force to a segment of the workpiece material proximate the perimeter of the hole, said localized force having force components in both the parallel and perpendicular direction relative to the plane of the workpiece; ii. increasing the localized force until it induces the yield stress in the workpiece and workpiece material deforms radially toward the fastener; iii. radially advancing the localized force around the hole perimeter to a new segment; iv. repeating steps (i)-(iii) until the localized force has been applied to the entire perimeter of the blind hole.
2. The method recited in claim 1, including the step of repeating steps (i)— (iv) until a sufficient amount of workpiece material has been deformed into contact with the fastener to clinch the fastener in the hole to the workpiece.
3. The method recited in claim 1, wherein the localized force is applied to the workpiece with a rotatable tool having displacer adapted for deforming the workpiece.
4. The method recited in claim 3, wherein said displacer applies both components of the localized force when the displacer is driven normally into the surface of the workpiece.
5. The method recited in claim 3, wherein said displacer applies both components of the localized force when the displacer is driven normally into the surface of the workpiece and is simultaneously rotated around the perimeter of the hole.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the fastener comprises a cylindrical body having a central axis, a top, a bottom, a side wall, an internal threaded bore, and a single shank at the bottom of the body extending radially relative to the central axis, said shank having a top surface orthogonal to the internal bore, and wherein workpiece material is deformed onto said top surface of said shank.
7. The method of claim 5, including the step of deforming workpiece material into at least one of the threads of said internal bore.
8. The method of claim 3, wherein the step of inserting the fastener into the blind hole is performed by a spring-biased pusher on said tool.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
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[0036]
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[0039]
[0040]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0041] “Self-clinching fastener” means any device, usually threaded, that, when pressed into ductile metal, displaces the host material around the mounting hole, causing it to cold flow into a specially designed annular recess in the shank or pilot of the fastener.” “Clinch-in” fastener means any device, usually threaded, that, can be mechanically fastened in a blind receiving hole of a metal workpiece by cold deforming the metal surrounding the hole into contact with the device. “Clinch-in fastening” as used with reference to a fastener and metal workpiece is used in its broadest send to mean the process of joining the fastener to the workpiece (without additional components) using a tool to plastically deform the workpiece into contact with the fastener to form a mechanical interlock between the fastener and the workpiece.
[0042] A fastener in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention is shown in
[0043] At the bottom 13c of the body 13, a shank 15 protrudes radially from the side walls 13b. The shank has a top surface 17, a side surface 18, a chamfer 14, and a bottom surface 16. In a preferred embodiment, the top surface 17 of the shank 15 is flat, annular and lies in a plane that is orthogonal to the central axis of the body, and parallel to the top 13a and bottom 13c of the fastener body 13. Preferably, the side surface 18 is cylindrical, and co-axial with and parallel to the side walls 13b of the body 13. Preferably the chamfer surface 14 extends at an angle that is skew to the central axis of the body, and tapers downwardly-inwardly from the side surface 18 towards the bottom 13c of the body 13.
[0044] In one preferred embodiment, the bottom surface 16 of the shank 15 is flat, annular and lies in a plane that is orthogonal to the central axis of the body 13, and parallel to the top 13a and bottom 13c of the body 13. In a preferred embodiment, the bottom surface 16 is continuous and co-planar with the bottom 13c of the body 13. By locating the shank at the very bottom of the body, the minimum thickness of the workpiece can be minimized. In other embodiments, the chamfer may blend directly into the bottom of the body, thereby eliminating the bottom surface of the shank.
[0045] In the embodiment shown in
[0046] In one preferred embodiment, the top 17 surface, side surface 18, chamfer 14 and bottom surface 16 are illustrated and described as planar. However, one or more of those surfaces may be curved, tapered, or have an irregular shape in other preferred embodiments.
[0047] The top surface 17 of the shank 15 is adapted to receive the cold flow of material surrounding a blind hole in a workpiece 21 such as seen in
[0048]
[0049] In the embodiment shown in
[0050] The working end or tip 40 of the installation tool 20 of
[0051] In this embodiment, the two displacers 27 are located approximately 180 degrees apart. The displacers 27 are identical and the length of each displacer 27 measures approximately 90 radial degrees about the tool central axis from the one end 33 to the other end 34. Compared to prior art flat-faced displacers having a rectangular cross-section, the wedge displacers 27 of the invention push some metal radially inward as they move downwardly into the workpiece.
[0052] Referring to
[0053] Referring to
[0054] Once inserted in the hole, the pusher 22 continues to steady and support the fastener in its upright position. Next, the tool translates further downwardly until the displacers 27 contact the workpiece. When the force of the displacer on the workpiece induces the yield stress into the workpiece material, rotation of the tool is preferably initiated. As the tool rotates, the displacers 27 cold deform inwardly the material surrounding the blind hole 23 onto the top surface 17 of the shank 13 and preferably into one or more of the notches 19. As deformation occurs and material is pushed radially, the yield stress on the workpiece gradually reduces if the displacers are not pressed further into the workpiece. Therefore, as rotation and radial deformation occurs, the tool translates continuously downward to maintain a steady force in the workpiece in excess of the yield stress. This process continues until a sufficient amount of material has been displaced onto the top of the fastener flange 15 to lock the fastener 11 in the workpiece 21.
[0055] The amount of force on the fastener and workpiece, and the amount of work, required to install a fastener 11 in accordance with preferred embodiments of this invention is less than the prior art methods using a displacer with a flat face. In prior art self-clinching fasteners, the displacer has a rectangular cross section, which deforms (pushes) all material in a downward direction and causes material to bulge into an undercut. In contrast, the wedge-shaped displacers 27 deform (push) some metal material radially inwardly as they move downwardly. Since the narrow apex or arcuate ridge 31 of the displacer 27 first contacts the workpiece, the force on the workpiece at the beginning of the displacement is very low. Then, for every increment of downward vertical displacement, the force on the workpiece increases until the displacer 27 is fully embedded. While this force gradually increases, this force is always lower than force exerted by a comparable, prior art, flat-faced displacer having a base and height equal to the base and height of the tapered displacer 27. Once the tapered displacer 27 is fully-embedded, the respective forces are nearly equal. This comparison of forces is graphically illustrated in
[0056] Furthermore, since the amount of work is the product of force and distance, the amount of work exerted by the tapered displacer is much lower than its prior art counterpart. The reduction in work to deform an equal amount of material compared to the prior art is also illustrated in the graph of
[0057] In preferred embodiments, the tool is rotated counterclockwise with respect to the embodiment shown in
[0058] The aforementioned force reduction permits clinch-in attachment of the fastener 11 into a very thin workpiece 21 such as an electronics panel. Even when applied into a blind hole as shown in
[0059] The above-described force reduction also is achieved in part because the displacers 27 are located on the installation tool 20 and not on the fastener 11, and because the displacers 27 are wedge shaped and not rectangular with a flat bottom working surface. This tool construction can therefore be used with a fastener having a very shallow shank. As a result, the fastener and workpiece have a strong attachment but have minimal displacement of the workpiece material.
[0060]
[0061] The tool shown in
[0062] The cross sectional area of the displacer of
[0063] Of the two preferred embodiments shown in
[0064] A tool 120 and method of installing a clinch fastener in a thin workpiece in accordance with another preferred embodiment is illustrated in
[0065] The tool 120 has a construction similar to the tool 20 described with reference to
[0066] The tool 120 is used to install a fastener 11 in the same manner, and using the same steps, as described with respect to the first tool 20. The fastener 11 is held in position against the panel 21 by the pusher 122. The spring-biased pusher 122 supports the fastener in the blind hole 123 as the displacer 127 cold deforms material surrounding the outer perimeter of the hole 123 onto the top 17 of fastener shank 15. However, in addition, as the tool 120 moves downwardly, the center punch 145 cold deforms the knob 143 outwardly and into at least one of the threads of the fastener 11 at the same time that the displacers 127 cold deform material around the perimeter of the hole 123 inwardly and onto the top surface 17 of the shank 15. The cold deformation of the knob 43 preferably occurs at the same time as deformation at the outer perimeter of the hole 123. This construction creates a more secure connection between the fastener 11 and the workpiece 21.
[0067] An installation tool in accordance with an additional embodiment of the invention is shown in
[0068] Within the bore 230 of the casing 248, the tool 220 has a compression spring 225 seated between two thrust bearings 242. At the upper end, the spring 225 is connected to the thrust bearing by a coupler 243. At the lower end, the spring 225 is seated against one side of the pusher 222. The other side of the pusher 222 is seated in another thrust bearing 242. The pusher 222 preferably has a shape and size that compliments the shape and size of the central bore 230 and permits the pusher 222 to freely reciprocate within the bore 230. The compression spring 225 controls the magnitude of the installation force of the pusher 222 on the fastener 11, thereby reducing the possibility of inadvertently making pressure marks on the back side of the panel. The force of the spring 225 should preferably be great enough to push the shank 15 of the fastener 11 through the interference zone of the hole 23. In a preferred embodiment, the compression spring 225 comprises a die spring.
[0069] Once the fastener 11 bottoms out in the receiving hole 23, the tool 220 is further advanced downwardly and simultaneously rotated to enable the displacer(s) 227 to deform and push metal radially-inwardly over the top surface 17 of the fastener flange 15, which attaches the fastener 11 to the workpiece as seen in
[0070] In a preferred embodiment, the pusher 222 has axial bores 244 that extend from one end of the pusher 222 to the other. The bores 244 create a fluid communication channel extending from the distal tip 240 of the tool 220, through the casing 248, through the spindle 241, and to a vacuum source “V”. The vacuum source “V” creates suction at the tip 240 of the tool to pick up and/or secure the fastener in the bore during crimping.
[0071] Because CNC control allows for variable speed and downward feed, discreet installation values for various workpiece materials can be developed. The tool can be spun and advanced either simultaneously or separately. For example, in a preliminary installation step the tool can be spun so that the tip 240 makes incidental contact with the workpiece. The friction from this incidental contact will heat the area surrounding the receiving hole and soften the workpiece material and thereby lower the rotational and compressive forces needed to install the fastener.
[0072] An installation tool in accordance with a further embodiment of the invention is shown in
[0073] Similar to the embodiment shown in
[0074] In the embodiments described above, the fastener 11 has a construction similar to an internally-threaded nut or standoff. However, it should be appreciated that fasteners in accordance with preferred embodiments of the invention may have a construction similar to other known fasteners while incorporating the novel features described above. For example, a two-part fastener arrangement is shown in the embodiment of
[0075] Each fastener 411a, 411b of the two part arrangement comprises a body 413a, 413b, respectively, having an axial bore. The bottom of each body 413a, 413b includes a radially-protruding shank 415a, 415b, respectively, having a construction similar to the shank 15 of the fastener 11 described above with respect to
[0076] A fastener in accordance with yet a further preferred embodiment of the invention is shown in
[0077] In contrast to the notches 19 of the embodiment shown in
[0078] From the foregoing it will be apparent to those of skill in the art that the objects of the invention have been achieved. Furthermore, it will be apparent to those of skill in the art that there are many variations and adaptations of the embodiments disclosed all of which fall within the scope and spirit of the invention which shall be determined only by the claims and their legal equivalents.