ROTARY INSTALLATION TOOLS FOR CLINCH FASTENERS
20240375254 ยท 2024-11-14
Inventors
- Michael Maloney (Doylestown, PA, US)
- Kristina Valko (Pipersville, PA, US)
- Jonathan Olson (Harleysville, PA, US)
- Brian Bentrim (Furlong, PA, US)
- Qiang Sun (Novi, MI, US)
- Ronald Dise (Perkasie, PA, US)
- Kent Johnston (White Salmon, WA, US)
Cpc classification
B23P11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B25B27/0007
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23P19/064
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21K25/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16B37/068
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y10T29/49915
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B25B27/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16B37/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B23P11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Tooling is held within the nose of a rotary punch and as the tool is rotated and forced against a workpiece a fastener within the tool becomes affixed to the workpiece. The tools have displacers which non-destructively deform and reshape the workpiece without any loss of workpiece material. The tools have various types of displacers including: tapered and arcuate displacers which act in concert to progressively act upon the workpiece; spherical displacers which may be fixed. or a full-circle displacer ring which wobbles as it presses against the workpiece. In the case of fixed spherical displacers, a multi-stroke method can be employed where the tool is rotated after each stroke in a group of installation strokes.
Claims
1. A tool tip for a rotary press punch, comprising: a body having a shank, an axial bore, and a flange on the shank adjacent a bottom end of the body, said bore constructed and configured to hold a fastener; at least one workpiece displacer, each workpiece displacer affixed to the body at a fixed position on the flange along a periphery of the body surrounding the bore and adapted for displacing workpiece material around the outside of the fastener; and wherein the at least one displacer has a profile to cause the deformation of the workpiece to affix the fastener to the workpiece without the loss of workpiece material said at least one displacer having a single topmost pointed ridge defined by a circular line centered about said axial bore, said at least one displacer tapered radially from the ridge toward the axial bore, and; wherein at least two of the at least one displacer profiles are different.
2. The tool tip claim 1, wherein a distal end surface face of the flange is orthogonal to the axial bore and having the at least one displacer that is vertically tapered along an arcuate ridge centered about said axial bore from a back end of the displacer of greatest height down to a front end of minimum height of the displacer where the ridge meets the distal end face.
3. The tool tip of claim 2, wherein an inside edge of said at least one displacer is chamfered from the arcuate ridge to the axial bore and wherein each displacer of said at least one displacer is chamfered from the displacer ridge to an outer edge of each displacer and wherein a width of each displacer is tapered such that the front end of said each displacer intersects said distal end surface at a point.
4. The tool tip according to claim 1 and a punch for a rotary press having a casing with a top end, a bottom end, and a central rotational axis; the top end being adapted for affixation to a rotary and vertically reciprocal spindle of an industrial machine; and wherein the tool tip is releasably held within the bottom end of the punch.
5. A method of displacing workpiece material around a fastener to affix the fastener to the workpiece, comprising the steps of: providing the tool tip and punch of claim 4; providing a malleable metal workpiece panel with a blind hole; inserting a fastener having a flange adjacent its bottom end into the blind hole; pressing the tool tip axially into the workpiece, said pressing defining a first workpiece deforming stroke; stopping the axial movement of the tool tip at a predetermined first stroke depth; and rotating the tool against the workpiece after said first stroke and held at the predetermined first stroke depth whereby material of the workpiece is reshaped around and above the flange of the fastener.
6. The method of claim 5, carried out by repeating the steps of pressing, stopping and rotating in succession until affixation of the fastener to the workpiece is completed.
7. The method of claim 6 wherein a second stroke at a second predetermined stroke depth is deeper than the first stroke depth and held at the second stroke depth whereby workpiece material is reshaped above and around the flange of the fastener.
8. The method of claim 7 wherein the tool rotation carried out during a first group of strokes including the first and second strokes is predetermined.
9. The method of claim 8 wherein said first group of strokes is completed when the tool has rotated a total of 360 angular degrees.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein completed affixation is achieved in incrementally advancing stroke depths.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein the tool is rotated the same number of angular degrees at each stroke depth.
12. The method of claim 11 further including a final smoothing step where the tool is rotated 360 angular degrees while held at a predetermined stroke of greatest depth.
13. The method of claim 5 further including axially oscillating the tool tip while pressing it into the workpiece prior to reaching the first stroke depth.
14. The tool tip of claim 1 comprising three displacers, each displacer having a different profile; a first displacer having a ramped profile which is vertically tapered along an arcuate ridge centered about said axial bore from a back end of the displacer of greatest height down to a front end of minimum height of the displacer where the ridge meets the distal end face; a second displacer that follows the first displacer in peripheral alignment and is configured to move workpiece material parted by the first displacer closer to the fastener; and a third displacer having a rectangular profile.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
[0023] The installation tool of the invention comprises a rotary punch press tip which holds a fastener. The tip has displacers which contact a receiving workpiece such as a metal panel to force material of the panel onto a flange of the fastener to attach it. Tips vary in the different types of displacers that they employ. The following four displacer embodiments are illustrated and discussed below. Herein the replaceable tips are also referred to as the tools. The term profile means the three-dimensional configuration of a displacer.
[0024] 1. Multiple fixed, reduced area displacers of different profiles to achieve a sequentially acting composite metal flow shape, all on one tool. (
[0025] 2. A tip with multiple displacers where the displacers such as ball bearings roll on the surface of the metal while being pushed axially (
[0026] 3. A full ring displacer that is pushed incrementally at one point per infinite increment through 360 degrees as it is advanced forward to displace metal, having the same force reducing quality as the above, with reduced friction given that the displacer itself does not rotate. (
[0027] 4. An oscillating punch tip fitted with fixed-position displacers, either rounded or wedge shaped evenly spaced about the tool bore. The tip presses and rotates incrementally between strokes which is repeated at each successive install depth. Axial oscillation is utilized to relieve panel stress. Torsional stress buildup is nearly eliminated and only occurs at the end of each install group of strokes and rotations after the tool has been rotated a complete 360 degrees when the tool is then rotated 360 degrees at the last stroke depth to smooth out displaced panel material. (
[0028]
[0029] With continued reference to
[0030] As seen in
[0031] In another embodiment seen in
[0032] The balls roll between the raceway 43 of the tip body 44 and a snap-in-place retainer 45 affixed to the end of the body. The balls 41 rotate within the tool while simultaneously being pressed into the installation panel, pushing metal above a flange or ledge on the fastener as seen in
[0033] In yet another tool tip embodiment 70 depicted in
[0034]
[0035] In yet another embodiment 90 seen in
[0036] Referring now to
[0037] In this embodiment the tool is incrementally stroked, and rotated between strokes of a given length which results in a workpiece deformation to a predetermined depth level. As depicted the tool is rotated a set amount (e.g. 20) before the next stroke is applied. Installation is achieved in incrementally advancing displacement depth levels. The number of axial strokes per depth level is determined by the amount of rotation in the tool following each stroke. Once the tool has rotated sufficiently to cover the angular distance between displacers, the stroke group is complete. The tool is then rotated a complete 360 degrees to smooth out the displaced material, and the process begins again at the next depth which are scalar increments of the initial depth.
[0038] Table 1 below provides a breakdown of how installation is achieved via install groups. Each group corresponds to an install depth or level. In this example the number of displacers is 6 (as in
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Installation broken down by install group Step z (in.) +z (in.) rotation () Group 1 (.005 install depth) 1 0.005 0.010 20 2 0.010 0.010 20 3 0.010 0.000 360 Group 2 (.010 install depth) 1 0.005 0.010 20 2 0.010 0.010 20 3 0.010 0.000 360 Group N (continue in scalar increments)
[0039] Using this method install groups are customized for each part and correspond to blind hole depth, the number of displacers, and the angular distance between displacers. For instance, if there are 5 displacers the distance between them is 72 degrees. This distance is covered by any number of strokes depending on the amount of rotation per stroke. If the rotation per stroke is 12 degrees, then there are 5 strokes followed by a complete rotation of the tool occurring immediately after the final stroke. Individual displacers, whether ball or wedge are used specifically to minimize the projected area on panel while also moving enough material to achieve installation; this is the purpose of tool rotation following each stroke.
[0040]
[0041] Displacing panel material in depth increments achieved with axial oscillation reduces compressive stress build-up in the panel. Torsional stress buildup in the panel is nearly eliminated, and only occurs during the final step which provides a complete 360 degree smoothing rotation. The result is reduced panel stress intended to prevent material near the cosmetic face 96 from reaching a yielding point.
[0042] The embodiments described above disclose but a few of the possible examples of the invention which include a combination of mechanical elements with the same functional concepts, but not limited to those embodiments specifically disclosed. Many variations and modifications will be apparent to those of skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention which shall be defined only by the following claims and their legal equivalents.