Method for producing pot-shaped components in a shaping process

09919351 ยท 2018-03-20

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A method for producing a pot-shaped component from a flat blank. The method comprises the following steps: a) shaping the flat blank in at least one deep-drawing step to form a pot-shaped raw component having a substantially flat bottom area and a circumferential frame, and b) shaping the pot-shaped raw component in a tool having a conically tapered die that applies shear to the circumferential surface of the frame in the axial direction against the conically tapered die. In step b), the bottom area is clamped between an ejector and a hold-down mechanism and the conically tapered die surrounds the bottom area of the raw component radially on the outside and extends in a diameter-reducing manner in a tool stroke.

Claims

1. A method for producing a pot-shaped component from a flat blank, wherein the pot-shaped component has a planar bottom region and a circumferential frame adjacent thereto, rising from the bottom region, wherein the blank has a first material thickness over its entire area, and wherein the bottom region has a second material thickness, which is greater than the first material thickness, and wherein the method comprises at least the following steps: a) shaping the planar blank in at least one deep-drawing step to form a pot-shaped raw component having a planar bottom region and a circumferential frame adjacent thereto, rising from the bottom region, b) shaping that pot-shaped raw component in a tool having a conically tapering die and a shear element exerting a shear on a circumferential surface of the rising frame of the raw component in an axial direction against the conically tapering die, wherein the bottom region of the raw component is clamped at least locally between an ejector and a retainer, wherein the conically tapering die encloses the bottom region of the raw component radially on an outside surface thereof and guides the bottom region of the raw component in a diameter-reducing manner in a tool stroke, wherein a retaining force of the retainer during the shaping tool stroke in step b) is less than a counterforce of the ejector, and wherein said second material thickness is the same over the entire bottom region due to a clamping between the retainer and the ejector.

2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the shear element is path-controlled.

3. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein step a) comprises at least one first deep-drawing step for forming said rising frame, and at least one second deep-drawing step for shaping, in which a radius of a transition region between the bottom region and the rising frame is reduced.

4. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein, following step b), the component is subjected to at least one shaping step in which the rising frame is converted from an orientation conically tapering toward the bottom region into a cylindrical orientation at least over a part of the height of the rising frame.

5. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the pot-shaped component is rotationally symmetrical.

6. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second material thickness is at least 1.25 times as great as the first material thickness.

7. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second material thickness is at least 1.5 times as great as the material thickness of the rising frame.

8. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the blank is of metal.

9. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the conically tapering die has a cone angle in the range of 320.

10. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein step b) is carried out at least two times, either immediately after one another or with at least one intermediate deep-drawing step.

11. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein starting material is supplied in a continuous or quasi-continuous process, and the blank is cut from the starting material in at least one processing step which precedes step a).

12. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein step a) comprises at least one first deep-drawing step for forming said rising frame, and at least one second deep-drawing step for shaping, in which a radius of a transition region between the bottom region and the rising frame is reduced, the frame being at least one of pressed and deep-drawn in a wall thickness-reducing manner or height-increasing manner in said deep-drawing step for shaping.

13. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein, following step b), the component is subjected to at least one shaping step in which the rising frame is converted from an orientation conically tapering toward the bottom region into a circular-cylindrical orientation at least over a part of the height of the rising frame.

14. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein, following step b), the component is subjected to at least one shaping step in which the rising frame is converted from an orientation conically tapering toward the bottom region into a circular-cylindrical orientation at least over the entire height of the rising frame, the rising frame being simultaneously at least one of pressed and/or deep-drawn so as to increase its height.

15. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second material thickness is at least 1.5 times as great as the first material thickness.

16. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second material thickness is at least 1.75 times as great as the first material thickness.

17. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second material thickness is at least 2 times as great as the first material thickness.

18. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second material thickness is at least 1.75 times as great as the material thickness of the rising frame.

19. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second material thickness is at least 2 times as great as the material thickness of the rising frame.

20. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second material thickness is at least 3 times as great as the material thickness of the rising frame.

21. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the blank is of steel.

22. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the blank is of a metal selected from the following group consisting of: steel, selected from the group consisting of: DC01, DC02, DC03, DC04, DC05, DC06, 1.4016, 1.4000, 1.4510, 1.4301, 1.4303, 1.4306, 1.4401, and 1.4404; nickel and tempered or untempered deep-drawable alloys including 2.4851; copper and tempered or untempered deep-drawable alloys thereof, including brass; tantalum, molybdenum and niobium and tempered and untempered deep-drawable alloys thereof; tungsten and tempered or untempered deep-drawable alloys thereof, including tungsten with rhenium being alloyed in addition; aluminum and tempered and untempered deep-drawable alloys thereof, including aluminium with magnesium being alloyed in addition; and magnesium and tempered and untempered deep-drawable alloys thereof, including magnesium with lithium or aluminum being alloyed in addition, including the alloy AZ31 and combinations and alloys of these materials.

23. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the conically tapering die has a cone angle in the range of 515.

24. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein step b) is carried out at least two times, either immediately after one another or with at least one intermediate deep-drawing step, in which the rising frame is converted from an orientation conically tapering toward the bottom region into a circular-cylindrical, orientation at least over the entire height, of the rising frame.

25. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein step b) is carried out at least two times, either immediately after one another or with at least one intermediate deep-drawing step, in which the rising frame is converted from an orientation conically tapering toward the bottom region into a cylindrical orientation at least over a part of the height of the rising frame.

26. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein starting material is supplied in a continuous or quasi-continuous process, from a roll, and the blank is cut by stamping, from the starting material in at least one processing step which precedes step a).

27. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein step a) comprises at least one first deep-drawing step for forming said rising frame, and at least one second deep-drawing step for shaping, in which a radius of a transition region between the bottom region and the rising frame is reduced, the rising frame being further at least one of pressed and deep-drawn in a wall thickness-reducing manner or height-increasing manner in at least one further step.

28. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein, following step b), the component is subjected to at least one shaping step in which the frame is converted from an orientation conically tapering toward the bottom region into a circular-cylindrical orientation at least over the entire height of the rising frame, the rising frame being at least one of pressed and deep-drawn so as to increase its height or in one or more additional pressing or deep-drawing steps.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

(1) Preferred embodiments of the invention will be described below with reference to the drawings, which are merely used for explanation and are not be interpreted as restrictive. In the drawings:

(2) FIG. 1 shows radial half-plane sections through the individual phases a)-d) of the first step for deep-drawing of a pot from a planar blank;

(3) FIG. 2 shows radial half-plane sections through the individual phases a)-d) of the second step for further shaping, or deep-drawing, of a pot with a larger frame height from a deep-drawn pot from the first step according to FIG. 1;

(4) FIG. 3 shows radial half-plane sections through the individual phases a)-d) of the third step for further shaping of a pot from a pot with a larger frame height from the second step according to FIG. 2;

(5) FIG. 4 shows radial half-plane sections through the individual phases a)-h) of the fourth step for thickening of the bottom of a pot from the third step according to FIG. 3;

(6) FIG. 5 shows radial half-plane sections through critical phases a) and b) when the ejector force is set too high;

(7) FIG. 6 shows radial half-plane sections through critical phases a) and b) when the ejector force is set too low;

(8) FIG. 7 shows a stage sequence in 9 stages from a blank to a finished component, a plan view respectively being given below and a sectional representation along the arrows in the lower representation respectively being given above, the blank being represented in a), the result of a first stage with a first tension being represented in b), the result of a second stage with a second tension being represented in c), the result of a third stage for swaging the corner in the bottom region being represented in d), the result of a fourth stage with first thickening of the bottom being represented in e), the result of a fifth stage for aligning the frame being represented in f), the result of a sixth stage with second thickening of the bottom being represented in g), the result of a seventh stage with further alignment of the frame being represented in h), and the results of two successive ironing steps to increase the frame height respectively being represented in i) and j); and

(9) FIG. 8 shows a photographic representation of a section through a produced component.

DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

(10) FIGS. 1-4 illustrate four different working steps in the scope of a stage sequence, individual instantaneous images of the sequence respectively being represented for each working step in order to illustrate the sequence. They are respectively half-plane sections, in other words the tools represented in the products and starting materials represented are cylindrically symmetrical, an axial section represented through the symmetry axis of the tool respectively being represented, and only one half plane respectively being represented owing to the symmetry.

(11) In this process, a blank in the form of a circular planar stamping 1 of metal (round) is provided. Such a stamping may for example be supplied in a continuous supply method from raw material on a roll, and stamped. In a first working step as represented in FIG. 1, the blank 1 is first shaped in a deep-drawing method by circumferentially shaping the edge region in one direction to form a frame, the extent direction of which lies essentially circumferentially perpendicularly to the plane of a bottom section. This is done in such a way that the blank (cf. FIG. 1a) is clamped in the central region between an ejector 3 and a punch 4, specifically by its being clamped flat in its central region between the clamping region 12 of the ejector 3 and the clamping region 9 of the punch 4. The clamped region 8 is correspondingly not processed in this step, while the circumferential section 13 following radially outward is. Radially on the outside of the ejector, a die 2 is arranged. Between the die 2 and the ejector 3, an axial gap 6 remains. The upper region of the die, facing toward the punch 4, is formed with a rounded shape, as represented by the reference 7. Likewise rounded and provided as a bearing for the region 13 placed around is the circumferential lower edge part 5 of the punch 4. The curved region 5 merges into an axially extending surface region 10, formed by a circumferential cylinder surface, of the punch 4. The ejector 3 and the punch 4, together with the blank 1 clamped between these two tool elements, now move, as represented in the sequence of FIGS. 1a-b, successively downward so that the section 13 comes in contact with the rounded surface 7 of the die and is increasingly placed circumferentially upward, so that it initially forms a depression. By the radial relative arrangement of the cylindrical outer surface of the punch 4 and the cylindrical inner surface 11 of the die 2, a narrow gap 14 is formed, which essentially corresponds to the material thickness of the blank 1 but may also be somewhat larger. As can be seen particularly in FIGS. 1c and 1d, the shaped circumferential section 13 is now clamped in this gap in such a way that clean shaping to form a pot-shaped component 17 takes place after the first step. In this intermediate result, there is a bottom region 15 which corresponds essentially to the region clamped between the ejector 3 and the punch 4, then there is a transition region 18 curved with a relatively large radius, the shape of which essentially corresponds to the rounded region 5 of the punch, and a circumferentially rising region 16.

(12) Although this is not the case in this method represented in FIG. 1, it is nevertheless also possible already in the scope of this step to set the gap width to be less than the material thickness of the starting material of the blank, and thereby implement first ironing/smoothing of the circumferentially rising region 16, and therefore an increase in the height of the pot.

(13) The pot-shaped component 17, which is the result of the shaping step represented in FIG. 1, is now the starting material for the second shaping step, which is represented in FIG. 2. Again, this involves a tool with a punch 20 and an ejector 22, and the bottom region 15 of the starting material is clamped between these two tool parts in a region 23. Now, however, the punch 20 has a substantially smaller radius, and the transition region between the horizontal clamping section of the punch 20 and the gap-limiting surface 26 in the form of a circumferential cylinder surface has a radius of curvature 25 which is substantially less than in the case of the first tool according to FIG. 1. Once more, there is an outer brace in the form of a die 21, which here as well has a circumferential rounded region 24. The region 23 clamped between the punch 20 and the ejector 22 moves downward together with the elements 20 and 22 relative to the outer brace 21, and the region following radially outward is then successively shaped, as shown in the sequence of steps 2a-b. Between the circumferential surface 26 of the punch 20 and the cylindrical inner surface 27 of the die, a gap 33 is here again formed, between which the rising region is shaped and drawn.

(14) The result of this second step is pot-shaped component 30, which again has a circumferential rising region 31, moreover, since the gap width of the gap 33 is here set to be more than the thickness of the starting material, it is not only shaped but simultaneously also pressed, i.e. by this process the circumferential region 31 is to some extent drawn in length. The section 34 has thus been tapered in the scope of this step by using a limited drawing gap, and the transition region from the bottom region 32 to the circumferential rising region 31 of the pot-shaped component 30 has also been reduced in its radius. The bottom region 32 still, however, essentially has the material thickness of the starting material.

(15) In a next processing step, which is represented in FIG. 3, the radius in the transition region from the bottom section 32 to the circumferential rising section 31 of the pot-shaped component 30 is now reduced even further. This is done in a tool in which the starting component 30 is now clamped in the bottom region between an ejector 42 and a retainer 55 only in the entire central region. Radially on the outside, the component is guided during essentially the entire processing step according to FIG. 3 by the die 41, the rising region being guided and displaceably clamped in the gap 53 between the gap-limiting surface 47 of the die 41 and the gap-limiting surface 46 of a punch 40. Furthermore, this punch 40 is now provided with a circumferential rounded region 45 with a very small radius. Like the retainer, it engages from above on the component. The punch 40 now moves, as is represented in the sequence of FIGS. 3a-d, downward relative to the retainer 55, the ejector 42 and the outer brace 41 onto the clamped region 43, respectively toward the bottom region of the starting component, so that the curved transition region between the bottom and the rising section is converted into a shape which has a very small radius of curvature. The punch 40 is moved down essentially with its lower surface onto the component until it is essentially flush with the clamping surface of the retainer 55, i.e. as far as an end state as represented in FIG. 3d.

(16) Respectively on the left-hand side of represented FIGS. 1-4, a shading scale is represented, which indicates the thickness of the component in the corresponding region. As can be seen particularly in FIG. 1a, the starting material has a thickness of 1.1 mm. Already in the process according to FIG. 1, the way in which a slight thickening occurs owing to the shaping process by displacement of material into the upper edge region of the rising section 13 can be seen, and particularly in FIG. 2 the way in which thinning of the material takes place for the radius of curvature in the transition region between the bottom section 32 and the rising section 31 can be seen. This is also the case in FIG. 3, and must be adapted in such a way that in the tool, this applying particularly to steps 1-3, excessive tensile forces do not act on the edge region, which could cause the bottom to be stamped out to some extent and separated from the rising region.

(17) FIG. 4 shows the processing step in a fourth tool, in which, after the third step, thickening of this section is now very deliberately induced while reducing the radius of the bottom region 52 of the pot-shaped component 50. In this case, the starting component 50 from the third processing step according to FIG. 3 is clamped between an ejector 72 and a retainer 70 in the central bottom region 13. Arranged circumferentially around the ejector 72, there is a conical outer brace having a cone surface 77 widening upward, which merges in a circumferential rounded region 74 to form a region essentially extending horizontally in this representation. The cone surface 77 is at an angle, the cone angle 83, with respect to the symmetry axis of the tool. This cone angle typically lies in the range of 5-15. Deeper cone angles make it necessary to carry out too many steps as in FIG. 4, with corresponding economic but also material technology disadvantages, and larger angles lead to problems as will be explained in detail below, and which are very similar to when the retaining force of the retainer 70, or respectively the ejector force, is not set precisely enough.

(18) Now, in addition, a shear element 75 is provided, which bears with a radial shear surface 76 on the circumferential surface or upper edge 84 of the side wall. This shear element 75 is path-controlled, while the other tool parts 70, 71, 72 are adjusted by corresponding spring forces (the tool part 71 need not be spring-mounted). Now, the unit consisting of the retainer 70, ejector 72 and shear element 75 moves downward together with the clamped component 50, while the conical outer brace 71 remains essentially stationary. During this movement, the transition region 56 formed with a small radius comes to bear between the bottom section 52 and the rising section 54 with the cone surface 77.

(19) By the successive further downward movement with pressure on the upper edge 84 by the shear element 75, as shown particularly in FIGS. 4c-h, with shortening of the radius of the bottom section 52 the latter is pushed together to a certain extent so as to thicken it, i.e. material is displaced into the middle and the material thickness in the bottom region increases.

(20) At the same time, moreover, the rising region is deformed owing to the conical brace of the die 71 to form a rising region widening upward, as represented for the finished component by the reference 81. Since this side wall region is also pressed in a swaging fashion by the shear element 75, the component is possibly also thickened in this region as well.

(21) The positioning and the shape of the retainer 70 are important in this case, as is in particular its radius. By the shear force directed radially inward, which is applied by the conicity of the die 71, the bottom may under certain circumstances also yield to this pressure by bulging upward, so that bulging instead of material thickening then results. Typically, the retainer should preferably cover at least one third of the radius of the bottom region at the starting time of the step, but it may also have a smaller radius. This, of course, is generally not desired, and correspondingly in this step it is important for the dimensioning and the clamping force of the retainer 70, in particular the clamping force between the retainer 70 and the ejector 72, to be set just in such a way that, although this bulging is prevented, the thickening of the material is nevertheless also made possible not only in the region where the retainer 70 does not bear, but also in the clamping region. Only if the distance between the retainer 70 and the ejector 72 can be modified in an increasing way in the course of the method step according to FIG. 4 can the desired thickening be achieved over the entire bottom region.

(22) The result of this important processing step according to FIG. 4 is then a pot-shaped component 80 with a circumferential rising region 81 widening conically upward, the actual frame, and an essentially planar bottom region 82, and the transition region has a relatively small radius. The bottom region 82 now has a thickness which is in this case 30-40% greater than the material thickness of the starting material. If it is desired to have a component with a parallel frame, and in particular to form this frame even substantially longer, i.e. to produce a component which has a greater height, then the desired geometry may be produced in subsequent shaping steps, in which essentially only the bottom region is then clamped and the frame is pressed. The setting of the parameters in the tool, so that under the desired material shaping in the fourth step can take place reliably and accurately at the end of the process, is important and may be determined by simple test runs. The most important defect states are represented in FIGS. 5 and 6.

(23) If an excessive force is exerted by the shear element 75 (cf. FIG. 5), then the frame is pushed down too intensely and rapidly, i.e. at a method stage which is too early, and a circumferential bead (undercut) bulging downward, possibly blocking the whole tool, may be formed in the edge region, as represented in FIG. 5. In this case, the clamping force of the first element is thus set too high, or the spring force of the ejector 72, if the shear element 75 is path-controlled, is set too high.

(24) FIG. 6, on the other hand, shows the situation when the counterforce of the ejector 72 is set too low. In this case, the shear element 75 pushes too little and, under the friction on the conical brace of the die, the edge region is pushed up, i.e. where the bottom section is not clamped by the retainer 70, and an unusable component likewise results, and in particular, precisely as in FIG. 5, there is no thickening of the bottom.

(25) With the aid of the different states of a component in the scope of a sequence of steps, FIG. 7 shows an entire stage sequence starting from a disk-shaped blank 1 (cf. FIG. 7a) to a pot-shaped finished component 100 having an extremely thick bottom region 102 and a comparatively thin circumferential frame region 101. An axial section through the processing part at the top and a plan view at the bottom are respectively represented.

(26) This stage sequence starts with a blank 1 having a thickness D. In a first step, this component is deep-drawn, the bottom optionally being very slightly thinned (D.sub.1) during this method step, while the frame retains the thickness of the original material and is set up to a height h.sub.1. This component, as represented in FIG. 7b, is subsequently shaped further in a second stage, a second drawing operation the radius in the transition region from the bottom to the frame being reduced, and the diameter of the bottom being reduced approximately by a further 20%, so that the height h.sub.2 is increased by about 50%. At the same time, the frames are also pressed somewhat more, so that a thickness D.sub.2 which is somewhat less than the thickness D of the starting material results in the frame region. The resulting component is represented in FIG. 7c.

(27) In a next step, which corresponds essentially to step 3 as described above, shaping is carried out by swaging the corners, in other words the transition radius between the bottom region and the frame is greatly reduced. This is a preparation for the step, represented above in the scope of FIG. 4, for the thickening of the bottom. In this bottom swaging step as well, the bottom may be thickened further slightly, i.e. the thickness D.sub.3 may be greater than the thickness D.sub.1. The overall height h.sub.3 is of course likewise further reduced somewhat in this step, but the aperture diameter Dm.sub.3 remains approximately the same as Dm.sub.2. The result is a pot as represented in FIG. 7d, with a sharp transition region with a small radius between the bottom and the frame.

(28) In a fourth step, the result of which is represented in FIG. 7e, the bottom is now firstly thickened, essentially in a step as described above in FIG. 4. The result is a bottom with a thickness D.sub.4 which is now already greater than the thickness D of the starting material. The frame regions are likewise swaged, i.e. D4 is somewhat greater than D. The inner bottom radius Dm.sub.4 is reduced in comparison with Dm.sub.3 by about 20%, while the height h.sub.4 remains the same, or may even be increased somewhat further.

(29) A further step is now carried out, the result of which is represented in FIG. 7f, the frames being raised further while simultaneously ensuring that the radii in the transition region between the bottom and the frame remain as small as possible. The bottom is possibly thinned somewhat further to a thickness D.sub.5 in the step then taking place, the result of which is represented in FIG. 7g, and in a second thickening step for the bottom the latter is increased further in its thickness to a final thickness D.sub.6, which in this special case is almost two times as great as the thickness D of the starting material. The frames are also thickened to a thickness D.sub.6, although this is thinned in the three steps then taking place, a first step with drawing (result represented in FIG. 7h) successively and with a great increase in the overall height of the component to a final height h.sub.9. The first step, the result of which is represented as FIG. 7h, is drawing, while the steps which lead to the results according to FIGS. 7i and j are effectively ironing steps, so that the wall thickness at the end (D.sub.9) is only about two thirds of the material thickness D of the starting material.

(30) This finally results in a component in which the ratio between the wall thickness in the bottom region and the wall thickness in the frame region lies in the region of 3 to 1, starting from a starting material thickness which is substantially less than the thickness in the bottom region, and greater or even substantially greater than the final thickness in the frame region.

(31) A component resulting from this process is represented, particularly in order to illustrate the corner region 103, with very small edge radii in FIG. 8 in an axial section. It is found for this component, above all in measurements, that owing to the processes with the bottom material the latter has a substantially higher strength than when such a component is subjected only to shaping steps of a conventional type. Typically, the starting material has a Vickers hardness in the range of HV1=107-111. If a component is deep-drawn in a normal method starting from a material with a thickness of 1.1 mm, then with a bottom thickness of somewhat less than 1.1 mm the Vickers hardness in this region then lies in the range of HV10=114-119. If the bottom is increased to a thickness of 1.3 mm by using the proposed method, then a hardness of HV10=151-166 results, and even in the range of HV10=176-181 if it is increased to a thickness of 1.7 mm. Essentially measured directly over the bottom, the frame under these conditions has a hardness in the range of HV10=154-155 at the deep-drawn part before the first thickening step, HV10=185 after the thickening to a bottom thickness of 1.3 mm, and HV10=206-219 after the second thickening to 1.7 mm and subsequent deep-drawing and ironing operations to form the finished component. The yield point of the material in the bottom region is furthermore increased correspondingly, starting from base material with approximately 210 MPa, in the two deep-drawing steps to approximately 240 MPa and subsequently in the first thickening step (1.1 mm to 1.3 mm) to approximately 400 MPa. In the second thickening step (1.3 mm to 1.7 mm), a further increase in the yield point to approximately 450 MPa is achieved.

(32) TABLE-US-00001 LIST OF REFERENCES 1 blank 2 outer brace for the first step, die 3 ejector for the first step 4 punch for the first step 5 circumferential rounded region of 4 6 wide gap between 2 and 3 7 circumferential rounded region of 2 8 clamped region of 1 9 clamping region of 4 10 gap-limiting surface of 4 11 gap-limiting surface of 2 12 clamping region of 3 13 shaped section of 1 14 gap for 13 15 bottom region after first step 16 circumferentially rising region after first step 17 pot-shaped component after first step 18 curved transition region between 15 and 16 20 punch for the second step 21 outer brace for the second step, die 22 ejector for the second step 23 clamped region of 17 24 circumferential rounded region of 21 25 circumferential rounded region of 20 26 gap-limiting surface of 20 27 gap-limiting surface of 21 28 circumferential surface of 23 29 clamping region of 22 30 pot-shaped component after the second step 31 circumferential rising region after second step 32 bottom region after second step 33 gap for 34 34 pressed section of 17 40 die for the third step 41 outer brace for the third step, die 42 ejector for the third step 43 clamped region of 30 44 circumferential rounded region of 41 45 circumferential rounded region of 40 46 gap-limiting surface of 40 47 gap-limiting surface of 41 48 circumferential surface of 43 49 clamping region of 42 50 pot-shaped component after the third step 51 circumferential rising region after third step 52 bottom region after third step 53 gap for 54 54 rising section of 50 55 retainer for the third step 56 transition region from 52 to 51, edge region 70 retainer for the fourth step 71 conical outer brace for the fourth step, die 72 ejector for the fourth step 73 clamped region of 50 74 circumferential rounded region of 71 75 shear element 76 shear surface of 75 77 cone surface of 71 78 circumferential cylindrical surface of 72 79 clamping region of 72 80 pot-shaped component after the fourth step 81 circumferential rising frame which widens after the fourth step 82 bottom region after the fourth step 83 cone angle of 77 84 circumferential surface of side wall 100 finished component 101 frame of 100 102 bottom of 100 103 corner region of 100 D thickness D.sub.m diameter H height