Vehicle component joining assembly
11628487 ยท 2023-04-18
Assignee
Inventors
- Vladimir Vladimirovich Bogachuk (West Bloomfield, MI, US)
- Shawn Michael Morgans (Chelsea, MI, US)
- Amanda Kay Freis (Ann Arbor, MI, US)
Cpc classification
B21D53/88
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16B43/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16B25/106
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16B5/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B21D53/88
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21J5/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16B25/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16B25/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16B43/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A vehicle assembly includes a first component having a stand-off that provides a cavity. The stand-off protrudes from an insertion side of the first component. The stand-off includes at least one side wall that extends from a floor of the cavity to at least one outer surface of the stand-off. The assembly further includes a second component that contacts the first component at an interface. The cavity is configured to receive a mechanical fastener that joins the first component to the second component. A distance between the floor of the cavity and the interface is greater in some areas than in other areas such that a cross-sectional thickness at a bottom of the cavity is varied.
Claims
1. A vehicle assembly, comprising: a first component having a stand-off that provides a cavity, the stand-off protruding from an insertion side of the first component, the stand-off including at least one side wall that extends from a floor of the cavity to at least one outer surface of the stand-off; and a second component contacting the first component at an interface, wherein the cavity is configured to receive a mechanical fastener that joins the first component to the second component, wherein the at least one outer surface of the stand-off is disposed along an outer surface plane, and the interface is disposed along an interface plane that is transverse to the outer surface plane, wherein the insertion side is disposed along an insertion side plane that is transverse to the outer surface plane, wherein a distance between the floor of the cavity and the interface is greater in some areas than in other areas such that a cross-sectional thickness at a bottom of the cavity is varied, wherein the first component does not provide a clearance throughhole for the mechanical fastener prior to rotating the mechanical fastener to drive the mechanical fastener through the floor; wherein the at least one side wall is an at least one inner side wall, the stand-off further including at least one outer side wall extending from the insertion side of the first component to the at least one outer surface.
2. The vehicle assembly of claim 1, wherein the mechanical fastener is a single-sided fastener.
3. The vehicle assembly of claim 1, wherein the mechanical fastener is a flow drill screw.
4. The vehicle assembly of claim 1, wherein the first component is a cast component.
5. The vehicle assembly of claim 1, wherein the second component is an extruded component.
6. The vehicle assembly of claim 1, wherein the outer surface is a planar outer surface.
7. The vehicle assembly of claim 1, wherein the second component does not provide a clearance throughhole for the mechanical fastener prior to rotating the mechanical fastener to drive the mechanical fastener through the floor.
8. The vehicle assembly of claim 1, wherein the mechanical fastener has a head and a shaft extending from the head, wherein, when the mechanical fastener is joining the first component to the second component, the head is configured to directly contact the stand-off, and the shaft is configured to extend along a longitudinal axis of the mechanical fastener through the cavity and the interface between the first and second component, the longitudinal axis of the mechanical fastener is oriented nonperpendicularly to the interface.
9. The vehicle assembly of claim 8, further comprising the mechanical fastener.
10. A vehicle assembly, comprising: a first component having a stand-off that provides a cavity, the stand-off protruding from an insertion side of the first component, the stand-off including at least one side wall that extends from a floor of the cavity to at least one outer surface of the stand-off; and a second component contacting the first component at an interface, wherein the cavity is configured to receive a mechanical fastener that joins the first component to the second component wherein a distance between the floor of the cavity and the interface is greater in some areas than in other areas such that a cross-sectional thickness at a bottom of the cavity is varied, wherein the mechanical fastener is a single-sided fastener; wherein the at least one outer surface of the stand-off is disposed along an outer surface plane, and the interface is disposed along an interface plane that is transverse to the outer surface plane; wherein the at least one side wall is an at least one inner side wall, the stand-off further including at least one outer side wall extending from the insertion side of the first component to the at least one outer surface.
11. The vehicle assembly of claim 10, wherein the mechanical fastener is a flow drill screw.
12. The vehicle assembly of claim 10, wherein the insertion side is disposed along an insertion side plane that is transverse to the outer surface plane.
13. The vehicle assembly of claim 10, wherein the outer surface is a planar outer surface.
14. The vehicle assembly of claim 10, wherein a floor of the first component lacks a clearance throughhole for the mechanical fastener prior to rotating the mechanical fastener to drive the mechanical fastener through the floor.
15. The vehicle assembly of claim 10, wherein the mechanical fastener has a head and a shaft extending from the head, wherein, when the mechanical fastener is joining the first component to the second component, the head is configured to directly contact the stand-off, and the shaft is configured to extend along a longitudinal axis of the mechanical fastener through the cavity and the interface between the first and second component, the longitudinal axis of the mechanical fastener is oriented nonperpendicularly to the interface.
16. The vehicle assembly of claim 15, further comprising the mechanical fastener.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) The various features and advantages of the disclosed examples will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the detailed description. The figures that accompany the detailed description can be briefly described as follows:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(10) This disclosure details a method of joining components together using a fastener. The fastener can be a one-sided fastener driven by a tool. One of the components includes a feature that facilitates driving the fastener while keeping the tool clear of surrounding components.
(11) Referring to
(12) A tool 20 is used to drive the fastener 18 into an installed position. The tool 20 can engage and drive the fastener 18 without interference from other components, such as a neighboring component 24.
(13) In the exemplary embodiment, the first component 10 is a cast vehicle component. In another example, the first component 10 is a composite material that is molded. In yet another example, the first component 10 could be extruded. The second component 14 is an extruded component, such as an extruded component utilized to provide a rail of a vehicle subframe. The second component 14 could be stamped, or cast in other examples.
(14) A person having skill in this art and the benefit of this disclosure would be able to structurally distinguish components that are extruded or cast from component that are not extruded or cast. Thus, specifying that a component is an extruded component or a cast component implicates structure to that component.
(15) During assembly, the first component 10 is moved against the second component 14 from the position of
(16) As shown in
(17) A stand-off 38 of the first component 10 protrudes from the insertion side 34. The stand-off 38 provides a cavity 42. In the exemplary embodiment, boundaries of the cavity 42 are established by a floor 46 and at least one sidewall 50. The at least one sidewall 50 extends from the floor 46 of the cavity 42 to at least one outer surface 54 of the stand-off 38. The fastener 18 is positioned within the cavity 42 during the securing operation. The cavity 42 can help to locate the fastener 18 during the securing operation. The first component 10 can be cast to include the stand-off 38. If the first component 10 is instead extruded, the stand-off 38 could be one or more ribs that extend along a longitudinal length of the component 10.
(18) As schematically shown in
(19) Due to the tilting of the floor 46 relative to the interface I, a distance between the floor 46 and the interface I is greater in some areas than in other areas such that a cross-sectional thickness at a bottom of the cavity 42 is varied.
(20) The outer surface 54 of the stand-off 38 is disposed along an outer surface plane P.sub.OS that, in the exemplary embodiment, is parallel to the floor plane P.sub.FS and angled transversely to the interface plane P.sub.I.
(21) In the exemplary embodiment, the direction D that the tool 20 drives the fastener 18 is perpendicular to the floor plane P.sub.FS. As the outer surface plane P.sub.OS is parallel to the floor plane P.sub.FS, the direction D is also perpendicular to the outer surface plane P.sub.OS. Keeping the outer surface plane P.sub.OS perpendicular to the direction D in which the fastener 18 is driven can help to lessen the likelihood that a drive feature on a head if the fastener 18 is not stripped. If the outer surface plane P.sub.OS is not perpendicular to the direction D, the head of the fastener 18 may rotate near the end of the drive cycle, resulting in a loss of contact between the tool 20 and the fastener 18.
(22) The direction D is nonperpendicular to the interface plane P.sub.I. That is, the fastener 18 is driven through the interface I in a direction D that is nonperpendicular to the interface plane P.sub.I. The tool 20 rotates the fastener 18 to drive the fastener 18 through the interface I into the installed position. During the driving, the longitudinal axes of the tool 20 and the fastener 18 are tilted away from an axis that is normal to the interface plane P.sub.I.
(23) The fastener 18, in the exemplary embodiment, is a flow drill screw. As the flow drill screw is rotated by the tool 20, here a torque tool, the material of the first component 10 and the second component 14 is heated and penetrated by the flow drill screw. Notably, the first component 10 and the second component 14 do not include throughbores that need to be formed and aligned prior to being joined by the fastener 18. Instead, the fastener 18 moves material of the first component 10 and the second component 14 to create apertures as the fastener 18 is driven.
(24) The flow drill screw is a single-sided fastener as the flow drill screw can join the first component 10 to the second component 14 without accessing a side other than the insertion side 34 of the first component 10. Other single-sided fasteners could be utilized in other examples to join the first component 10 to the second component 14. For example, the fastener 18 could be a tack that is moved to an installed position in a high-speed tacking operation. The fastener 18 could also be a standard thread cutting fastener.
(25) As understood, a flow drill screw is often configured to be driven through a surface while generally perpendicular to the surface. In the exemplary embodiment, the fastener 18 is driven in the direction D, which is perpendicular to the floor 46. Since the floor 46 is tilted to face slightly upward, the direction D can slope downward toward the floor 46. This enables the tool 20 to drive the fastener 18 into a seated position without the neighboring component 24 contacting or otherwise interfering with the driving of the fastener 18. If the fastener 18 needed to be driven perpendicular to the interface plane P.sub.I, the neighboring component 24 would interfere with the tool 20.
(26) In the exemplary embodiment, the stand-off 38 provides the cavity 42. Due to the cavity 42, the first component 10 has a cross-sectional thickness at the bottom of the cavity 42 that is reduced when compared to the cross-sectional thickness of areas of the first component 10 surrounding the cavity 42, such as the remaining portions of the stand-off 38. The reduced cross-sectional thickness at the bottom of the cavity 42 leads to the fastener 18 needing to move less material in order to penetrate the first component 10 than if the cross-sectional thickness at the bottom of the cavity 42 were not reduced.
(27) In
(28) The example fastener 18 is shown as joining two components. The fastener 18 could, in other examples, join more than two components.
(29) Some exemplary features of the disclosed examples include a first component having cavity with a floor that is angled relative to an interface between the first and a second component. The angling or tilting of the floor enables a tool to drive a fastener through the interface when the fastener is nonperpendicular to the interface. This helps the tool avoid interference with neighboring components. The first component can be cast, which can facilitate the formation of the cavity having the angled floor. A stand-off feature can provide the cavity.
(30) The fastener can be a single-sided fastener that can be moved to a seated position without access to another side of the first and second components, and without requiring throughbores in the first and second components prior to driving the fastener.
(31) The preceding description is exemplary rather than limiting in nature. Variations and modifications to the disclosed examples may become apparent to those skilled in the art that do not necessarily depart from the essence of this disclosure. Thus, the scope of legal protection given to this disclosure can only be determined by studying the following claims.