The present invention relates to an anti cross-thread bolt which prevents itself from being cross-threaded even when obliquely screwed into a female screw.
When a bolt is screwed into a nut or any other female screw, it is preferable to insert the bolt by precisely aligning the bolt axis with the female screw axis. In actual assembly lines or the like, however, there are some cases where bolts are inserted using tools such as power screwdrivers with their axes being somewhat inclined. In such cases, the threads of the bolt male screw part fit into the root parts of the female screw that are deviated by one pitch from the proper root parts, and if the bolt is forcibly screwed into the female screw in this state, cross-threading may occur, leading to a serious trouble that the bolt cannot be unscrewed easily.
Conventionally, there have been proposed various kinds of bolts which are designed to prevent cross-threading even if they are inserted into female screws somewhat obliquely. A typical example of such bolts is the one disclosed in Patent Citation 1 by the applicant of this invention, wherein a pilot portion (which is also called a full dog point or a guide portion) is formed at the tip of the regular thread part and the outer periphery of the tip of the pilot portion is contacted with the female screw when the bolt is obliquely inserted, thereby correcting the posture of the bolt. As disclosed in Patent Citation 2 and Patent Citation 3, there have been also proposed anti cross-thread bolts having various kinds of threads formed on the pilot portions to enhance a posture correction effect.
As a matter of course, however, the pilot portion has a smaller diameter than the regular thread part of a bolt, and an incomplete thread part is inevitably formed between the regular thread part and the pilot portion. As a result, cross-threading may occur on the incomplete thread part. Making the pilot portion longer only reduces the obliquity of the bolt and has no specific effect in preventing cross-threading. Accordingly, making the pilot portion longer is not a good idea in terms of cost and resource.
PTL 3: International Publication No. WO2006/134626
An object of the present invention is to solve the conventional problems mentioned above and provide a novel anti cross-thread bolt which prevents itself from being cross-threaded without the need for a posture correction effect provided by a pilot portion.
As a result of elaborate studies to solve the above-mentioned problems, the inventor of the present invention has found that against the conventional common knowledge, an effect of preventing occurrence of cross-threading is obtained by forming a small-diameter thread part intentionally and setting an appropriate outer diameter for the small-diameter thread part.
The present invention has been completed based on the above finding and provides a bolt which is screwed into a female screw having a nominal diameter D and an inner diameter D1, wherein at the tip of a regular thread part provided on the bolt shank, a small-diameter thread part is formed by one pitch or more, the small-diameter thread part having an outer diameter d which is larger than the inner diameter D1 of the female screw and smaller than (D+D1)/2.
As described in claim 2, it is preferable that the outer diameter d of the small-diameter thread part is larger than the bolt pitch diameter. In addition, as described in claim 3, it is preferable that the small-diameter thread part is formed by one to three pitches. Furthermore, as described in claim 4, at the tip of the small-diameter thread part, a pilot portion having a diameter smaller than the inner diameter D1 of a female screw may be formed.
The bolt of the invention has a small-diameter thread part formed at the tip of the regular thread part by one pitch or more. The outer diameter d of the small-diameter thread part is larger than the inner diameter D1 of a female screw and smaller than (D+D1)/2. Therefore, even when the bolt of the invention is somewhat obliquely inserted into the female screw, the threads of the small-diameter thread part do not bite with the threads of the female screw by force and occurrence of cross-threading is prevented. This point will be described in detail later. Furthermore, as the small-diameter thread part is formed by one pitch or more, no cross-threading occurs even if the bolt inclines in any direction with respect to the end of a female screw. The bolt of the invention originally does not need a pilot portion. As described in claim 4, however, a pilot portion may be formed further at the tip of the small-diameter thread part.
Hereinafter, the present invention will be described in more details with embodiments.
The female screw 20 has a nominal diameter D and an inner diameter D1. The nominal diameter D is common to the bolt 10 and the female screw 20. As stipulated in JIS-B0205, the nominal diameter D is the same as the outer diameter of a male screw. According to this embodiment, it is equal to the outer diameter of the regular thread part 11. In addition, as stipulated in JIS-B0205, the inner diameter D1 of the female screw 20 is equal to a root diameter of a male screw. According to this embodiment, it is equal to the root diameter of the regular thread part 11. To sum up, the nominal diameter D of the bolt 10=the nominal diameter D of the female screw 20=the outer diameter of the regular thread part 11, and the inner diameter D1 of the female screw 20=the root diameter of the regular thread part 11.
The above relations generally hold and are not specific to the present invention. The present invention is characterized by the small-diameter thread part 12, and in particular, that the outer diameter d of the small-diameter thread part 12 is larger than the inner diameter D1 of the female screw and smaller than (D+D1)/2. The small-diameter thread part 12 needs to have at least one pitch and preferably one to three pitches. Next, descriptions will be given on the reason why the outer diameter d of the small-diameter thread part 12 is set as mentioned above and on the effect produced by doing so.
This allows the bolt 10 to change its inclination angle freely between the state shown in
The reason why the outer diameter d of the small-diameter thread part 12 is made larger than the inner diameter D1 of the female screw 20 is that if the former is smaller than the latter, the small-diameter thread part 12 may not be contacted with the female screw 20 at all, just like a pilot portion of a conventional bolt. By making the outer diameter d of the small-diameter thread part 12 larger than the inner diameter D1 of the female screw 20 according to the present invention, the small-diameter thread part 12 is always brought into contact with the female screw 20 at any one point, allowing the bolt to turn around the point. In particular, it is preferable that the outer diameter d of the small-diameter thread part 12 of the bolt 10 is larger than the bolt pitch diameter. This ensures that the small-diameter thread part 12 is brought into contact with the female screw 20.
Furthermore, the small-diameter thread part 12 is formed by at least one pitch in order to ensure that the incomplete thread part 12 is always brought into contact with the female screw 20 even if the bolt 10 is inclined in any direction. In fact, however, if the small-diameter thread part is formed by just one pitch, the opposite side may not fall on the small-diameter thread part 12 depending on the contact point. Therefore, it is preferable that two or more pitches are provided. Also, after completion of fastening, the small-diameter thread part 12 does not make any contribution to fastening. Therefore, providing pitches more than necessary is meaningless. One to three pitches are preferable, and two to three pitches are more preferable. The thread shape of the small-diameter thread part 12 is not particularly limited, but as long as it meets the above-mentioned dimension rule, it may be a standard type triangular thread or trapezoidal thread. Hereinafter, an example of the present invention will be described.
Using a bolt and nut having a nominal diameter of 12 mm and a pitch of 1.25 mm, the effect of the present invention were examined. According to JIS, the nominal diameter D for this case is 12 mm on the bolt, the inner diameter D1 of the female screw is 10.647 to 10.912 mm and the bolt pitch diameter is 11.188 mm. In this bolt, the small-diameter thread part is formed by two pitches at the tip of the regular thread part having an outer diameter of 12 mm. The range of the outer diameter d of the small-diameter thread part according to the present invention is 10.912 mm<d<11.32 mm, and in this example, it is 11.20 mm, which is larger than the pitch diameter.
The bolt was obliquely screwed into the nut at an angle of 4, 8 or 12 degrees and the rate of occurrence of cross-threading was measured. For comparison, using an anti cross-thread bolt having a nominal diameter of 12 mm on which a pilot portion having a shape as described in Patent Document 2 is formed, a test was conducted on the same conditions as those mentioned above to measure the rate of occurrence of cross-threading.
As a result, cross-threading occurred on the bolt for comparison with ¼ probability when it was screwed into a female screw at an inclination angle of 8 degrees, while no cross-threading occurred on the bolt of the present invention even when it was screwed into a female screw at an inclination angle of 12 degrees, resulting in normal fastening. The data obtained by this example showed that, compared to the conventional bolts, the bolt of the present invention prevents itself from being cross-threaded even when screwed into a female screw obliquely at a larger angle.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2008-256976 | Oct 2008 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP09/05022 | 9/30/2009 | WO | 00 | 3/28/2011 |