The present invention relates to a method for determining the need to dress the tip of welding electrodes in an electric resistance spot welding process.
The construction of automotive bodies and other manufactured products often requires the formation of many uniformly sized electrical resistance spot welds. The welds are made by bringing assemblies of sheet metal parts to a welding station where a computer controlled robot, or other welding machine, systematically and sequentially forms a series of spot welds to attach the sheet metal parts of the sheet metal assembly.
The welding is performed using a weld gun typically having copper or copper alloy welding electrodes. One electrode is a fixed electrode and the other electrode is a movable electrode. The electrodes are axially aligned in opposition to each other, at a specified spot weld site, and the movable electrode is advanced to clamp and press the sheets against the fixed electrode. A large electric current is momentarily passed between the opposing electrodes through the electrically resistive metal sheets pressed between the electrodes. The sheet metal between the electrodes is briefly fused during current flow and then re-solidifies to form an integral weld nugget of suitable diameter at the abutting surfaces of the sheet metal layers. In such a manufacturing operation, scores or hundreds of such welds are rapidly formed. The goal is to form all of the welds to substantially the same size, within an acceptable tolerance value, and with minimal internal porosity or discontinuities.
Welding controllers are used to control the force applied by the electrodes and to control the weld current and its duration. The force applied to the welding site by the electrodes and the resistive heat generated by the welding current results in an indentation caused by the displacement of the electrode into the softened welded surface of the sheets at the location of the weld nugget. In setting up the welding machine to produce a series of uniform welds, initial values of suitable electrode force, total welding current, and its duration are established for the welding gun and the specific metal sheets. The welding controller can be programmed in an attempt to maintain these values so that the same welds are produced during extended manufacturing operations.
However, it is known that variations creep into the welding operation because of electrode wear. In particular, as the welding operation proceeds, the tips of the electrodes are progressively deformed and mushroomed in shape and must eventually be dressed, either by hand or by machine, to remove the mushroomed copper from the weld tip and restore the original tapered shape. After a number of such dressings the electrodes will become so shortened in length and consumed that they must be replaced with new electrodes.
Weld nugget uniformity and quality can be confirmed off-line from the production operation by periodically removing the sheets from the operation and physically examining and testing a number of weld nuggets. By conducting a number of such tests at varying degrees of electrode wear, a process engineer can make a decision to dress the electrodes every certain number of welds, for example every 200 welds, and this dressing criteria is established with a considerable margin of error in order to assure quality welds.
It would be desirable to have an on-line process that could be performed during welding operations to monitor and assess welding conditions and correlate them to the condition of the electrode tip and determine the need to dress the electrode tips and/or replace the electrode tips.
A method is provided for determining that the electrodes of an electric resistance welder are in need of replacement and dressing. The method monitors the rate at which the depth of the weld indentation caused by the electrode changes during the progressive wearing of the electrodes during the making of successive welds. The electrodes are then dressed when it is determined that the rate of change of the depth of the weld indentation formed by the electrodes has substantially leveled off to a stable depth of indentation.
Referring to
The weld gun apparatus 10 includes a fixed electrode 16 mounted on a shank 17 inserted in a holder 22, which is attached to a fixed arm 24 of a welding gun arm 20. A movable electrode 18 is mounted on a shank 19 and inserted in a holder 26 carried in a servomotor drive 28. Servomotor drive 28 is adapted to axially move the movable electrode 18 into clamping engagement with the sheet 14 and press and clamp the sheet 12 into clamping engagement with the sheet 12.
The welding gun arm 20, shown in
A process controller 30 is provided for precisely controlling the servomotor drive 28 as well as controlling the robot or other multi axis manipulator that mounts the welding apparatus 10. The process controller 30 is connected to the servomotor drive 28 by conductor cable 32. An encoder 41 is associated with the servomotor drive 28 and accurately monitors the motion of the movable electrode 18. A load cell 43 is provided within the electrode holder 26, or elsewhere, to detect the amount of force that is exerted upon the sheets 12 and 14 by the electrodes 16 and 18.
A welding controller 36 is provided for controlling and monitoring the welding apparatus 10. A cable 38 connects the welding controller 36 to a weld transformer 40, and a cable 42 connects the weld transformer 40 to the electrode holder 26.
In operation, process controller 30 will activate the servomotor drive 28 to move the electrode 18 into engagement with the sheet 14, and move the sheet 14 into engagement with the sheet 12, so that the sheets 12 and 14 are clamped between the electrodes. The welding controller 36 then regulates the passage of a primary welding current from a remote source, not shown. The welding energy source may be 60 Hz, high voltage, low current alternating current. Upon command of welding controller 36, the primary current is delivered through cable 38 to weld transformer 40. Weld transformer 40 converts the primary current to a lower voltage, but higher current. Furthermore, the alternating current may be converted by a suitable rectifier to a direct current for welding. The secondary welding current is provided to electrode 18 through cable 42. The electrode 16 is connected to the opposite pole of the weld transformer via the electrode holder 22 and arm 20. The welding current may be of the order of 5,000 to 45,000 amperes depending upon the requirements of the welding operation. Where 60 cycle alternating current is initially provided, the total welding time for a typical spot weld may, e.g., be from 5 to 40 cycles of the 60 Hertz current.
When movable electrode 18 has been brought into contact with sheet 14, controller 30 initiates the spot weld operation and weld current is delivered through electrodes 18 and 16 as the servomotor drive 28 advances the movable electrode 18 during welding for the purpose of applying a predetermined squeeze force on sheets 12 and 14.
A typical spot weld nugget 44 joining sheets 12 and 14 is shown in the enlarged, fragmentary sectional view of
The tip of electrode 18 is usually round and nugget 44 has a diameter, indicated at D, in
Referring to
Accordingly,
It will be appreciated that the process controller 30 and the weld controller 36 each have hardware and software capable of control, memory storage, and electronic interface, and may typically include a microprocessor, a micro-controller, an application specific integrated circuit, and the like. The various process steps of
As alternative to measuring the beginning and end location of the movable electrode, it may be desirable to simply record the ending location of each successive weld, and to then determine the rate of change in the end location as this measurement will also enable an algorithm to analyze the rate of change and find the point where the rate of change begins to level off.
Thus the invention enables the manufacturing plant to obtain manufacturing efficiencies and high quality by determining the need to dress or replace the welding electrodes via an on-line monitoring process.