The present invention relates to decking cone devices operable to assist in mutual alignment and subsequently handling of assembled automotive components during fabrication of road vehicles. Moreover, the present invention also concerns methods of mutually aligning and subsequently handling assembled automotive components during fabrication of road vehicles.
During mass production of products, it is desirable that production processes should be as efficient and effective as possible. Complex contemporary products often require a high input of human labor during manufacture which can represent a significant portion of a cost of finished such manufactured product provided to consumers.
When manufacturing road vehicles, numerous component parts are assembled together with high reproducibility so as to provide a reliable and dependable road vehicle. Automotive component parts which are sub-optimally designed for manufacture can potentially slow down manufacturing rendering vehicle manufacture less efficient and adding to manufacturing cost. Moreover, during vehicle manufacture, it is often desirable to handle groups of automotive components assembled together to render manufacturing more efficient, for example sub-assemblies of components such as suspension systems for mounting to vehicle chassis components.
In a context of the present invention, it is convenient to attach vehicle suspension sub-assemblies to vehicle chasses during part of a vehicle assembly process. Moreover, it has been found in practice that a technical problem arises in quickly and easily aligning and securing such suspension sub-assemblies to chasses during vehicle assembly; for example, various holes need to be aligned during manufacture to receive securing bolts or similar fasteners. Precision alignment of holes not only needs care and attention, but can also result in assembly operator fatigue on account of a degree of continuous concentration required.
An object of the present invention is to provide a decking cone device which is capable of being used in manufacturing, for example in automotive manufacture, for more rapidly aligning and subsequently holding components together prior to mutually securing the components together.
According to a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a decking cone device adapted for automatically mutually angularly aligning and laterally aligning at least a first component part to a second component part, said decking device including one or more features for laterally and angularly engaging onto or into said first component part, said decking device having external surfaces so shaped so as to cooperate with edges of a hole formed in the second component part, the decking device being operable so as to generate when the decking device engaged onto or into the first component part is offered to the hole in the second component part lateral and angular alignment forces so as to mutually laterally and angularly align said first component part to said second component part.
The invention is of advantage in that the decking device is capable of automatically generating alignment forces when the first and second component parts are offered together so as to laterally and angularly mutually align the first and second component parts together.
In an embodiment, the decking device further comprises retaining features for maintaining the first and second component parts mutually held together when mutually offered together. Such a feature is of benefit in that it enables the first and second component parts to be subsequently handled as an aligned configuration for undergoing subsequent manufacturing operations, for example affixing the first and second component parts together in alignment so that the decking device can be subsequently removed and reused.
In an embodiment, the device comprises a tapered portion so shaped so as to generate minimal angular alignment forces when the tapered portion is angularly aligned to the hole, said tapered portion being so shaped so as to be capable of generating progressively increasing alignment forces as the device is progressively offered into the hole. Interaction of the surface of the tapered portion with the hole is an important feature of the invention for providing lateral and angular alignment forces automatically directed to ensure mutual alignment of the first and second component parts.
In an embodiment of the decking device, the tapered portion is formed so as to be of substantially rhombic cross-section to cooperate with the hole being implemented to be also of substantially rhombic shape.
In an embodiment of the decking device, the tapered portion at its greatest transverse cross-sectional area is adapted to be substantially similar in shape to said hole and a margin smaller than said hole. More preferably, in the decking device, the margin is substantially 0.2 mm to accommodate manufacturing tolerance when forming the hole.
In an embodiment of the decking device, the retaining features include at least one pivotally-mounted member resiliently biased outwardly from said device, said at least one pivotally-mounted member being operable to clip onto one or more edges of said hole for retaining said decking device engaged with said hole and thus held to said second component part. Conveniently, the retaining features are implemented as spring-loaded flipper arms which automatically engage onto edges of the hole when the first and second component parts are mutually offered together in mutual lateral and angular alignment.
In another embodiment, the decking device includes an attachment for attaching said device to said first component part for maintaining them mutually affixed when the decking device in operation is offered to said hole in said second component part.
In an embodiment, the decking device is adapted to be reused in manufacture for repetitively mutually aligning examples of said first and second components parts. More preferably, the decking device is adapted for mutually laterally and angularly aligning automotive suspension subassemblies to corresponding portions of vehicle chasses during road vehicle manufacture.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of applying a decking cone device for automatically mutually angularly aligning and laterally aligning at least a first component part to a second component part. The method comprises the steps: first, engaging said decking device into or onto said first component part, said decking device including one or more features for laterally and angularly engaging onto said first component. Second, offering said first component part via said decking device engaged thereto to a hole included in the second component part, said decking device having external surfaces so shaped so as to cooperate with edges of the hole formed in the second component part so as to generate when the decking device engaged onto the first component part is offered to the hole in the second component part lateral and angular alignment forces so as to mutually laterally and angularly align said first component part to said second component part. And third, deploying retaining features for holding the device into a position for retaining said mutual angular and lateral alignment, so that said at least first and second component parts remain mutually in angular and lateral alignment.
In another embodiment, the method includes two further steps. First, applying fasteners to affix the at least first and second component parts mutually together in angular and lateral alignment. And a second step includes after mutual fixing of the at least first and second component parts together, removing the decking device for subsequent reuse in angularly and laterally aligning similar at least first and second component parts.
It will be appreciated that features of the invention are susceptible to being combined in any combination without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the accompanying claims.
By way of example only, embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
Referring to
The underside surface 40 has projecting therefrom two underside alignment projections 45 as illustrated at extremities of the first width D1. A upperside surface 50 of the outer part 20 opposite to the underside surface 40 is of circular profile with a diameter D3. The diameter D3 is less than the first and second widths D1, D2 respectively so as to provide for the tapered portion 22 which is important to functioning of the decking device 10 when in operation as will be elucidated later.
The decking device 10 further includes two spring-loaded flipper arms 100 on mutually opposite sides of the decking device 10. Each flipper arm 100 is pivotally mounted substantially midway therealong about a transverse axis 110, for example by way of the flipper arm 100 including a transverse hole midway therealong for receiving a pivot pin included along the axis 110. Each flipper arm 100 is operable to pivot as shown by arrows 120 and is accommodated in a recess 130 formed or machined into sides of the decking device 10.
The outer part 20 is optionally fabricated from steel by CNC machining operations or by casting operations. Moreover, the flippers 100 are optionally fabricated from aluminium or similar alloy softer than steel. However, one or more of the outer part 20 and the flipper arms 100 can be fabricated by casting or molding processes.
The decking device 10 further includes an inner rotating part 200 comprising a cone portion terminating at a remote end thereof in a nut 210 susceptible to being engaged with an motorized nut-driver, spanner or similar type of rotary drive tool. The inner rotating part 200 includes an elongate shaft 220 projecting into a hole machined into the outer part 20 as will be further elucidated later. The inner part 200 is susceptible to being rotated in operation relative to the outer part 20 as denoted by an arrow 250, and also being moved longitudinally along the aforesaid central axis of the device 10 in respect of the outer part 20 as denoted by an arrow 260.
The inner part 200 is retained within the outer part 20 by way of a retaining component 330 included at an upper region of the tapered portion 22 just prior to the upperside surface 50; the retaining component in shown in
Referring next to
The decking device 10 is designed to be employed in manufacture but not form a permanent functional part or a vestigial part of a final manufactured product, for example a road vehicle. Thus, the decking device 10 is susceptible to being recycled and reused to assist manufacturing by aligning and subsequently holding, for example, a suspension sub-assembly of a road vehicle to a corresponding receiving portion of the vehicle during its manufacture. As will be elucidated later, the decking device 10 is capable of providing automatic angular alignment and also holding items together once angularly aligned.
Referring to
In manufacturing, the aforesaid sub-assembly is assembled together and then during manufacturing offered, for example by way of a hydraulic pusher actuating on an underside of the sub-assembly in an upward direction, to the receiving portion 510 of the chassis of the road vehicle. The sub-assembly can, for example, be provided by a sub-contractor to a road vehicle manufacturer. It is often encountered that the mounting plate 500 is not reliably angularly orientated, and the coiled spring 530 can suffer manufacturing tolerances which render the interface component 520 non-perpendicular to a central longitudinal axis of the shock-absorber 600. A technical problem is encountered in manufacture when offering the sub-assembly to the receiving portion 510 in that the mounting plate 500 is not easily accessible to assembly personnel to angularly adjust by eye when the sub-assembly is offered to receiving portion 510. Such alignment is necessary for aligning three holes 700 of the mounting plate 500 with three corresponding holes 710 formed into the receiving portion 510 so as to receive fixing screws 720.
In manufacturing, it is also convenient to apply the fixing screws 720 at a later step than at an earlier step of offering the sub-assembly to the receiving portion 510.
Thus, in manufacture, the decking device 10 is employed in a method of manufacture. Prior to the sub-assembly being offered to the receiving portion 510, the decking device 10 is applied to the mounting plate 500. The mounting plate 500, as shown in
Next, in the method, the sub-assembly together with its decking device 10 attached as shown in
When the screws 720 have been applied to firmly attach the mounting plate 500 to he receiving portion 510, and thus firmly attaching the suspension sub-assembly to the chassis of the vehicle, the nut 210 is rotated to release the threaded head 310 from the threaded upper rod portion 630 so as to enable assembly personnel to remove the decking device 10 from the vehicle. The decking device 10 can then be returned for reuse further back along the production line.
The decking device 10 is thus potentially of considerable benefit in manufacturing products, for example road vehicles but not limited thereto, when two of more component parts require to be mutually centralized and angularly aligned, and then subsequently held together in preparation for a subsequent fixing operation to join the two or more component parts together. On account of the angular alignment forces 1020 being automatically generated to mutually align the holes 700, 710, operator intervention, for example performing precision angular alignment by eye, is not required, thereby simplifying and expediting manufacture. The decking device 10 is thereby capable of providing a convenient and effective solution to aforementioned technical problems which the present invention seeks to address.
Modifications to embodiments of the invention described in the foregoing are possible without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the accompanying claims.
Expressions such as “including”, “comprising”, “incorporating”, “consisting of”, “have”, “is” used to describe and claim the present invention are intended to be construed in a non-exclusive manner, namely allowing for items, components or elements not explicitly described also to be present. Reference to the singular is also to be construed to relate to the plural.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05025197.4 | Nov 2005 | EP | regional |