The invention relates to a side rail for vehicles having a tensile strength in excess of 1400 MPa, said side rail having one end projecting from the safety cage of the vehicle and adapted to carry a bumper.
Vehicles, e.g. passenger cars, generally have side rails both at the front and at the rear welded to the bottom panel of the vehicle, these side rails carrying the bumper. U.S. Pat. No. 6,820,924 B2 describes a passenger car with a front side rail for carrying the bumper, this side rail having a plurality of narrow, soft portions which are supposed to act as deformation triggers for axial deformation of the side rail in the event of a collision. The soft portions trigger deformation of the hard portions.
The aim of the invention is to allow for controlled deformation resulting in high energy absorption even in the case of side rails made of high-strength steel. This is achieved in that the end of the side rail projecting from the safety cage has lower strength with a yield point of less than 1000 MPa over a length of at least 0.4 m. The projecting end advantageously has an outer portion with a length of at least 0.2 m and a tensile strength below 800 MPa and an inner portion with a higher tensile strength than the outer portion. Both the inner portion and the outer portion may include two or more portions with a tensile strength gradually increasing inwards the vehicle.
The invention is defined by the claims.
The side rail is made of high-strength steel and can advantageously be manufactured by press hardening, i.e. a flat blank is heated to austenitising temperature and is moved in the heated state to a cooled tool pair where it is hot-stamped and then left in the tool pair for a few seconds until it has hardened. This method results in tensile strengths of more than 1400 MPa. Rapid cooling and therefore full hardening of specific portions of the product can be prevented in various ways, e.g. by providing gaps between the tool pair and the finished product or by heating selected portions of the otherwise cooled tool pair.
In the event of impact, e.g. in the event of a collision, high-strength steel tends to crack when it is deformed and the front portion 16 of the side rail shown in
In the event of a collision axially towards the end of the side rail, the softest portion 20 will be deformed first and absorb impact energy. Only once this portion has been deformed will the portion 21 begin to be deformed and once the portion 21 has been deformed, the portion 22 will begin to be deformed.
The outermost end 25 of the side rail may be of high-strength as shown so as to counteract deformation in the event of low-speed collisions where the wish is for no damage at all to the side rails.
Short transition zones are formed between the portions 20, 21, 22. Alternatively, there may be short high-strength zones between the portions 20, 21, 22 and short transition zones are then formed on either side of the high-strength zones.
As a result of the fact that the S-bend 15 is made of high-strength steel and the front end 16 of the side rail has softer portions, the S-bend is not deformed until the soft portions have been deformed. The possibility of having a side rail with an S-bend made of high-strength steel simplifies the design of the vehicle.
The example shows a side rail with three soft portions having different strength, wherein a portion closer to the end has lower strength than its nearest soft portion. Alternatively, there may be two or more than three soft portions.
The invention has been described by way of the example of a front side rail, but may also be applied to a rear side rail
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0900567 | Apr 2009 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE2010/000102 | 4/20/2010 | WO | 00 | 10/4/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/126423 | 11/4/2010 | WO | A |
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20120025548 A1 | Feb 2012 | US |