The present application is based on International Application No. PCT/IB06/001938 filed Jul. 13, 2006, and claims priority from German Application Number 10 2005 032 699.4, filed Jul. 14, 2005, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
The present invention relates to a fastener to connect a first structural part, hereafter first component, to a second structural part, hereafter second component.
A fastener of this kind is known from the European patent document EP 0 681 110 B1. It comprises two molded metal parts, one being a cage and the other a nut. The cage is fitted with a radial flange resting against one side of a component as its shank is inserted through said component's hole. Said shank is cross-sectionally square and tapers away from the flange. The hollow cage receives the nut which substantially consists of a nut thread and two mutually opposite wing elements. Within the cage, the nut may be pivoted by nearly 90°, said wing elements when being rotated moving along ramp faces until coming to rest against an axis-parallel surface of the cage. The component's affixing hole is similar to a keyhole to allow inserting the wing elements together with the cage into said hole. When an affixation screw is rotated into the nut's thread, said nut shall be pivoted as cited above and shall be moved along said ramp face. As a result the device as a whole no longer can be pulled out of the hole. As the affixation screw is tightened further, the upper surface of each wing element will be clamped against the component opposite it. This fastener design entails complex manufacture and requires a special hole contour.
Moreover the state of the art comprises various dowel designs for inserting said dowels into holes in components such as automobile bodies. By appropriately turning a screw, expansion ensues to produce frictional connection. Such dowels are disclosed in the patent documents DE 931 81 22 U1, FR 2,122,781 A1, U.S. Pat. No. 3,478,395 or GB 2,242,928 A.
The objective of the present invention is to improve a fastener of the initially cited kind so that it may be manufactured economically and be easier to mold.
As regards the fastener of the present invention, the cage and nut are made of plastic and preferably are integral, though their junction allows shearing them apart to allow moving them into their assembly position.
Furthermore, in the present invention, the nut wing elements are configured at the first rotational position within the cage contour, this cage together with its received nut thereby being easily insertable into a rectangular/square hole. When the nut is being rotated due to rotating the affixation screw, the said wing elements will move out the cage contour and then pivot against a stop. Upon further rotation of the affixation screw, the nut is then displaced axially toward the cage flange until the upper wing element faces shall make contact with the associated component's surface and in this manner both the nut and the cage shall have been affixed to the said component. The wing elements run approximately diagonally to the cage in the first rotational position and therefore remain within said cage's cross-sectional contour.
The fastener of the present invention offers several advantages. It enables a geometrically (positively) interlocking connection free of play. It may be manufactured at low cost, in particular by integral injection molding. The fastener of the present invention allows high clamping forces and low assembly stresses. Moreover it allows large component tolerances.
In one embodiment mode of the present invention, the nut comprises a cylindrical segment situated between said nut wing elements and fitted with an annular collar at the cage's end opposite the cage. Said cylindrical segment may be inserted into the cage, in which event the collar cooperates with a peripheral inner cage shoulder. As a result the nut shall be locked in the cage though it still may be rotated to a limited extent about its axis. Preferably said collar is fitted with a conical, external face allowing inserting the cylindrical segment into a partly cylindrical passage in the cage. Upon insertion of the annular collar, said passage in the cage may temporarily be expanded slightly until the said collar shall be situated above said shoulder.
In a further embodiment mode of the present invention, the cage comprises a clearance at its end opposite the flange and the nut is fitted with a locking segment running parallel to its axis, this locking segment engaging the said clearance in locking manner when the wing elements are tightened from the second rotational position against the said second component, the nut being hampered thereby from rotating back toward the first rotational position. The said locking segment may be fitted with a ramp face cooperating with an edge of said clearance in a manner that the particular wing element shall be forced against the said stop as the locking segment enters the clearance. As a result playless locking has been attained that shall remain effective even in the presence of vibrations or shocks.
Lastly in another embodiment mode of the present invention, the cage may comprise at least one barb-shaped, deforming protrusion at its external side, said protrusion being temporarily deformed when the cage is inserted into the second hole and cooperating in locking manner with the opposite side of the said second component if the attempt were made to pull the cage out of the hole.
The present invention is elucidated below by means of an illustrative embodiment shown in the appended drawings.
The fastener shown in
As shown in particular in
At its end opposite the flange 14, the shank 16 is fitted with a downward-pointing protrusion 28 comprising an elastic tip 30. A clearance 32 is constituted in this manner in the walls 18.
The nut 12 comprises a lower cylindrical segment 40 merging downward into a conical segment 42. It also comprises an adjoining upper cylindrical segment 44 of which the top end is integral with an annular collar 46a. The diameter of the cylindrical segment 44 is less than that of the cylindrical segment 40. Mutually opposite and substantially cross-sectionally triangular wing elements 46 are integral with the two cylindrical segments 40, 44.
In the above described assembly, the wing element 46 points at one corner of the shank 16, the radial configuration of the wing element 46 being such that the corner edges of the shank 16 and wing element 26 merge into each other. As a result the wing element contour 46 does not project beyond the contour of the shank 16.
The nut 12 assumes a first rotational position relative to the cage 10 in the assembly position of
The nut 12 comprises an axially continuous passage of circular or other cross-section that is able to receive the affixation screw 56 tapping a thread into the nut.
When, as shown in
The nut 12 is displaced axially into the cage 10 until the surface (not shown above) of the wing elements 46 engages the facing surface of the component 52 as shown in
A geometrically interlocking (positive) connection free of play is created between the components 52, 54 and provides affixation forces. The force which must be applied during assembly are low. Large thickness tolerances in the planar components 52, 54 can be absorbed.
Be it also borne in mind that when the nut 12 is inserted into the cage 10, deeper axial displacement of the nut 12 into the cage is prevented by the cooperation between the upper surface of the wing elements 46 with the opposite wall face of the clearance 32. In this manner the nut 12 is received and locked in the cage 10. Said nut 12 can be displaced deeper into the cage 10 only after the wing element 46 has been aligned with the clearance 22.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2005 032 699 | Jul 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2006/001938 | 7/13/2006 | WO | 00 | 9/28/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/007180 | 1/18/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3444917 | Bennett | May 1969 | A |
4573025 | McKinzie, III | Feb 1986 | A |
5173025 | Asami | Dec 1992 | A |
6322305 | Bantle | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6560819 | Mizuno et al. | May 2003 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0681110 | Jul 1998 | EP |
2544411 | Oct 1984 | FR |
2613439 | Oct 1988 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080193251 A1 | Aug 2008 | US |