The invention relates to a method for the manufacture of convertible roofs in accordance with the preamble of claim 1, to a tool in accordance with the preamble of claim 9, to a roof installation tool in accordance with the preamble of claim 16 and to a roof closure installation tool in accordance with the preamble of claim 22.
It is necessary in the manufacture of convertible roofs to observe a high dimensional precision to be able to carry out the insertion of the roof into the body carcass with an exact fit—and thus also in a time-saving manner in ongoing production.
However, this is difficult due to the inner spaces to be spanned by the roofs and to the plurality of mutually movable parts so that it is usually necessary to carry out an alignment of the roof on its insertion at the body carcass and, where necessary, to compensate tolerances by interposing shims or similar tolerance-compensating measures between the body and the roof. In addition, with roofs with at least one window, for instance a rear window, there is already a high imprecision in the window manufacture which has to be taken into account and which can easily add up to two millimeters.
It is the underlying problem of the invention to improve the manufacture of convertible roods which include one or more windows.
The invention solves this problem by a method having the features of claim 1 and by a tool having the features of claim 9, a roof installation tool having the features of claim 16 and a roof closure installation tool having the features of claim 22. Reference is made to the further claims 2 to 8, 10 to 15, 17 to 21 and 23 to 25 with respect to advantageous aspects of the invention.
An exactly fitting and always constant alignment of the window to a frame part of the roof supporting it in the connection position is made possible by the method in accordance with the invention. The alignment of the parts is not carried out manually so that any installation imprecision in this respect is avoided. The spacing between the two parts is preset by the two receiving planes fixed with respect to one another and is always constant.
Pushing members can in particular be associated with the window on the first contact plane such that they align the window toward an abutment, with the pushing path being dependent on the extent of the respective window. Tolerances in the window size can thus be compensated by the different pushing paths, with an always constant position of each window at at least one edge nevertheless being ensured by the pushing against the abutment.
It is also particularly favorable for the spacing between the two contact planes to be set such that an applied adhesive bead is squeezed in a defined manner and thus has sealing contact to the window and to the frame part at every point. Since the parts are fixedly supported in the receiving planes, it is nevertheless ensured that the full weight force of one of the parts at no time bears down on the adhesive bead. It is in particular helpful for this purpose if the window(s) and frame part(s) connected to one another in this manner remain in these planes, are movable in a defined manner therein and can be supplied to a further roof installation tool. The adhesive then has a longer period available for hardening before the parts connected in this manner are first moved relative to one another.
A multipart roof can also be installed using the invention which, for example, includes a frame part for the rear window and a frame part which is arranged at the front in the direction of travel and which can support a solid roof part or can be covered together with the rear window frame by a covering. The two frame parts can be installed at an angle which exactly corresponds to their angular position with a closed roof. All the mounted parts such as also front closure parts or lateral linkage parts can be installed thereat in an overhead position.
A connection of the frame parts to lateral linkages which are supplied from above is in particular also possible in an ergonomically favorable and less irksome work posture of the operator. These linkage parts can favorably be positioned in an upper support of a roof installation tool free of tolerance in accordance with the body dimensions and can be moved exactly by a downward movement of this support into a relative position with respect to the frame parts in which they are also located with a later fully installed roof. A tolerance compensation in the installation of the roof to the body carcass is then no longer required. It is rather the case in a method shown here that a possible tolerance compensation is possible within the installed roof: Shim packets of different thickness can be installed between the linkage parts, on the one hand, and the frame parts with installed windows, on the other hand, said shim packets additionally also having elongate holes in addition to the thickness adjustability and so being able to compensate tolerances in two spatial directions. No tolerance compensation is necessary in the third spatial direction, in contrast, since upper and lower supports in the tool can be moved toward one another to a precisely matching vertical spacing.
Front connection members in the fixedly aligned holder of the frame parts can also advantageously be set onto the front roof end in an automatedly aligned manner by means of a pivot template or a similarly movable template. The hardening period for the adhesive before the removal of the window(s) and frame part(s) is thus further extended; the roof can be removed from the tool in the completely installed position with an exact fit with respect to the body.
The tool for the connection of window(s) and frame part(s) with a holding of the parts spaced apart in a defined manner, the roof installation tool for the supply of the lateral linkage parts later holding the roof and the roof closure installation tool for the automatically aligned attachment of the connection members of the roof tip are likewise integral parts of the application and are also claimed.
Further advantages and features of the invention result from an embodiment of the subject matter of the invention shown schematically in the drawing and described in the following.
There is shown in the drawing:
The tool 1 shown schematically in
At least one outer skin part is here formed by a rear window 2. A further outer skin part 3 is here likewise formed by a window which should cover the passenger compartment of the vehicle with a closed roof. Precisely two outer skin parts 2, 3 are shown in the embodiment. Further outer skin parts can, however, be provided in dependence on the size of the passenger compartment to be engaged over.
Nor must all the outer skin parts be made rigidly, but rather, in addition to a rear window 2, a cover can, for example, also be provided which is connected to the frame parts 4, 5 via the method in accordance with the invention. This can therefore be used both for retractable hard tops (RHTs) and for soft tops.
The first receiving plane, which serves for the receiving of the rear window 2 and the window 3 arranged at the front in the drawing is defined by upwardly projecting supports 6 onto which the windows 2, 3 can be placed in an position turned upside down, that is with the later outer side facing downwardly. Abutments 7 are provided in the separation region of the two windows and their thickness presets the spacing of the windows at the assembled roof.
As can, for example, be seen in
The windows 2, 3 or other outer roof skin parts then contact at least the abutments 7 in a position in this tool 1 practically free of tolerance with respect to the tool 1. In this connection, they can be disposed angled with respect to one another and have the angle to one another which corresponds to their angle to one another with a closed roof in the vehicle. The receiving planes are each angled for this purpose.
The tool 1 furthermore includes a second receiving plane which is above the first and which serves in the drawing for the receiving of frame parts 4, 5 of the roof to be connected to the windows 2, 3. This second receiving plane is defined by outer upwardly projecting supports 10 onto which frame parts 4, 5 can be placed, for example, by being supplied by means of a robot arm. Furthermore, movable closures 11, here pivotable closures, (not drawn in
The windows 2, 3 or, here, the frame parts 45, are provided, before being placed on, with a uniform adhesive bead 12 peripherally which has, for example, a triangular cross-section design with a height of one to 1.5 centimeters. This adhesive bead is defined by the placement of the frame parts 3, 4 onto the supports 10 and is compressed uniformly down to a height of, for example, 5 to 8 millimeters due to the parallel position of the receiving planes. The outer skin parts 2, 3 and the frame parts 4, 5 are firmly fixed with respect to one another during this procedure. The weight force of the frame parts 4, 5 only bears down on the columns 10 after placement and then does not further compress the adhesive 12.
The tool 1 with the parts 2, 3, 4, 5 of the roof fixed thereon can then be moved in the direction of the arrow 13, for example on rails or via induction drive and induction control, and form the lower support of a roof installation tool 14 in which at least one of the frame parts 4, 5 is connected to lateral linkage parts 15 which support the roof with respect to the vehicle body with a completely installed roof.
In addition to the lower support, which is formed by the tool 1, the tool 14 includes an upper support 16 which accordingly supports the linkage 15 upside down, but otherwise corresponding to its longitudinal position and transverse position in the later vehicle and which is lowerable in the direction of the arrow 17 (
The linkage 15 is held at the support 16 via holders 18 in exactly that angular position in which it will later hold the closed roof in the vehicle. It therefore tightly contacts the frame part 4 or 5 during the installation. The schematic representation in accordance with
The connection between the later upper end 19 of the linkage part and the frame part 5 and/or 4 takes place in the lowered position of the support 16 in accordance with
The tolerances are thus compensated inside the roof itself, its outer dimensions are exactly dimensionally stable with respect to the body, whereby the roof installation at the carcass is substantially facilitated and accelerated.
Furthermore, connection members which hold the fully installed closed roof at the windshield frame can be installed at least at one frame part 5 in its position turned upside down at the front end.
In this connection, a template 22 is put on almost free of tolerance, is in particular pivoted on in the direction of the arrow 24, for the alignment of the connection members to the front frame part 5, said template including centering devices 21 for its installation on the frame part 5. Screws or similar fastening means can be guided into the template 22 in the state put on and fixed via the centering members 21 for the exactly fitting fixing of the connection members, with the fastening means, for example, being able to adopt the precise position preset by the template 22 in elongate holes.
This template is a component of a roof closure installation tool 23 which is in turn a component of the tool 1 in the embodiment drawn for the exactly fitting holding of the frames 4, 5 in an upside down position. The frame parts 4, 5 can thereby remain clamped up to the end of the roof installation without a relative movement to the tool 1 so that the adhesive 12 has an extended hardening time. Furthermore, the exactly fitting alignment of the connection members of the roof tip is also ensured since the template 22 is held in an exactly fitting manner with respect to the tool 1. The template 22 can be downwardly pivoted and thus release the contact surface of the parts for the insertion of the windows 2, 3 and frame parts 4, 5. The number of the processing steps is moreover minimized by the remaining of the parts 2, 3, 4, 5 in the tool 1, which increases the efficiency of the manufacture.
Since the tool 1 can both be connected to the roof installation tool 14 and includes the roof closure installation tool 23, the tool effort in the manufacturing process is moreover minimized. The tool 1 can, for example, be supplied to the upper support 16 of the roof installation tool via rails or in an inductively controlled manner, with the mass of the car holding the tools 1 being so large that a dimensionally stable holding is ensured which is unmoved during the installation step.
The roof closure installation tool 14 can moreover be used independently of the roof installation tool 23. Both installation steps can therefore take place simultaneously or shortly after one another, which shortens the production time.
In any case, all the installation steps can be carried out by operators in an ergonomically favorable body posture; overhead work is not necessary for any workstep.
It is understood in this connection that the manufacturing processes are not restricted to those roofs which have a plurality of glass windows. As well, for example, for a RHT, in addition to the window 2 and its frame part 4, a component can also be placed into the tool 1 with a preinstalled connection between, for example, a metal sheet and a frame part 5 or between a reference section and a frame part 5. Making the connection only in the tool 1 is then not compulsory for these parts.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 2005 036 243.5 | Aug 2005 | DE | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/DE06/01230 | 7/14/2006 | WO | 00 | 10/6/2008 |