This invention pertains to hot stretch forming of sheet metal panels with reinforcing patches. More specifically, this invention pertains to locating the sheet metal patch pieces on a forming tool before the sheet metal blank for the panel is stretched against the tool and patches.
Hot stretch sheet forming of certain high elongation aluminum alloys has been used to make one-piece body panels for automotive vehicles.
Cold rolled sheets of fine-grain magnesium and manganese containing alloys are heated to a forming temperature in the range of, for example, 400 to 510° C. and stretch formed against a heated forming tool surface into the shape of the panel. A sheet blank is gripped at its edges between the forming surface tool on one side of the sheet and an opposing tool defining a pressure chamber on the other side of the blank. A pressurized working gas is admitted into the chamber stretching and draping the heat softened sheet into compliance with the forming surface. After forming, the pressurized gas is released, the hot tools are parted, and the formed hot sheet product carefully removed from the forming tool to a cooling rack.
The sheet metal blanks are typically about one to three millimeters thick and there is some localized thinning of the sheet material during the stretch forming process. In applications involving the forming of automobile body panels, the original blanks are often generally rectangular with sides three or four feet in length. When a passenger compartment floor pan for a vehicle is to be stretched formed, the blank is considerably larger.
Sometimes a panel design requires reinforcement pieces to be attached at specific locations on a side of the one-piece panel. Such reinforcing pieces are often considerably smaller than the panel to which they are to be attached. These reinforcement sheet pieces may provide local thickening for structural support or for attachments or the like. They have been formed separately and welded or otherwise suitably attached to the formed panel during final assembly. It would be desirable to form the reinforcement pieces when the main panel is being stretch formed so that the reinforcement precisely fits the formed part. However, it is necessary to suitably position reinforcing sheet pieces on the relatively large area tool for forming the hot sheet blank. When a number of parts are being produced successively the forming tool is hot and the reinforcing piece must be positioned on a hot forming surface of the tool.
Accordingly, it is an object of this invention to provide a practice for locating pieces, sometimes relatively small pieces, of sheet metal on a forming tool before a sheet metal blank is gripped over the tool surface for hot stretch forming into a body panel or the like.
This invention pertains to hot stretch forming of sheet metal parts in combination with sheet metal reinforcing pieces. The method is particularly applicable to the high temperature forming of automotive vehicle body panels from magnesium and manganese containing aluminum alloys, such as AA5083, under superplastic forming conditions or quick plastic forming conditions. The practice of the invention will be illustrated in the forming of a one-piece AA 5083 sheet metal vehicle floor pan with reinforcement pieces for anchoring seat assemblies to a portion of the passenger compartment floor panel. However, it is to be understood that the invention is applicable generally to high temperature sheet metal stretch forming operations where patches or reinforcing sheets are to be attached to a main sheet metal part.
Hot stretch forming of sheet metal alloys typically uses at least two opposing and complementary tools that are heated to a suitable forming temperature for the sheet material. In the case of AA5083 sheet this temperature is typically near 500° C. The tools are moved between an open position for removal of a finished part and insertion of a new sheet metal blank, and a closed position in which the edges of the blank are gripped and gas pressure is applied to form the panel. A tool on one side of the blank provides the forming surface for the part such as a vehicle door or tailgate panel or body floor pan. An opposing tool on the other side of the sheet provides a chamber for application of pressurized gas. In accordance with this invention one or more reinforcing sheet metal pieces is placed on the hot forming tool in a predetermined location for forming of the reinforcement piece against the portion of the sheet that is to be reinforced in the finished part.
The reinforcing sheet(s) is typically somewhat smaller than the primary part to which it is to be attached. The piece must be located on the forming tool surface so that it is formed against the appropriate surface region of the part. The forming tool may have been preheated or it is heated as part of the forming operation. Accordingly, one or more locator features are formed or embedded in the forming tool surface where the reinforcing piece is to be formed. For example, a locator pin or a tool surface shape is suitable for this purpose. One or more corresponding locator holes or notches are formed in each reinforcing piece. Then a robot arm or other placement mechanism can place the reinforcing piece on the locator pin on the forming tool surface. The length of the pin or locating tool surface feature extending above the forming tool surface is specified to secure the position of the reinforcement sheet without damaging or undesirably altering the shape of the principal sheet.
The sheet metal blank is then inserted between the open tools and the press mechanism closes them against the edges of the sheet for the stretch forming operation. Applied gas pressure stretches the larger blank against the trapped reinforcing pieces and against the forming tool surface. The floor pan and the reinforcing pieces are shaped at the same time and the formed panel and formed reinforcing pieces are removed from the tools. The nature of the removal of the co-formed sheet parts depends largely on their respective shapes. Sometimes the parts are mechanically attached by the forming process and are removed together from the forming surface. Sometimes the parts are removed separately. Sometimes a bonding agent is used to attach the parts and they are removed together. But the general intent of the invention is that the formed-to-shape sheet parts will be attached in the completed assembly. For example, in the manufacture of the floor pan the reinforcing pieces are welded to it or otherwise attached after the forming step.
The reinforcing pieces may be formed on top of a forming tool surface and this practice will result in an offset in the primary panel surface. Alternatively, suitable recesses for the reinforcing pieces may be made in the surface of the forming tool so that the shape of the principal part is not affected by the interposed reinforcing piece. During the forming of the reinforcing pieces, markings for identification may be imprinted on their surfaces for later use in attaching them at the appropriate location on the finished and cooled part.
In this illustration, several reinforcing pieces for attachment of seat assemblies to a vehicle floor pan may be shaped at the same time that the floor structure itself is formed. After the floor panel is cooled and trimmed, etc, the reinforcing pieces are fastened, e.g. welded, to the panel at the seat attachment locations.
Thus, this invention provides a method for location of small sheet metal reinforcing or patching pieces on a hot forming tool surface for forming simultaneously with a larger sheet metal part. Other objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from a detailed description of specific embodiments which follows.
High elongation magnesium and manganese containing aluminum alloy sheet stock can be hot stretch formed into intricate shapes such as are required in automotive body panels. An example of this practice is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,253,588, entitled Quick Plastic Forming of Aluminum Alloy Sheet Material. This '588 patent is assigned to the assignee of this invention and its disclosure of such hot stretch forming is incorporated into this specification by reference.
An example of a commercial superplastic formable aluminum alloy which is used in quick plastic forming or related superplastic forming practices is aluminum alloy 5083. AA5083 has a typical composition, by weight, of about 4 percent to 5 percent magnesium, 0.3 to 1 percent manganese, and maximum amounts of about 0.25 percent chromium, about 0.1 percent copper, about 0.3 percent iron, and about 0.2 percent silicon and the balance substantially all aluminum. Generally a homogenized ingot of the cast alloy is hot rolled and then cold rolled to a desired sheet thickness from about 1 to about 4 millimeters. In its high elongation form, cold rolled AA5083 sheet material is recyrstallized to have a microstructure characterized by finely dispersed particles of intermetallic compounds with a grain structure of about 10 micrometers or less.
The sheet material is shaped in a hot stretch forming process. The edges of a suitable sheet blank that has been preheated to a forming temperature are gripped between opposing, complementary hot forming tools. One of the tools is shaped to provide a forming surface against which the hot sheet is pressed and stretched. The opposing tool defines a pressure chamber on the opposite side of the sheet for application of a pressurized working gas. The tools may be placed in a heated press or they may be internally heated with resistance heating elements to a suitable hot forming temperature typically in the range of about 450° C. to 510° C. The tools are carried in a press structure in which one tool is typically stationary and the other tool is moved between open and closed positions. The sheet is inserted between opened tools and they are closed to grip the edges of the sheet. High pressure gas introduced in the tool chamber on one side of the sheet pushes and stretches the sheet into conformity with the shape defining surface of the other tool.
The stretch forming of the hot sheet against the internally heated and insolated tools typically requires about 60 to 150 seconds depending upon the size and shape of the part and the formability of the sheet metal material. Sometimes it is desired to provide an additional sheet layer of reinforcing material for attachment to one side of the hot stretch formed sheet product. The overall thickness and shape of the hot formed sheet product provides adequate strength for its application over most of its surface area. However, sometimes it is desired to provide additional thickness of sheet reinforcement in selected areas of the sheet. For example, an automobile floor pan can be formed of a large sheet (for example, 1230 mm by 3060 mm by 1.3 mm) of AA5083 aluminum alloy. Rails for seat assemblies will later be attached to the floor pan sheet and it may be desirable to attach a strip of reinforcing AA5083 sheet material to one side of the floor pan where the rails are to be attached. Typically such reinforcing strips are formed separately from the hot forming operation of the main panel. The reinforcing strips are not particularly large and can be formed to more or less match the shape at the portion of the main panel to which they are to be attached. This invention provides a practice by which the reinforcing strips can be formed at the same time as the main panel and at the intended location to which they will be later attached in an assembly operation.
Transverse channels 20 and 22 support a passenger seat assembly and transverse channels 24 and 26 underlie seat rails for a driver seat. Since floor pan 10 is viewed from its bottom side 12, the transverse channels 20–26 each extend upwardly into the plane of
As stated, integrally heated forming tools are prepared for the hot stretch forming of floor pan 10 and its reinforcing pieces such as pieces 32, 34 and 36. The principal forming tool provides detailed shape of the floor pan 10 that is illustrated in
Floor pan forming tool 110 includes relieved channel surfaces 118 for forming longitudinal reinforcing channels 18 in floor pan 10. The illustrated portion of tool 110 also contains upstanding forming surfaces 124, 126 for transverse reinforcing channels 24 and 26 in floor pan 10. Shown elevated above tool 110 in
Thus it is contemplated that when the press is opened and the forming tool, a portion of which is shown in
The blanks 132, 134, 136 of the reinforcing pieces are placed on the hot tool 110 suitably before the large sheet metal blank, not shown, for the main panel structure is placed over the forming tool and gripped at the edges of the tool and the edges of the sheet for the hot stretch forming operation. Gas pressure is admitted to the other side of the sheet metal blank and the sheet metal blank is pressed and draped into conformance with the whole of the forming tool 110. At the same time that the main sheet is being formed it exerts pressure on the now hot blanks 132, 134, 136 of reinforcing material and they too are shaped in conformity with the surface of forming tool 110.
As further illustrated in
After the 60 to 110 seconds or so of the forming operation, the forming tools are opened and the floor pan panel 10 is carefully removed from the forming tool 110 as are the reinforcing pieces 32, 34, 36. The floor pan 10 and reinforcing pieces 32, 34, 36 are cooled and subjected to any trimming or finishing operations that may be required. They are later brought together for welding of the reinforcing pieces 32, 34, 36 against the bottom side of reinforcing channels 24, 26 of floor panel 10.
It is recognized that a large stretch formed part like a floor pan may require several reinforcing pieces that are to be attached later to the formed panel after cooling and trimming. In accordance with this invention, identification markings or symbols may be imprinted or embossed in the reinforcing pieces as they are being formed against the main panel.
While the invention has been described in terms of this illustrative embodiment, it will be appreciated that other sheet metal materials could be formed and other objects with reinforcing sections could be formed. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited by the specific illustrations by only by the scope of the following claims.
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