This invention refers to the manufacturing process of rims for wheels without tubes in “off road” vehicles, the rims obtained through these processes, as well as the wheels of “off road” vehicles, which encompasses the referred to rims.
Classified as “off road” vehicles are all those pieces of equipment that are, motorized, low speed, destined for extra heavy work in loading, offloading, transport and operation, such as the known graders, front-end loaders, telescopic handlers, backhoes, among others.
The “off road” vehicles use tubeless steel wheels, usually called multipart, as they are composed of the rim, safety hoops, disc and rubber o-ring for sealing.
The “off road” rim manufacturing process making up the wheel is craft-work or low production. The rim may be made up of a hot laminated profile equipped with a region of channels (“gutter”), which is welded to a cylindrical segment (strip), which in its turn is welded to a flange, thus configuring the rim made up of three parts. It may also be made up of a “gutter” welded directly to a flange, thus configuring the rim made up of two parts.
The manufacturing process steps are different for each part making up the rim. The “gutter” is rolled, welded and deburred starting with a hot laminated profile of better quality steels. The strip is made up of a bulk piece (“blank”) and is rolled, welded and deburred. The flange is usually made through a stamping process. For some wheel dimensions the rim may as has already been mentioned be made up of two parts with these being only the “gutter” and flange, with the due dimensions being compensated, but maintaining the same manufacturing process. The safety ring's seating and “o-ring” “gutters are machined after” the final assembly of the wheel, or may even be incorporated into the laminated profile itself.
These known processes present a number of disadvantages, as for example, the fact that it deals with crafting manufacture, with low production, due to the handling of a number of components and the high number of operations in each one. Besides this the cost of the hot laminated profile, which is used in the “gutter” region is far higher and it must be from a better quality steel (SAE 1025 steel), as it is in the region with the greatest stress on the rim. The “gutter”, when it has the safety and o-ring channels “gutter” on the profile itself, requires special deburring and sanding operations to remove the excessive material arising from the autogenous welding from the top with fusing anticipating the electric current (“flash welding”). When there are no such channels these must be made in specific machining operations, with the same low production and difficult adjustment.
The assembly of the components is another problem, as the weld creates a thermally affected zone, which changes the properties of the materials adjacent to the joins and affects the resistance of the unit, especially in the strip to “gutter” junction. The dimensional tolerances for this type of rim are also always greater due to the sub-mounts of the components, a factor which mainly affects the lateral and radial alignment deviation of these wheels. Finally the weight of these wheels with the current technology is highly affected by the type of material employed and through the absence in the thickness variation in the necessary locations. Consequently the final cost of the wheel is high to cover its low productivity, too many operations, raw materials and labor involved in the current rim manufacturing process.
A document for the current technology that has some relation with the object of this invention is U.S. Pat. No. 3,926,025. The technique described in this patent is therefore different, constituting in a single rim manufacturing process for wheels with tubes for trucks. In it the so called “gutter” region is made in a strip process and presents a single cavity with a complementary depression for the seating of the ring or rings.
The objective of this invention is to afford a semi-automatic process for the manufacture of rims, rim segments and flanges for steel wheels, multiparts and without tubes for “off road” vehicles, which may overcome all of the disadvantages discussed herein in relation to current technology. The main advantages of the manufacturing process herein proposed are:
As an additional advantage it is worth mentioning that the metallographic analysis of the rim's profile has shown that the drawing combined with the lamination allows for a diminishing in the size of the material's grain at its structure level, which results in a more homogenous structure and far more resistant.
It is also the objective of the invention to furnish a rim for tubeless wheels for “off road vehicles”, which is obtained through the manufacturing process here described, and that it encompasses all of the advantages listed above, as well as provide a tubeless wheel for an “off road” vehicle, which encompasses the said rim.
The objectives of the invention are achieved through the provision of a manufacturing process of a rim for a tubeless wheel for an “off road” vehicle, the rim being constituted of a single piece mechanically formed through drawing.
The objectives of the current invention is achieved through the provision of a manufacturing process of a rim for a tubeless wheel for an “off road” vehicle, the rim being made up of two parts, the first part being mechanically shaped through drawing and the second part being mechanically shaped through stamping.
The objectives of the invention are also achieved through the provision of a manufacturing process of a rim for a tubeless wheel on an “off road” vehicles, the rim being made up of two parts mechanically shaped through drawing.
Finally the objectives of the invention are achieved through rims obtained by the referred to processes of tubeless wheels for “off road” vehicles, constructed with the referred to rims.
This invention will next be described in detail based on the execution examples represented in the drawings. The figures show:
FIG. 1—is a view in perspective of a complete multipart wheel (rim, rings, disc and “driver”);
FIG. 2—is a profile view of a rim fitted with three components (flange, strip and “gutter”) with the current technology; and
FIG. 3—is a profile view of a rim fitted with two components (flange and “gutter”), also with the current technology.
FIG. 4—a sectioned view of the bulk part “blank”, which is rolled into a cylindrical shape;
FIG. 5—a sectioned view of the “blank” with the shaped “gutter” and with greater thickness in the “gutter” region;
FIG. 6—rest of the drawn rim's body with the seating region of the pre-formed tire's “bead seat”;
FIG. 7—rim profile with the drawn flange;
FIG. 8—rim profile after the last lamination operation of the “o-ring” channel “gutter” and the final form of the “bead seat”.
The sets of figures from 9 to 13 and 14 to 17 respectively illustrates the shaping steps of the rim's segment and flange, for a rim composed of two parts, according to the invention. The figures show:
FIG. 9—a sectioned view of the “blank”, which is rolled into the cylindrical shape, starting the shaping of the rim's segment;
FIG. 10—the profile of the rim's segment with the shaped “gutter”, presenting a greater thickness in its region;
FIG. 11—the body of the drawn rim's segment;
FIG. 12—rim segment after the “o-ring” channel lamination operation;
FIG. 13—rim segment after the last machining operation the weld joint;
FIG. 14—sectioned view of the “blank”, which is rolled in a cylindrical shape and which gives rise to the rim's flange;
FIG. 15—the drawn flange body, with the preformed “bead seat”;
FIG. 16—drawn flange; and
FIG. 17—the shaped “bead seat” and the last machining operation carried out on the welded joint.
FIG. 18—shows the final profile of the complete rim after the joint welding operation;
FIG. 19—shows the detailed “gutter” formed according to this invention;
FIGS. 20 and 21—comparatively illustrates the rim profiles of the previous technique (made up of two parts—
FIGS. 22 and 23—comparatively illustrates the rim profiles of the previous technique (made up of three parts—
FIG. 24—schematically shows the manufacturing process of the rim with current technology, with two components, with the complementary operation after assembling the wheel (machining the “gutter's” channels);
FIG. 25—schematically shows the manufacturing process of the rim, through drawing, into a single component, according to this invention;
FIG. 26—schematically shows the manufacturing process of the rim with current technology, with three components, with the complementary operation after assembling the wheel (machining the “gutter's” channels);
FIG. 27—schematically shows the manufacturing process of the rim with two components, with the drawn rim and stamped flange, according to this invention; and
FIG. 28—schematically shows the manufacturing process of the rim with two components with this invention, being drawn rim and drawn flange.
Only for illustration purposes,
According to the invention, to obtain a single piece rim, a SAE 1010 steel blank is split, which is rolled, welded, deburred and gauged (
Once the process has terminated, a single piece rim is obtained, drawn, without unstable regions due top the elimination of the thermally affected region resulting from the welding between the flange and “gutter” (
Rims for “off road” vehicles, three component multiparts (
The shaping of section 16 containing the flange 19 may be carried out through stamping or drawing (
Alternatively, according to the invention, section 16 containing the flange 19 may be shaped through drawing. In this process starting with a steel “blank” (
With portion 16 containing the flange 19 and rim segment 17 finished, then it is mounted and the joint between them is welded 22, forming the final rim which will be the integral part of multipart wheels for “off road” vehicles.
Once the process has been terminated for wheels with larger dimensions, one has a two part rim, with only one thermally affected zone 22 and far from the region with the greatest stresses 12 (
Having described the preferred example, it must be understood that the scope of the current invention also covers other possible variations, with it only being limited by thought, here included the possible equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PI0604498-0 | Oct 2006 | BR | national |