The invention relates to a method for connecting a component with an optically relevant front and an optically irrelevant rear with an attachment.
In principle there are three possibilities available for connecting components to one another.
Thermal Joining Technique: Welding
With welding, with the aid of pressure and temperature as a rule two joining parts are thermally connected in various ways, for example, by friction welding, ultrasonic welding, etc. It is common to all techniques that a plasticizing process occurs in the joint region due to power supply, which generates a deep connection between the joining parts.
Specifically with use in the field of automobile exteriors, due to the possibilities that new material properties provide in injection molding, the common wall thicknesses in processing are currently in the range of>=3.0 mm. The type of material hereby used on a standard basis is, due to the price, talc-filled PP. Due to the thin wall thickness, the cost and weight of the component are reduced. However, since specifically PP has a high creeping capability under load with respect to other technical plastics and has a very low modulus of elasticity, but at the same time the demands made on the component welding of holding forces on the welding component bond of>200 N for each welding point remain unchanged, it is often impossible to connect the components in a manner free from faults. Above all the inserted power for plasticizing and deep connection of the split planes obstructs a connection free from indentations, since it has an effect through the component such that the surface is deformed as a result of the shrinkage difference during cooling and a defect is formed.
Chemical Joining Technique: Adhesion
With adhesion, substances are chemically introduced into the split plane, which develop a holding force in the form of adhesive forces due to cross-linking reactions between the joining parts. Specifically in the field of polyolefin materials such as PP and PE, the effective systems are expensive and generally can be used only with complex pretreatment of the surfaces.
Mechanical Joining Technique: Clipping
Due to the danger of indentation of the necessary web connection of the clip to the optically relevant surface can be used only in the non-flat region, for example, in ribbing or edge zones of a painted plastic body.
Criticism of the Prior Art:
Currently no technique is available that makes it possible to guarantee the function of holding three and optical appearance simultaneously under flat Class A painted. components of PP with a wall thickness <=3 mm in a sufficiently cost-effective manner.
Most of the components to be welded in the field of automobile construction are large, usually flat, such as bumpers. The object of the invention is to make these bodies and geometries accessible for connection by means of mechanical meshing and thus to guarantee a connection of thin-walled, flat Class A painted components in a cost-effective manner.
The object is attained according to the following description and
As has been shown in tests, it is possible to develop a sufficient holding force between the components to be connected by means of a mechanical locking of the two joining parts (component and attachment). To this end:
Because recesses are made on the rear of the component which are aligned at different angles to the surface normal of the rear of the component, wherein the recesses do not penetrate through the optically relevant front, but end at such a distance from the front in which no visible deformations are produced on the front and subsequently the attachment is mortised and connected positively to the component via connecting bodies, wherein the connecting bodies on the one hand are inserted into the recesses and on the other hand project through the attachment or are attached thereto, areal thin-walled flat class A painted components, such as bumpers, can be connected by means of mechanical meshing.
Advantageously, the recesses are bores.
Recesses are generally also understood to mean cavities. Recesses and cavities can also be easily made by laser processing.
In a preferred embodiment a first number of recesses are inserted at a first angle to the surface normal and a second number of recesses (opposed recesses) at a second angle to the surface normal. The attachment cannot be detached from the component hereby.
It has proven to be advantageous thereby if the recesses are inserted in an opposed manner to a later load direction. The term opposed is understood broadly and comprises recesses that run in a different direction from the later load direction.
In order for a lasting and firm anchoring to be achieved, the distance between two opposed recesses should be less than 20 mm.
It is important that the recesses are inserted such that their end has a distance from the front of greater than 0.5 mm. This ensures the intactness of the optically relevant front of the component.
In one embodiment, the connecting bodies are embodied in a pin-shaped manner. These can easily be inserted into the recesses.
Expediently, the entry of the recesses into the component is covered by the attachment, One advantage is that the entry of the recesses is invisible and another advantage is that the connecting bodies cannot be detached from the bore.
In another embodiment, which is shown in
The connecting bodies on the attachment are preferably molded on.
Preferably, the attachment as well as the component is produced from plastic.
Preferably, the space between the connecting bodies of dissimilar alignment is designed such that it can be temporarily expanded without damage by suitable structural design. This simplifies the meshing.
Preferably, the attachment embodied in a one-part or two-part manner is first placed on the component in the end position and then the connecting bodies are inserted in the joining process.
The use of the method just described is preferred for components from the automobile field, preferably in the field of optically relevant, e.g. painted surfaces or painted that surfaces with particularly sensitive surfaces.
The use in the automobile field is preferably in the field of the exterior of motor vehicles and there preferably for bumpers on motor vehicles.
A method according to the invention is described in
A component 1, here a bumper for a motor vehicle, has an optically relevant front 2 and an optically irrelevant rear 3, Optically relevant means that the highest demands are made on the visual appearance, i.e. that it is a class A painted component.
Recesses 5, in this case 5a, 5b, 5d, 5e are inserted into the component 1 for connecting an attachment 4 to the component 1. There is a distance greater than 0.5 mm between the end of the recesses 5 and the front in order to ensure the intactness of the front 2. Both parts, the component 1 and the attachment 4, are made of plastic.
The recesses are bores in the embodiment shown here. However, they can also be cavities that are inserted by laser processing.
In the embodiment of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 057 859.5 | Dec 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP10/69458 | 12/13/2010 | WO | 00 | 6/21/2012 |