The invention relates to a method and a production line for manufacturing a product through hydroforming.
During conventional hydroforming, a single tube-formed blank is placed into a mould and placed under pressure such that it is shaped hydrostatically in contact with the mould. The mould is opened, and the product is removed and replaced by a new blank.
The aims of the invention are to simplify and reduce the costs of the manufacture of hydroformed products, and to make possible complete automation of the manufacture.
The aims described above are achieved in principle by the following consecutive operations: unrolling a strip from a coil and shaping the strip directly into a tube that is welded together and introduced into a mould for hydroforming, which is then held open such that previously shaped product can be removed, stopping the feed of the tape when the previously shaped product has been removed, closing the mould, sealing both ends of the tube and placing the tube under pressure such that it is shaped into a product, opening the mould, recommencing the manufacture of the tube, stopping the feed, cutting away the completed product, and hydroforming a new product.
A production line according to the invention comprises an decoiler for the unrolling of a steel strip from a coil, a roll-forming unit for folding the steel strip into a tube, a welding unit for welding together the edges of the steel strip, a hydroforming unit comprising a mould that can be opened for receiving the finished tube when the tube has been shaped and welded, a cutting arrangement for cutting the completed product after it has been removed from the hydroforming unit, arrangements at the two ends of the tube for sealing the tube, and a supply line for pressure medium through one of the sealing arrangements in order to place the tube under pressure.
The drawings show a decoiler 11 for unrolling a steel strip 12 from a coil 13. The strip is led through a roll-forming unit 14 with shaping rollers 15, shown schematically. The strip is folded successively in the roll-forming unit to a tube 16, the longitudinal seam of which is welded together by a welding unit 17 when the tube passes the stationary welding unit. The tube may have a circular cross-section as shown. The roll-forming unit constitutes also the feed arrangement for the steel strip.
A hydroforming unit 18, shown schematically, is located after the welding unit. The hydroforming unit has a mould that consists of two moulding parts, an upper part 19 and a lower part 20. The mould is shown closed in
When the tube 16 has been formed, the mould 19, 20 is held open such that the product 23 formed in the preceding manufacturing cycle can be removed from the mould while at the same time the tube 16 is continuously fed into the mould as it is being manufactured.
When the product 23 that has been hydroformed is removed from the mould 19, 20, as is shown in
The hydroforming process is best described with reference to
A conical steel ring 35 and a conical plug 36 are located also at the other end of the mould 19, 20. The plug 36 is attached to a rod 37, and a supply channel 38 for pressure medium extends through the rod and the plug. The plug 36 and the steel ring 35 are supported by an arm 39 that can be pivoted around an axis I, as is shown in
In order to place the tube 16 under pressure while it is in the mould 19, 20, the rods are drawn outwards by a power unit such that the plugs 33, 36 reach an initial position at which they form a seal with the rings 30, 35 and at which they elastically expand the rings to an initial position at which they make a seal with the tube 16. It is an advantage if the rings expand to form a seal since this minimizes leakage and provides initial friction against the tube 16, but this is not absolutely necessary. The pressure medium is supplied through the channel 38 and the pressure of the medium provides an outwards force on the plugs 33, 36 that interact with the rings in an expansive direction such that they obtain an increased normal force onto the tube 16, which is radially supported against the mould 19, 20. The spokes 29 allow this expansion of the ring 30, and the ring 35 is expanded in the same manner. Self-locking of the end-seals is obtained in this way, and it is not necessary to apply as great an external axial force in order to obtain a seal. The arrangements for sealing the ends are thus small, simple and cheap, and they simplify the construction of the production line. The machine-operated arrangements for controlling the rods 32, 34 are not shown. When the pressure is released and the plugs 33, 36 are displaced inwards by the rods 32, 37, the rings 30, 35 shrink elastically and the unit 35-39 can be pivoted out to the position shown by dashed lines in
The plugs 33, 36 and the rings 30, 35 are both shown as having conical form. It may, however, be sufficient with either the ring or the plug having a conical form, although the illustrated embodiment is preferred.
A suspension of oil and water may be used as pressure medium in the conventional manner.
It will be understood that the manufacturing process provides a simple opportunity for complete automation from unrolling of the steel strip to removal of the completed hydrostatically formed product.
Both the roll-forming and the hydroforming are established technology and are therefore not described in more detail. It is not necessary that the roll-formed tube have a circular cross-section; it can have any cross-section. Nor does it need to have a cross-section that is constant along its length, on the condition that the available roll-forming unit can shape such tubes.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0500298 | Feb 2005 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE2006/000151 | 2/1/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/20/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/085811 | 8/17/2006 | WO | A |
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3613423 | Nakamura | Oct 1971 | A |
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6609301 | Morris et al. | Aug 2003 | B1 |
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0027563 | May 2000 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080110222 A1 | May 2008 | US |