The present invention concerns a method of fastening two or more components together by rivets. The invention also concerns a device for carrying out the aforesaid method. Sheet metal components, especially those riveted together, are now being increasingly employed in the field of automotive manufacture. This trend has been augmented by the practice of combining various components into subassemblies. Riveted joints can also be reinforced with adhesives.
U-shaped “tongs” with a rivet driver at the end of one arm and a dolly at the end of the other are often employed to rivet the parts together. Such tongs can be operated by hand or by robots. Since the rivets usually are of types that punch their own holes out of the material, no preliminary punching is necessary.
The aforesaid method, which employs hydraulically or electrically powered tongs, has several drawbacks. The arms of the tongs must be very rigid, and their weight accordingly increases considerably with their length, with how far the riveting point is from the outer edge of the component, that is. Such tongs are very heavy, and their arms tend to sag considerably. The robots need to be very sturdy, and cannot move as quickly as lighter-weight robots.
Another disadvantage is low speed. The tongs have to be opened and, in a complicated procedure, correctly positioned before they can be shifted to the next riveting point. This procedure can be even more troublesome when the machinery includes several robots and several riveting tongs.
One object of the present invention is accordingly a method of fastening two or more components together by rivets, a method that can be carried out with lighter-weight devices and at higher speeds.
One embodiment of the present invention will now be specified with reference to the accompanying drawing, wherein
Two or more sheet-metal components 1 and 2 are to be fastened together in the illustrated example. The components rest on a riveting device 3, with component 2, underneath, resting directly against the device and maintained in its intended position by positioning-and-securing heads 4. Component 1, which is to be fastened to component 2, is maintained in position by suction cups 5 for example. It is on the other hand alternatively conceivable to cement components 1 and 2 together at various points before riveting them together.
Riveting dollies 6, preferably identical in design, are positioned at prescribed points below components 1 and 2 and along device 3. Each dolly 6 in the present example comprises a foot 7, an annular rivet holder 8, a punch 9, and a rivet-lifting wedge 10. The exact shape of foot 7 and the precise length of punch 9 will vary in accordance with the particular application, but the dollies' other components will all be identical in design at every riveting point. The position of all the dollies 6 in the device can accordingly be varied vertically and horizontally until they are ideally positioned at and below the riveting-points.
Components 1 and 2 are preferably fastened together with hole punching rivets 11. Rivets 11 are thrust through the intact material and subsequently against a dolly 6 with a matching depression in its head by a rivet driver 12. Rivet driver 12 is supplied with fresh rivets by an unillustrated mechanism and is accommodated in an accommodation 13 at the end of an arm on a robot that secures and positions it. The force necessary to hold components 1 and 2 together properly prior to riveting can be generated by a spring 14 or by other means.
The metal can be punched out and the lower rivet head shaped by either pressing or hammering. Hammering will demand less counteracting force on the part of the rivet driver 12 and robot.
The present method can also be profitably employed without robots. In this event, rivet driver 12 must be positioned and secured by the human hand, with of course the riveting points marked on components 1 and 2.
The device 3 in one specific embodiment employed in a concatenated fabrication-and-assembly line can be assigned other tasks upstream or downstream of the riveting operation. A conventional die previously employed for punching, stamping, or orienting the sheet can for instance be provided with appropriate dollies 6. Such an approach can decrease tooling investment.
Thicker components can when necessary be provided with rivet holes before being fastened together. When the materials are being processed manually, this approach entails the advantage that no marks are needed. When working through robots on the other hand, they must be more precisely controlled.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101 46 442 | Sep 2001 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030051332 A1 | Mar 2003 | US |