The invention relates to a method of fastening a fastening element to a workpiece, in particular to a sheet metal part.
In many areas of technology, in particular in automotive engineering, it is necessary to fasten an element to a workpiece. This element then, for example, serves to connect a further component to the workpiece. For example, the fastening element can be a nut element or a bolt element to which the component is screwed.
Known fastening elements of the above-mentioned kind frequently comprise a flange section provided for contact with the workpiece; and a fastening section which has a rivet section that at least sectionally bounds a hollow space in a peripheral direction and that is in particular at least sectionally produced from a metal material. The elements are frequently completely or largely composed of metal.
The fastening process is typically carried out as follows: First, the workpiece, for example a planar, panel-shaped component, is provided. Then, the fastening element is inserted into the workpiece and at least one section of the rivet section is reshaped (in particular by cold deformation) such that this section engages behind the workpiece at a side of the workpiece remote from the flange section. At least this section therefore passes through the workpiece.
The insertion and the reshaping are expediently effected by a fastening movement of the fastening element in a common fastening direction. This direction is, for example, defined by a straight line that is arranged coaxially to a longitudinal axis of the element.
However, considerable forces are required for this process, in particular to effect the reshaping of the rivet section. This has the result that a corresponding setting apparatus for setting the element at the workpiece has to have a very powerful and stable design. In addition, large forces that inter alia result in considerable wear likewise act on a reshaping tool that reshapes the rivet section.
It is therefore an object of the invention to improve the above-described method such that the components required for fastening the element are subjected to less load, but without compromises in this respect having to be made with regard to the reliability of the fastening of the element.
It has been recognized in accordance with the invention that this object is satisfied in a surprisingly simple manner if the fastening element is acted on by a mechanical vibration, in particular by an ultrasound vibration, at least at times during the insertion into the workpiece (e.g. a sheet metal part, a fiber-reinforced plastic component or the like) and/or during the reshaping of the rivet section. Significantly lower forces are then particularly required for the reshaping process than for conventional methods. It must be mentioned for reasons of completeness that the insertion and reshaping do not have to be strictly successive processes. It is by all means possible that the rivet section is already reshaped during the insertion of the element into the workpiece.
In general, it is also—additionally or alternatively—conceivable for the workpiece, and/or a reshaping tool provided for reshaping the rivet section to be acted on by a mechanical vibration, in particular by an ultrasound vibration, in order to optimize the fastening process.
Further embodiments of the method in accordance with the invention are set forth in the description, in the claims and in the enclosed drawings.
In accordance with an embodiment of the method, the fastening element, the workpiece, and/or a reshaping tool provided for reshaping the rivet section is/are acted on by a vibration that is oriented coaxially to the fastening movement. A vibration in the direction of the longitudinal axis of the element, which can also be its axis of symmetry, is designated as a longitudinal vibration.
It can be advantageous in various applications if an amplitude and/or a frequency of the vibration is/are varied during the insertion of the fastening element and/or during the reshaping of the rivet section. This also includes cases in which no action by vibration is provided (at times) on the insertion of the element or on the reshaping of the rivet section. The amplitude and/or the frequency of the vibration can also be kept substantially constant during the insertion of the fastening element and/or during the reshaping of the rivet section. In other words, said parameters and their variation in time (provided in this manner) can be adapted as required to the respective present situation.
The workpiece can be provided with an opening for receiving the rivet section (pre-punched workpiece). However, the method in accordance with the invention can be used in cases in which the provided workpiece at least does not have an opening in a region provided for the insertion of the fastening element. The element then produces an opening in the workpiece (self-piercing element) by its insertion.
The rivet section is preferably a continuous wall that surrounds the hollow space in the peripheral direction. For example, the wall is an annular wall that can be reshaped by a corresponding tool to produce an undercut that generates a fastening effect. It is generally preferred if the hollow space is open toward the workpiece in the direction of movement of the element. The hollow space can, for example, have a cylindrical basic shape.
The reshaping tool is in particular a die.
The present invention further relates to an apparatus for fastening a fastening element to a workpiece in accordance with a method in accordance with at least one of the preceding claims. The apparatus comprises a punch movable relative to the workpiece in a fastening direction for inserting the fastening element into the workpiece; and a die for at least sectionally reshaping a rivet section of the fastening element at least sectionally surrounding a hollow space such that a reshaped section of the rivet element engages behind the workpiece after the completion of the fastening. A first drive apparatus is provided by which a movement of the punch can be produced in the fastening direction, on which movement a mechanical vibration, in particular a vibration in the fastening direction, is superposed. In addition or as an alternative, a second drive apparatus can be provided by which the workpiece and/or a reshaping tool provided for reshaping the rivet section can be set into a vibration. The vibration produced by the second drive apparatus is preferably oriented coaxially to the fastening movement.
In accordance with an embodiment of the apparatus, the first drive apparatus and/or the second drive apparatus comprises/comprise an apparatus for producing an ultrasound vibration.
The reshaping tool can be a die which has a reshaping surface that cooperates with the rivet section, that is at least sectionally curved, and/or that is at least sectionally arranged obliquely with respect to the fastening direction and to a plane extending perpendicular thereto.
The present invention will be explained in the following purely by way of example with reference to an advantageous embodiment and to the enclosed drawings. There are shown:
The spacers 16 extend in parallel with the axis A, wherein the spacers are screwed into corresponding bores 17 of the die 14 and are therefore releasably connected thereto. The spacers 16 are each made in the manner of pins and have an end section 20 that projects out of a contact surface 18 of the die 14. The length of the end sections 20 is set uniformly such that the sheet metal part 12 is horizontally supported on the spacers 16, i.e. perpendicular to the axis A. A spacing D is thereby set between a lower side 21 of the sheet metal part 12—i.e. the side of the sheet metal part 12 facing the contact surface 18—and the contact surface 18. Each end section 20 comprises a substantially convex support surface 22 facing the sheet metal part 12.
The spacing D can be adapted by an adjustment of the spacers 16 if necessary, e.g. if a different rivet element 10 should be used.
The die 14 has a conical die plunger 24 (here static, a die plunger escaping downwardly in a dynamic manner is also conceivable) that partly projects into a circular hole 26 provided at the sheet metal part 12. The axis A extends through the corresponding centers of the die plunger 24 and of the hole 26. In this respect, the axis A is thus an axis of symmetry for the sheet metal part 12—at least in the region around the hole 26—and for the die 14. The hole 26 was produced before the fastening process described here.
The sheet metal part 12 is planar in the region around the hole 26 and does not have a flare in this region. Optionally, however, the sheet metal part 12 can also be completely planar—as in the embodiment described here. However, this does not necessarily have to be the case.
A gap 30 is formed between a wall 28 of the hole 26 of the sheet metal part 12 and the lower side 21 of the sheet metal part 12, on the one hand, and the die plunger 24, on the other hand.
The rivet element 10 arranged above the sheet metal part 12 has a rivet section 32 that surrounds a cylindrical hollow space 33 in the peripheral direction and that is open toward the workpiece 12. The section 32 is an annular wall in the present example that extends away from a flange section 36 of the rivet element 10 in the axial direction. It has an end edge 34 that is rounded at the outside and conical at the inside. A functional section that supports the thread 11 at least in part is provided at the other side of the flange sections 36. The rivet element 10 is a nut element.
A peripheral groove 38 is provided in a transition region between the flange section 36 and the rivet section 32.
The outer diameter of the rivet section 32 is slightly smaller than the diameter of the hole 26 so that the rivet section 32 can be introduced into the hole 26.
Starting from the state shown in
The rivet element 10 is displaced further in the direction toward the die 14 (direction of movement B) during the reshaping of the rivet section 32, wherein the flange section 36 comes into contact with a contact surface 37 at the sheet metal part 12. The length of the rivet section 32 or the spacing D is adapted such that the flange section 36 only comes into contact with the sheet metal part 12 when the rivet section 32 at least partly engages behind the sheet metal part 12 in the course of the reshaping, in particular when the reshaping that produces the engagement behind is completed.
The rivet element 10 is now moved further in the direction toward the die 14, wherein the sheet metal part 12 is moved along in the direction toward the contact surface 18 of the die 14. In this respect, the sheet metal part 12 is reshaped locally in the region of the spacers 16 so that the end sections 20 of the spacers 16 engage into the sheet metal part 12 and the sheet metal part 12 comes into contact with the contact surface 18. In this connection, the end sections 20 of the spacers 16 that reshape the sheet metal part 12 cause a respective elevated portion 41 of the sheet metal part 12 at the side remote from the die 14, as will be explained in more detail further below.
In
As mentioned above, the end sections 20 of the spacers 16 engage into the sheet metal part 12 in the course of the movement of the sheet metal part 12 toward the contact surface 18 of the die 14. As a result, the already mentioned elevated portions 41 are thereby produced at the upper side of the sheet metal part 12 (
The above statements serve as a purely exemplary explanation of a fastening process of a fastening element. It is understood that such an element—when using a suitable die—can also be fastened to a workpiece that is not prepared or that is not pre-punched. The element is then self-piercing.
The design of the die 14 provided for reshaping the rivet section 32 can also differ from that shown. It is therefore conceivable that no spacers 16 are present, but that the sheet metal part 12 rather lies directly on the contact surface 18. The die then preferably has a (possibly annular) recess which receives the end of the rivet section 32 that penetrated the part 12 and/or contributes to its reshaping.
In accordance with the invention, the rivet element 10 is acted on by a vibration on the insertion into the sheet metal part 12 in order to minimize the force required for the insertion. The vibration is superposed on the movement B and oriented coaxially thereto, as indicated by the double arrow S in
Superpositions with vibrations in the ultrasound range have proven to be particularly efficient.
The vibration S is preferably also maintained at least at times during the reshaping of the rivet section 32 since this process is associated with a substantial exertion of force that can exceed (frequently even by a multiple) the exertion of force required for the insertion of the element 10 into the sheet metal part 12. In many cases, this even applies to self-piercing elements.
The exertion of force required for the fastening of the element 10 is reduced by the vibration-superposed movement B, S of the element 10, which enables a simpler design of a corresponding setting apparatus. In addition, the wear of the die 14 is reduced.
However, it is not absolutely necessary to provide a movement B, S acted on by vibration during the insertion of the element 10 into the sheet metal part 12. It very generally applies that the vibration S can be superposed on the movement B as required. It can vary over time, be it with respect to its amplitude and/or its frequency. This also applies to transverse vibration components—if provided.
10 rivet element
11 internal thread
12 sheet metal part
14 die
16 spacer
17 bore
18 contact surface
20 end section
21 lower side of the sheet metal part
22 support surface
24 die plunger
26 hole
28 wall
30 gap
32 rivet section
33 hollow space
34 end edge
36 flange section
37 contact surface
38 groove
40 reshaping surface
41
41 elevated portion
A axis of symmetry
B direction of movement
S vibration
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
102019106280.2 | Mar 2019 | DE | national |